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[中学] 名校“优等生”是这样炼成的:每月5800元补习费!

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发表于 6-3-2012 16:20:50|来自:新加坡 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式

《新报》专访:名校中三优等生,每月补习费高达$5800元,还要花费每小时200~250元请人代*写*作*业*。。。

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Parent pays nearly $6,000 a month in tuition fees

Maureen Koh |       The New Paper |    Tue Mar 6 2012

                              

      
   
Her son is a straight A student in a top boys' school here yet this mother spends $5,800 a month on his tuition.

Her son, who is in Secondary 3, attends classes for English and mathematics at a premier tuition centre in Thomson once a week - two hours per session.

He also takes a 21/2 hour weekly Chinese class in a popular language school.

And he gets one-on-one tuition - each for about two hours - for physics, chemistry and biology with a private tutor.

All these classes are on top of the regular supplementary lessons that his school gives.

Madam Irene Tan, a housewife who is in her early 40s, says: "It's money that we can afford and it's totally well-spent."

She agreed to this interview on condition that we do not name her only child or his school to avoid getting him into trouble.

She is married to a businessman and lives in a bungalow in Bukit Timah.

She says: "All parents just want the best for their child's education."

To top it off, she pays people to do her son's homework when he can't cope with the combination of school and tuition assignments.

She pays $200 per hour if they have to swing by before midnight and $250 an hour when it's later.

Madam Tan is not the only one willing to pay through the nose for intensive tuition to help her child.

Mrs Pauline Soh, who has two daughters, one in Primary 4 and another in Sec 2, spends "close to $4,000" on their tuition classes.

Her daughters take English, mathematics and science at an elite tuition centre.

Her younger daughter, who is in a Gifted Education Programme primary school, also gets tuition for Higher Chinese.
The older girl is in an independent school.

Mrs Soh, 40, a civil servant, who lives in a condominium in the east says: "My husband (who is also a civil servant) and I don't have the time to coach our children."

She adds: "Education is an expensive affair here but the paper chase makes it necessary for us to equip our children with the best education possible."

Mr Frank Chan, 46, prefers to spend his money on extra tuition for his pair of twins, who are in Primary 6, than go for holidays.
The marketing manager, who lives in a terrace house in the east, says: "We can always go for holidays when the boys grow up. Right now, it's more important to focus on their Primary School Leaving Examination."

The twins have tuition in English, mathematics and second language, which cost about $2,000 per child per month.
This does not include fees he pays for a private music tutor.

In fact, primary schoolers are not the only ones getting loads of extra coaching. Some parents spend big on the little ones.
Madam Cathy Ho, 39, hires a private tutor to prepare her five-year-old son and six-year-old daughter for primary school.

She pays the tutor, who gives her children individual lessons in English and mathematics separately, for $800 a month.

They also take Chinese classes at a language enrichment school at $1,500 for 12 lessons for each child every three months.
In addition, Madam Ho's daughter takes abacus and mental calculation preparation classes at an enrichment centre. That's another $320 a month.

Madam Ho, a creative director, who lives in an apartment in a Jurong condominium, says: "Some of my friends have called me crazy but I don't care.

"When my children make it to a better school and do well, I'll be the one having the last, and best, laugh."
  


发表于 6-3-2012 16:32:14|来自:新加坡 | 显示全部楼层
小狮租房
本帖最后由 jjrchome 于 6-3-2012 16:37 编辑

记者发现,受访的80名家长有一半承认他们已经或者正准备聘请补习老师帮孩子完成功课。。。。

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Parents hire tutors to do kids' school and tuition assignments
     Maureen Koh |       The New Paper |    Tue Mar 6 2012

                              

Her child is burdened with so much tuition, school assignments and co-curricular activities (CCAs) that he is finding it tough to cope.

Madam Irene Tan's son, a Secondary 3 student in a top boys' school says: "It gets so crazy some days that I just want to give up school. I don't mind the lessons but I hate doing all the stupid homework."

So what does Madam Tan do?

A. Cut down on tuition?
B. Help him with his assignments herself?
C. Hire people to do his school and tuition assignments when he is too tired to do them?

Yes, it's option C.

Madam Tan says: "If my son does not get enough sleep, he will not be able to focus in class and that's definitely a no-no."
She pays the specialised tutors $200 per hour if they have to swing by before midnight and $250 an hour when it's later. She found out about the tutors through word-of-mouth as they do not advertise.

The tutors are on her mobile phone's speed dial.

But how does that help her son?

Madam Tan says: "They will finish whatever homework (that is) left while he goes to bed."

The tutors do what he can't finish so he can get some sleep. And, they don't have to explain the workings or formulas.

She says: "It's not like my son doesn't know how to do it. He just does not have the time."

Madam Tan insists it's fine because it has not affected her son's grades.

"The tuition that he gets is to help him master the subjects and prepare him for the major tests and exams," she said.

"And he has managed to consistently score As for all the subjects."

A check on the boy's result slips showed that he has not slackened even after the specialist tutors were hired since last year.

The New Paper on Sunday polled 80 parents outside some elite tuition centres and found that nearly half had hired or will hire such tutors.

One such parent who also gets tutors to do her daughters' homework is Mrs Pauline Soh. Her daughters are 11 and 14.

But her reason for wanting such tutors is different from Madam Tan's - her tutors are hired to help with her children's assignments from the elite tuition centre.

Given that the centre demands students get consistently good results, Mrs Soh, 40, a civil servant, says it can get tough for her daughters to cope with "mounting school assignments plus the extra homework".

He daughters take English, mathematics and science at the tuition centre.

Aside from the academic classes, her daughters also has ballet, piano and art classes. Her younger daughter also gets tuition for Higher Chinese.

The older girl is in an independent school.

She says: "It took my daughters nearly a year before they were given a place in the tuition centre."

Mrs Soh, who lives in a condominium in the east, says: "After all that effort, it'd be such a terrible waste if they had to give up their spots for others on the waiting list just because they cannot finish the work."

She adds: "I try very hard not to let the tutors help with the school homework as well so that my girls won't be too spoilt."

She sets aside an extra $500 to $700 a month for the specialist tutor for each child.

Mr Ong Kwee Lam, 39, who has a 10-year-old son, says he knows of friends who have paid for such services.

The architect reckons that if the need arises when his son gets to secondary school, he "will not hesitate" to do the same.

Says Mr Ong: "It's nothing illegal. At most, you can only argue whether it's morally right or wrong.

"It makes no difference if my child ends up copying his homework from his classmate. At least, with a tutor, I can be sure that he'll get it right."

A secondary school teacher in a top girls' school says she has not come across any such cases among her students.

But she admits she has heard about it from her peers in other schools.

Says the English head of department: "It came as a shock when I first heard about. It's so totally wrong.

"How can any parent condone this or, worse, encourage it?"

The teacher adds: "Should we discover that any of our children here are guilty of this, we'd not hesitate to haul them up for disciplinary action."

Madam Dawn Chionh, 44, feels it's fine for parents to send their children for intensive tuition but not in this manner.

Her daughter, who is in Secondary 1 in an Independent School, also has tuition at an elite centre.

Madam Chionh, a housewife, says: "What kind of values are we teaching our kids? That it's okay to 'delegate' your work?

"It's downright dishonest."

Mr Wong Ju Ping, 36, managing director of Lynn Tuition Centre, says he has heard of this practice among his students.

Says Mr Wong: "Teaching is like selling; you cannot make a sale unless someone buys. You have not taught unless someone has learnt.

"Parents who resort to such tactics (think) they know what is best for their children."

But, he adds: "Perhaps they could allow their children to learn experientially so they will adopt greater initiative and self-direction, which happen to be two of the skills under the (Ministry of Education's) 21st century learning competency framework."


Tutors, why do this?

The New Paper on Sunday spent two weeks searching for tutors who do homework for students and found five of them through parents.

All have education backgrounds. Here's what these people who call themselves "specialised tutors" do:

What is expected of you?

When I get a call, I'll go down to the student's home. I am usually shown to a desk where stacks of homework are left on the table.

The parent or the child will tell me the order of priority in which the homework should be done.

And these subjects are...?

It can be anything from English to mathematics, science, physics and even history or geography.

It's usually homework from the school or tuition centre which the child cannot complete.

But you don't teach the children?

No, I just take over and complete everything while the child plays, watches TV or sleeps.

How is the homework done?

If the assignments require the students to complete in their own handwriting, I write the answers on pieces of paper, which the students copy later.

But I prefer homework that has to be typed out because I can charge more.

How much do you charge?

Anything from $150 an hour, up to $250 an hour for higher secondary students.

If all the work is done by me (as in typewritten), there is a 20 to 50 per cent surcharge.

What are your working hours like?

Totally flexible; I'm on call 24/7.

But I avoid making any plans after 9pm as that's usually when the frantic calls of distress come in.

I get an average of two calls a week. When it's the period of continual or semestral assignments, the calls go up to as many as 20 a week.

How do you think this will benefit the children?


It's just a job. Don't take the moral high ground with me. You pay me, I do my work.


Mum, how could you even think of that?

It's really interesting how fast this mother can change her mind.

Two weeks ago, it disturbed me when nearly half of the 80 parents outside some elite tuition centres told me they had hired or will hire tutors to do their kids' homework.

Whatever the reasons - however justified the parents thought they were - it just was not right, I felt.

If your child is a straight A or even a "high B" student, does he or she really need tuition? And this comes from a mother who (like her husband) never believed that tuition was necessary. I am also not the type who sits down and coaches my son in his schoolwork.

When I first wrote about this in The New Paper on Sunday in November last year, some parents reacted strongly. And negatively.

Among the barrage of e-mails I received was one from a mother who first accused me of "boasting that your son is intelligent", then promised that I'd "live to regret (it) because when he gets to secondary school, he'll be nothing".

In chasing this story, I was yet again taken to task.

Madam Irene Tan, who wagged her finger at me, said: "How can a mother treat her child's education so lightly?

"Just because your son is in a reasonably good school does not mean he will turn out to be a success in the future."

I was indignant, though I did not bother to clarify then.

But the thing is, my son has never had the need for tuition. He coped well in school and while he didn't top his cohort, he managed to score two distinctions and two As for his Primary School Leaving Examination.

He spends most of his free time feeding his voracious appetite for books.

He reads everything including thrillers, autobiographies, manga comics and football magazines.

When he's not reading, he's down at the neighbourhood football field trying to polish his skills in the hope of morphing into Manchester United's Javier "Chicharito" Hernandez.

Games on his laptop are restricted to a total of two hours over the weekend, and there's no TV on weekdays.

And he is a happy child. But lately, things have changed a little - since he started Secondary 1.

Most school days, he returns home only after 5pm and deals with lots of homework. He usually manages to finish the work and hop into bed before midnight.

Until this week. And this mum's heart broke.

He had so much homework that he went to bed at nearly 1am. Five hours later, he was expected to be up and ready for the school bus to pick him up for another 10 hours in school.

I promptly updated my Facebook status, attracting several likes and comments.

Someone suggested: Help him do his homework.

Another recommended setting aside the homework for another day.

In that instant, I understood why some of these parents resorted to hiring those tutors.

The tutor would allow him to get some much-needed rest. Then, he could be fresh and ready for lessons the next day.

But when I told my son, it was his turn to be indignant. He said: "Mummy! Don't you know that's so dishonest? How can you even think of it?"

Ouch!

点评

这疯狂的年代!  详情 回复 发表于 6-3-2012 17:23
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发表于 6-3-2012 17:28:01|来自:新加坡 | 显示全部楼层
为什么会有这么多的功课?!
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发表于 6-3-2012 17:45:22|来自:新加坡 | 显示全部楼层
liyuer 发表于 6-3-2012 17:28
为什么会有这么多的功课?!

我的同事也帮孩子做功课。 据他说,学校太多课外活动了,孩子还要上补习,实在没时间做功课。。。

他的孩子在德明上学。

点评

没想到呢。。或者一些不必要的作业还要忙于在deadline前完成,找人代做也未尝不可。  详情 回复 发表于 6-3-2012 23:07
没想到呢。。或者一些不必要的作业还要忙于在deadline前完成,找人代做也未尝不可。  详情 回复 发表于 6-3-2012 23:07
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发表于 6-3-2012 17:47:59|来自:新加坡 | 显示全部楼层
花自己的钱, 无可厚非,  
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发表于 6-3-2012 21:03:30|来自:新加坡 | 显示全部楼层
:L
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发表于 6-3-2012 21:19:19|来自:新加坡 | 显示全部楼层
不准备给孩子补习,所以觉得太夸张,新加坡的TOP又如何?看看哪天成为什么大人物了再说。。。。不相信有哪个诺贝尔奖得主是这样补习的。。。
厉害的不补习人家也就是厉害,用钱堆出来的,不予置评。。。再说了,小时了了~~~~~
6000。。一年60000。。。哇。。够读一张英国皇家音乐硕士出来了。。。。哈。。。。这些钱就花在考这种O、A水准上。。。。感觉不合乎经济效益。。。。富豪家庭另当别论。。。
这个世界上优秀的人不多,能拿诺贝尔的更少了。。。都是平凡人,孩子要开心,快乐,健康成长才最重要。。。这些升学压力太恐怖,真难想象这些孩子会ENJOY其中,不可思议。。。。
我完全不给孩子读书的压力,因为我知道,这个世界孩子越来越少,各国大学学生慌越来越严重,僧少粥多,以后要读什么书,稍微努力点,连考试都免了,直接申请入学都不是问题。。。。何苦搞得紧张兮兮的呢。。。哈。。。
完全就是新加坡人的怕输心态。。。不可取!
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发表于 6-3-2012 21:39:17|来自:新加坡 来自手机 | 显示全部楼层
怪不得偶是个笨蛋,偶家没钱。
就这种未来会?
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发表于 6-3-2012 22:19:32|来自:新加坡 | 显示全部楼层
这孩子将来工作了,家长是不是还要请人帮孩子完成工作 ?:)
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发表于 6-3-2012 22:58:37|来自:新加坡 | 显示全部楼层
啊!补得太夸张了!

为自己的孩子喝彩!至少没放掉我那么多的血就考到EXPRESS的成绩了,哈哈,(自我阿Q一下)。
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