Special Assistance Plan
The Special Assistance Plan is a programme in Singapore introduced in 1979 which caters to academically strong students who excel in both their mother tongue as well as English. It is only available in selected primary & secondary schools. In a SAP school, several subjects may be taught in the mother tongue, alongside other subjects which are taught in English. Currently SAP schools only cater to those studying the Mandarin mother tongue, although theoretically, future SAP schools for other mother tongues are a possibility.
Special Assistance Plan schools
Special Assistance Plan schools refers to schools that offers the Special Assistance Plan. The SAP is offered at both primary school level as well as secondary level, in Special Assistance Plan primary schools and Special Assistance Plan high schools respectively.SAP Primary Schools
Name | Type 2 | Area | Notes | Website | GEP |
Ai Tong School 爱同学校 | Mixed | Bishan | Affiliated to Singapore Hokkien Huay Kuan | - | |
Catholic High School 公教中学 | Boys | Bishan | yes | ||
CHIJ St. Nicholas Girls' School 圣尼格拉女校 | Girls | Ang Mo Kio | - | ||
Holy Innocents’ Primary School 圣婴小学 | Mixed | Hougang | - | ||
Hong Wen School 宏文学校 | Mixed | Kallang | - | ||
Kong Hwa School 光华学校 | Mixed | Geylang | Affiliated to Singapore Hokkien Huay Kuan | - | |
Maha Bodhi School 菩提学校 | Mixed | Geylang | - | ||
Maris Stella High School 海星中学 | Boys | Toa Payoh | - | ||
Nan Hua Primary School 南华小学 | Mixed | Clementi | yes | ||
Nanyang Primary School 南洋小学 | Mixed | Bukit Timah | yes | ||
Pei Chun Public School 公立培群学校 | Mixed | Toa Payoh | - | ||
Pei Hwa Presbyterian Primary School 培华长老会小学 | Mixed | Bukit Timah | - | ||
Poi Ching School 培青学校 | Mixed | Tampines | - | ||
Red Swastika School 卍慈学校 | Mixed | Bedok | - | ||
Tao Nan School 道南学校 | Mixed | Marine Parade | Affiliated to Singapore Hokkien Huay Kuan | yes |
SAP High Schools
Name | Type | School Code | Area | Notes | Website | - | - |
Anglican High School 圣公会中学 | Mixed | 7101 | Tanah Merah | Affiliated to Saint Andrews JC | - | - | |
Catholic High School 公教中学 | Boys | IP: 9131 Special: 7102 | Bishan | Affiliated to: | - | - | |
CHIJ Saint Nicholas Girls' School 圣尼各拉女校 | Girls | IP: 9134Special: 7118 | Ang Mo Kio | Affiliated to:
| - | - | |
Chung Cheng High School 中正中学 | Mixed | 7104 | Marine Parade | Affiliated to: | - | - | |
Dunman High School 德明政府中学 | Mixed | 3101 | Tanjong Rhu | Affiliated as Feeder School to:
| |||
Hwa Chong Institution 华侨中学 | Boys | 0806 | Bukit Timah | Offers the Hwa Chong Diploma ;Affiliated to: | - | - | |
Maris Stella High School 海星中学 | Boys | 7111 | Toa Payoh | Affiliated to: | - | - | |
Nan Chiau High School 南侨中学 | Mixed | 7112 | Sengkang | Affiliated to Singapore Hokkien Huay Kuan | - | - | |
Nan Hua High School 南华中学 | Mixed | 3047 | Clementi | - | - | ||
Nanyang Girls' High School 南洋女子中学校 | Girls | 7114 | Bukit Timah | Offers the Hwa Chong Diploma ;Affiliated to:
| - | - | |
River Valley High School 立化中学 | Mixed | 3103 | Boon Lay | - | - |
Admission
A student's admission to a SAP school is decided based on their results in the Primary School Leaving Examination. To enter a SAP school, a student must achieve a PSLE aggregate score that puts him in the top 10% of his cohort, with an 'A' grade for both the mother tongue and English. This means that only a relatively small group of students who are academically and linguistically strong may enter a SAP school. Consequently, SAP schools have a reputation of being the "elite" group of secondary schools in the country, alongside independent and autonomous schools. This stems from the Singaporean tradition of effective bilingualism in the education of the elite students from SAP schools. Some students, regardless of whether they are in a SAP school, are offered a chance at effective trilingualism in secondary education starting from age 13. The first language, English, is the international language of commercial and the administrative and legal language of Singapore, a former British colony. The mother tongue reflects the cultural and ethnic identity or in recent times, the linguistic curiosity of the students, e.g. Malay and Indian students who opt to study Mandarin as second Language in Singapore. The "third languages" are foreign languages which are considered by MOE to be "economically, politically and culturally vital", such as Japanese, German and French.Historical context
Many SAP schools were historically Chinese language medium schools, i.e. they taught all academic subjects in Mandarin, and which may have taught English as a foreign language. Following Singapore's independence in 1965, the government recognised four official languages in Singapore, but clearly designated English as the main language of basic and higher education, government and law, science and technology as well as trade and industry. This is reflected in the Bilingual Policy which came into effect in 1966. While according official recognition to the languages of different ethno-linguistic communities in Singapore, it sought to promote English as a neutral common language to unite a culturally diverse nation of immigrants. English was also held to be the language of international higher education, science/technology and commerce. As such, it was indispensable to Singapore, given her ambition to become a 'Global City', articulated as early as 1972.As English Language gained importance, more parents inclined to send their child to English-medium schools, which adversely affected enrollment of Chinese-medium schools. In 1977, admission to Chinese-medium elementary schools made up only 10 per cent of the nation's cohort, which increasingly reflected the increasingly critical status of the Chinese-medium schools, in stark contrast over a decade. The need to preserve traditional Chinese schools with rich heritage and culture became a pressing agenda for the government, with raising English standards and attracting capable students into such schools a key priority, as pointed out by then Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew.
In 1979, the Ministry of Education designated nine Chinese-medium secondary schools as Special Assistance Plan schools. These schools were intended to provide top-scoring primary school leavers with the opportunity to study both English and Mandarin to high levels of competence. Also, these schools were to preserve the character of traditional Chinese-medium secondary schools and allay fears that the Government was indifferent to Chinese language and culture amid declining enrolments in Chinese-medium schools. The selected schools were given additional teaching resources and given assistance to run classes with a lower student-to-teacher ratio.
The programme was deemed highly successful with five of the designated schools consistently attaining top ten positions in the secondary school ranking in the 1990s, outperforming several established English-medium schools. This supported the Government to further expand the programme to two other institutions with strong Chinese heritage, including Nan Chiau High School, which was initially listed as an SAP school candidate in 1978. Six top performing SAP high schools are also approved by the Ministry of Education to offer Integrated Programme to their full cohort, with The Chinese High School, Nanyang Girls' High School being the piloting schools with Hwa Chong Junior College in 2004, followed by River Valley High School in 2006 and Dunman High School in 2008. Catholic High School and CHIJ St. Nicholas Girls' School were approved to offer Joint Integrated Programme in 2013 with Singapore Chinese Girls' School.
Societal significance
With rapid economic development and exposure to Western, particularly American popular culture and values in the 1970s and 1980s, Singapore began to change from a lower income, poorly educated society to a more confident, educated, vocal and individualistic society. Around the same time, in the 1980s, the world was witnessing the rise of Japan and the Asian newly-industrialised economies or NIEs, of which Singapore was one. Economically, America appeared unable to compete with rising Asian manufacturing competitors, especially Japan and was facing budget deficits. Singapore politicians from the dominant People's Action Party synthesised these various situations and developed certain ideas that came to be known as the Asian Values discourse.According to this line of argument, Singapore, along with Taiwan, Hong Kong, South Korea and Japan, had succeeded so spectacularly in no small part because of their shared Confucianist cultural heritage, which emphasised values such as hard work, education, family unity, deference and loyalty to authority figures, community spirit, etc.
To better sell this argument to a multi-ethnic population where the non-Chinese / non-'Confucianist' communities formed at least a quarter of the population, the discourse was re-branded 'Asian Values', rather than Confucian Work Ethic. In Singapore, traditional Asian culture was seen as a source of the nation's economic success thus far. As such, the government embarked on programmes and campaigns to promote traditional culture, including the revitalised Speak Mandarin Campaign as well as SAP schools.