Showing posts with label Lasalle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lasalle. Show all posts

Saturday, August 1, 2009

Why accept diploma only from 5 polys-

I AM keen to join the police force. With this in mind, I took a two-year course with the Management Development Institute of Singapore, leading to an advanced diploma which I obtained in March.

However, in the past year, it appears the job application form on the police website has been restructured so one may apply as a direct-entry sergeant with a diploma only from one of the five local polytechnics, Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts, LaSalle College of the Arts or the Singapore Hotel And Tourism Education Centre.

What about candidates in a similar position to me?

A reply from the recruitment division of the Singapore Police Force stated that the police force accepts diplomas only from the five local polytechnics.

Is a candidate who has an equivalent qualification from a private institution any less capable of being a police officer than one from a local polytechnic?

Why does the police force need to set such a requirement, when no basic qualifications in any of the institutions I have listed are directly related to police work?

Even if one is shortlisted, one must still pass interviews with the recruitment division. I assume it is in these interviews that recruitment officers assess each candidate and decide if he is suitable to join the police force.

I am already mentally prepared for the rigours of the job, and this is the only hurdle stopping me from being where I want to be.

I read often enough about the shortage of manpower in the police force and recruitment challenges, especially among Singaporeans. So why are educated and willing candidates like me barred from trying?

Basil Yeo

 

Read More...

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Giving teen entrepreneurs an early start

Energetic, full of ideas and eager to be their own boss, Singapore's teen entrepreneurs now have another reason to turn their vision into reality.

With the amended Civil Law and Bankruptcy Bills passed by Parliament last Monday, anyone aged 18 or older can now start and run a business.

Previously, aspiring entrepreneurs had to be 21 years old, the age when someone is legally considered an adult. Now, anyone who is 18 and above can act as a director of companies, form companies or limited liability partnerships and enter into business contracts, including land leases not exceeding three years.

The changes are a welcome move to those who are already raring to go.

Ms Cindy Chng, 19, a director of Eco-travel, a company that organises nature appreciation and environmental learning trips to South-east Asian destinations, started preparing to get her own firm registered the day she heard the news.

'Having my own company will grant me greater autonomy and control over its operations,' said the first-year business student at Nanyang Technological University (NTU).

Eco-travel is registered as a subsidiary of Eco Singapore, a non-profit social enterprise.

Eco Singapore president Wilson Ang, 26, Ms Chng's business partner, agrees: 'Young people will have more ownership and responsibility if the business is registered in their names.'

Most teen entrepreneurs currently turn to the Internet - creating blog shops and eBay stores or offering Web services - or set up stalls at flea markets and bazaars. Those who want to make their businesses official often do so by proxy: They register their companies under their parents' names.

Ms Janice Tan, the 20-year-old owner of Zsofi, a tapas bar in Little India, wished the changes had come sooner.

When she started her business in August 2007, she had to register her company under her father's name. But even that proved complicated because her father had to juggle her business' legal paperwork and his own day job.

'I feel bad as my father is not supposed to be doing this, as it is my job,' said Ms Tan, who is in her second year of communication studies in NTU.

Mr Donovan Auyong, 19, also had to register a photography and media company under his mother's name when he realised his clients - a large electronics firm and a supermarket - could make out his pay cheque only to a company and not an individual.

He is a final-year fashion communication student at Lasalle College of the Arts.

'The old law did not completely stop young people from starting a business. It just made it more bureaucratic and cumbersome,' said Professor Wong Poh Kam, director of the National University of Singapore's (NUS) Entrepreneurship Centre.

The centre, started in 2001, offers workshops and business clinics on entrepreneurship and runs an incubator programme that provides seed funding and mentorships to NUS students and graduates.

Most polytechnics, some junior colleges, and even secondary schools, have got into the act of incorporating entrepreneurship classes into their curriculum.

Like all three local universities, Temasek Polytechnic and Republic Polytechnic also have dedicated centres for entrepreneurship to provide guidance for young bosses.

Businessman Justin Lee, 27, thinks 18 is 'an ideal time to start a business', as most would have several months free while waiting to enter university or the army.

'Registering my business was the first thing I wanted to do the day I turned 21,' recalled Mr Lee, who started out as a freelance website designer when he was 14.

He now owns three companies that offer services such as software design, events organising and helping foreign technology start-ups relocate here. Operating in both Singapore and Jakarta, his firms have 20 full-time staff in total.

The youth are becoming more entrepreneurial because rapid changes in technologies have created opportunities for innovation, said Professor Desai Narasimhalu, the director of Singapore Management University's Institute of Innovation and Entrepreneurship.

He also observed that with parents being more affluent and educated these days, youngsters may find it easier to get their support in pursuing alternative careers.

But Mr Nicholas Chan, 30, the executive director of Azione Capital, which provides seed funding and mentoring for technology start-ups, advised caution against rashly rushing into binding contracts.

'Some youths genuinely want to create something for themselves but many, being young and lacking in life experiences, can easily be distracted from their work when faced with school stress and relationship or friendship problems,' he warned.

 

Read More...

Sunday, December 14, 2008

Careers in the arts

Students aged between five and 18 who are talented in the arts can enrol part-time at the Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts' (Nafa) School of Young Talents. Enrolment has increased steadily from 1,000 in 1999 to 3,700 now. But despite the increase, Madam Fang Yuan, the school's founding principal, has lamented that the students are not taking up careers in the arts. According to her, parental concerns and school workloads stop students from pursuing their artistic studies and training. There are students at 14 or 15 who have been offered places at prestigious music schools overseas, but their parents insist that they complete their O levels before they accept the offers. Madam Fang said she was dumbfounded.

But she must be realistic. There are few opportunities in Singapore for music performers, even when they return from prestigious institutions. Most of Singapore's talented musicians, like Siow Lee Chin for instance, are based abroad.

Still, there definitely has been a shift in parents' attitude towards the arts. The School of the Arts, for example, which opened this year and offers a six-year programme leading to the International Baccalaureate diploma, drew 243 students. It expects more when it moves into proper premises in Dhoby Ghaut in 2010. The LaSalle College of the Arts, which offers a variety of diploma, undergraduate and postgraduate courses, has 2,300 students. At Nafa, which offers a three-year diploma programme, there are some 2,200 students.

If you do not plan on becoming a concert soloist, there are enough job opportunities in the arts and arts-related fields. As Singapore gears up to be a creative hub, the number of jobs in the creative industry can only grow. According to Nafa president Choo Thiam Siew, about 90 per cent of each graduating cohort of its diploma programme find jobs within three months.

 

Read More...

Earn $$ with WidgetBucks!