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Thursday, August 13, 2015

The Factory For Leaders

There is no point aiming for equality for the sake of equality, and giving up equity. 

Elitism, in reality, is just the darker side of meritocracy. What has come about is a natural consequence of meritocracy - when we stream students according to their abilities, it is only natural that students whose families can afford better quality education make it to better institutions

... it is the fault of meritocracy. 

But maybe that is not a fault at all. A natural consequence that stratifies society does have its own purpose for the well-educated, critical minds to mingle together to build Singapore up to greater heights. Intelligence is an asset; and we cannot allow ourselves to prioritise equality over intelligence and equity.


- Russell Tan Wah Jian, The Straits Times, August 11, 2015 -

That Which Is Natural Is Not Wrong
See brown highlights. A fault that is not a fault. I am amazed that this person can recognise that something is from the "dark side" and in the next breath claim that all is well and good.

- It is as good as saying evil is good, because it is natural.

- It is as good as saying "Lions eat zebras. There is bloodshed. Just too bad because that is natural."

The last I looked, lions and zebras are losing out in terms of survival vis-à-vis the human race. If humans were to go all natural, we would still be living in trees. We have come so far because we took the trouble to bend nature to our will for the advancement of human society.

Natural! Sheesh!

Intelligent Kids = Kids With Critical Minds = Families With Money
See blue highlights. Kids from rich families will make it to better institutions. This puts them into the top strata of "well-educated and critical minds". His text implies that critical minds = intelligence. Hence, the reasoning is as follows...

Intelligent Kids = Kids With Critical Minds = Rich Kids.

What has the size of your Father's bank account got to do with your IQ? How do you relate the 2? Is there not a flaw in the logic? Or at the very least, a gap in the logic... or perhaps Petunia is too obtuse to see the link between millions in the bank and progeniture IQ.

From Someone Who Knows The Complexities of the Education System
The scariest thing is that this young man's thinking is shared by many well-educated adults. A comment to my post HERE is from someone (named YS) who wrote in to provide me "different insights on the complexities of the [Singapore] education system".

YS wrote...

I hope I can provide you different insights on the complexities of the educational system.
 
The inequalities of education are a huge concern for a country that is deeply embedded with the values of meritocracy. However, I think that we all have to agree that equal opportunities are almost impossible in a largely free capitalistic World. As "The Rise of Meritocracy" the original coinage of the term "meritocracy" itself, laments that "we have had to recognize that nearly all parents are going to try to gain unfair advantages for their offspring" (Young, M. 1958).

So, what is the unintended consequences of adopting a more egalitarian system? Would it be wise to inhibit someone's full potential in the name of equality? I understand that I am hovering on borderline elitism, but the question is real: discriminating one chance against the other does not solve the moral issue.

Read the green text and compare it with the green text from Russell's letter to the Straits Times. Read the brown text and compare it with the brown text from Russell's letter to the Straits Times. Both persons say the same thing, no?

The thing that struck me about YS, is that he/she purports to know enough about "the complexities of the [Singapore] education system" at the policy level to "share insights" with me. I am just hoping YS is not some big shot in MOE.

What I am trying to get at, is that, we adults created Russell Tan Wah Jian. We taught him what appears to him as self-evident truths. It is our generation's over-riding drive for academic excellence and the qualities of the mind (over the heart) that created Russell Tan Wah Jian. Note that Russell mentions intelligence as an asset. He left out the qualities of the heart.

Perhaps, he never learnt that qualities of the heart are important.

It is good that the MOE is changing and becoming more sensitive to the qualities of the heart and the need to level the playing field. It is good that the Principal of RI is tackling this issue head-on. It is good that the entire MOE ship is moving in a different direction.

Nonetheless, there is ALREADY damage.

I have managed out 2 ex-Rafflesian staff, and lost interest in a 3rd. These kids are un-employable. 1 ex-Rafflesian would call on the morning of class and say "Dr Pet, I cannot come in today because I have an important meeting in school." Once, he even FORGOT to turn up for work. Another ex-Rafflesian wrote me a long letter explaining why I did not need to administer a language test to her. Her point was that she was damn good already and I should just take her word for it because she won this prize and that prize in RJC.

Hey, that is like telling HR Dept, "I tell you I am damn good, so I am damn good lah! I no need to go through your interview and selection process one! I damn good mah!"

The Factory for Leaders
I think that there will be a gap of 15 to 20 years where no leaders will come from RI. Leaders are leaders because people want to follow them. Who would want to follow someone like Russell? He will devour you because he is a lion and you are only a zebra, and he thinks it is only natural to eat you up.

As a society, we will pay a price well into the future for MOE's myopic focus on intelligence and MOE's faith in Reagan-Thatcherism (i.e., the belief that if you invest heavily in the top, the top will lift the bottom). Increasingly, the practice of Reagan-Thatcherism shows that if you lift the top, the top will just feel entitled to ingest the bottom.








8 comments:

Unknown said...

Finally this post - https://stuffaboutsingapore.wordpress.com/2015/08/12/why-you-cant-separate-equity-from-equality/

Chan Poh Meng must be relieved. Show that not every RI guy is a jerk?

The Success Biz said...

This is a rehash of the Graduate mother scheme. There is nothing new under the sun.

Petunia Lee said...

Hi... Lyn Lee... thanks for commenting. I do think not every RI youngster is a jerk but of all that I have tried to employ, all are jerks so far. I think a fair proportion of Rafflesians have a strong sense of entitlement. It has got to a point where I think twice about calling in an RI alumni for an interview. They behave like working for me is to do me a favour because they are the best. Sigh!

Petunia Lee said...

The Success Biz... oh dear... you are right. I had not thought of it.

Melodies said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Melodies said...

Do the policy makers recognise that Reagan-Thatcherism belief and policies can ultimately drive elitism? For some countries, elitism is a dirty word because it is a show stopper for social mobility. To level the playing field, I think MOE can do more by scrapping the GEP program, scrapping DSA scheme, scrapping the SBGE program in sec, twisting the p1 registration, distributing the same amount of fund per student headcount to every school. I still cannot understand why you allow a talented music/art/sport student to use DSA n get into academic excellent schools. Can they excel in academic excellent schs? Shouldn't they DSA to niche schools in sport/music/art/etc instead?

roger said...

this is lee kuan yewism at its best

Petunia Lee said...

Roger... dear me... really?