channelnewsasia.com - Fourth Singapore university should cap intake at 2,500, says study
   
 
  blogs  
 
yournews
   
   
Video Finance Lifestyle Travel Weather Discussion TV Shows
CNA Live    | About Us 
 
  Home ›
 
Singapore News

 
 

Fourth Singapore university should cap intake at 2,500, says study
Posted: 24 June 2008 1829 hrs

 
 
Photos  of

   
 

SINGAPORE: The next Singapore university should be a publicly-funded institution offering disciplines such as Design and Architecture, Engineering and Applied Sciences, and Business and Information Technology, with an integrated approach centred on these disciplines.

This was the recommendation made by the Committee on the Expansion of the University Sector in a preliminary report released on Tuesday.

The committee also proposed that the fourth local university should set an annual intake of about 2,000–2,500 students and provide the bulk of the additional university places required to achieve the target 30 per cent cohort participation rate outlined by Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong at the 2007 National Day Rally.

While recognising the progress made by Singapore's existing universities, the committee - which began studying the education landscape last September - asked that consideration be given to the introduction of a liberal arts education in Singapore.

Since the the National University of Singapore (NUS) has already proposed the setting up of a liberal arts college (LAC) as an autonomous institution under the NUS umbrella, the committee recommended a deeper study of issues relating to the LAC, such as a possible partnership and funding model.

In addition, the committee said there is scope to offer students more opportunities to pursue degrees in niche areas currently not offered as publicly-funded degree programmes.

This, it said in its report, will complement the demand in strategic sectors of the economy, and the committee encouraged local polytechnics to explore more tie-ups with specialised institutions for niche degree programmes.

It added that the number of places available through such tie-ups could grow beyond the current target of 460 by 2010 to 700 in the longer term.

The committee, which will submit its final report to the government next month, has also recommended public funding for a limited number of students taking up bachelor degree programmes in high-quality independent degree-awarding institutions in Singapore, such as those brought in by the Economic Development Board under its Global Schoolhouse Initiative. - CNA/sf


 

 



Other singapore News
H1N1 vaccine approved for those aged between 10 and 18
Modest year-end payment for civil servants
NTUC, civil service unions support one-off payment by govt
NCPG launches casino self-exclusion order
Most of the top PSLE students from neighbourhood schools
Man charged with alleged murder of 6-year-old boy
SAF to send 13-man medical team to Afghanistan
Singapore Pavilion at 2010 World Expo right on schedule
Husband urges wife to go for surgery, donates kidney
10 individuals receive highest service honour from SPRING
Trainee policemen get a dose of reality
Courts lends a hand to We Are One project
100 students help place S$1,000 worth of LEGO bricks for We Are One project
2 loanshark runners arrested
TripleOne Somerset to open in January 2010
1 in 5 smokers say yes to smoking in public toilets: poll
Japanese national lodges successful appeal against six-week jail sentence
Man found dead in toilet at Tampines MRT station
NUS law scholarship set up in memory of Mumbai terror victim
Arts sponsorship down to S$30.5m last year from 2007's S$37.4m
SITEX organisers expect sales figure to beat last year's S$45m
87-year-old woman found dead

 

 
Affiliate Sites:
 
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise with Us  |  Terms & Conditions