Integrated Programme subject combination and promotion criteria
What happens at the end of Y4 IP?
Tips on how to Excel in Integrated Programme
What to do if you are failing in Integrated Programme?
SCIENCE PRACTICAL TRAINING
List of ‘Top’ Secondary Schools (2017) in Singapore by Cut-Off PSLE aggregate score
Dear Parents/Students.
Here is the list of the ‘top’ 40 secondary schools by COP for 2017. I have chosen to cut the list off at the COP of 232. If a school has both IP and non-IP streams, the COP listed is only for non-IP. If a school has both Affiliation and Non-Affiliation groups, the COP listed is only for the Non-Affiliation group. Please note there is more to choosing secondary schools than just their cut-off points. If you wish to here from me more about choosing secondary schools, please attend my free Talk this coming Sunday 25 Nov 2018 from 5 pm to 6.30 pm (Talk on Choosing a Secondary School by our Principal Educator)
Name of School | COP 2016 | Highest Score |
NANYANG GIRLS’ HIGH SCHOOL | 264 | 281 |
RAFFLES GIRLS’ SCHOOL (SECONDARY) | 261 | 277 |
RAFFLES INSTITUTION | 260 | 278 |
METHODIST GIRLS’ SCHOOL (SECONDARY) | 259 | 276 |
HWA CHONG INSTITUTION | 259 | 279 |
DUNMAN HIGH SCHOOL | 257 | 280 |
CHIJ ST. NICHOLAS GIRLS’ SCHOOL | 257 | 274 |
NATIONAL JUNIOR COLLEGE | 256 | 272 |
ANGLO-CHINESE SCHOOL (INDEPENDENT) | 256 | 275 |
CEDAR GIRLS’ SECONDARY SCHOOL | 254 | 271 |
ST. JOSEPH’S INSTITUTION | 253 | 274 |
VICTORIA SCHOOL | 252 | 268 |
SINGAPORE CHINESE GIRLS’ SCHOOL | 252 | 269 |
CATHOLIC HIGH SCHOOL | 252 | 269 |
RIVER VALLEY HIGH SCHOOL | 251 | 273 |
TEMASEK JUNIOR COLLEGE | 250 | 267 |
PAYA LEBAR METHODIST GIRLS’ SCHOOL | 250 | 255 |
ST.ANDREW’S SECONDARY SCHOOL | 246 | 250 |
BUKIT PANJANG GOVT. HIGH SCHOOL | 245 | 267 |
ANDERSON SECONDARY SCHOOL | 245 | 264 |
CHIJ SECONDARY (TOA PAYOH) | 243 | 260 |
NAN HUA HIGH SCHOOL | 243 | 271 |
NAN CHIAU HIGH SCHOOL | 241 | 268 |
CRESCENT GIRLS’ SCHOOL | 241 | 260 |
FAIRFIELD METHODIST SCHOOL (SECONDARY) | 241 | 252 |
ANGLO-CHINESE SCHOOL (BARKER ROAD) | 241 | 248 |
ST. MARGARET’S SECONDARY SCHOOL | 240 | 251 |
SWISS COTTAGE SECONDARY SCHOOL | 240 | 262 |
CHUNG CHENG HIGH SCHOOL (MAIN) | 240 | 275 |
ANGLICAN HIGH SCHOOL | 238 | 275 |
COMMONWEALTH SECONDARY SCHOOL | 237 | 262 |
NGEE ANN SECONDARY | 237 | 269 |
CHUNG CHENG HIGH SCHOOL (YISHUN) | 237 | 256 |
MARIS STELLA HIGH SCHOOL | 236 | 259 |
YISHUN TOWN SECONDARY SCHOOL | 235 | 259 |
CHIJ ST. THERESA’S CONVENT | 234 | 240 |
XINMIN SECONDARY SCHOOL | 233 | 258 |
TANJONG KATONG SECONDARY | 232 | 255 |
FUHUA SECONDARY SCHOOL | 232 | 252 |
ZHONGHUA SECONDARY SCHOOL | 232 | 266 |
Integrated Programme subject combination and promotion criteria
What happens at the end of Y4 IP?
Tips on how to Excel in Integrated Programme
What to do if you are failing in Integrated Programme?
By EX-MOE TEACHERS & EXPERIENCED TUTORS
@ BLK 644, BUKIT BATOK CENTRAL, #01-68. S(650644).
CALL 65694897
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Tel: +(65) 6569 4897, +(65) 9786 0411 (SMS)
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List of ‘Top’ Secondary Schools (2016) in Singapore by Cut-Off PSLE aggregate score
Talk on Choosing a Secondary School by our Principal Educator (click to find out more)
Here is the list of the ‘top’ 38 secondary schools by COP for 2016. I have chosen to cut the list off at the COP of 235. If a school has both IP and non-IP streams, the COP listed is only for non-IP. If a school has both Affiliation and Non-Affiliation groups, the COP listed is only for the Non-Affiliation group. Please note there is more to choosing secondary schools than just their cut-off points. If you wish to here from me more about choosing secondary schools, please attend my free Talk this coming Sunday 25 Nov 2018 from 5 pm to 6.30 pm (Talk on Choosing a Secondary School by our Principal Educator)
Name of School | COP 2015 | Highest Score |
NANYANG GIRLS’ HIGH SCHOOL | 264 | 279 |
METHODIST GIRLS’ SCHOOL (SECONDARY) | 261 | 277 |
RAFFLES INSTITUTION | 261 | 276 |
RAFFLES GIRLS’ SCHOOL (SECONDARY) | 260 | 278 |
HWA CHONG INSTITUTION | 260 | 275 |
DUNMAN HIGH SCHOOL | 258 | 276 |
CHIJ ST. NICHOLAS GIRLS’ SCHOOL | 258 | 272 |
NATIONAL JUNIOR COLLEGE | 258 | 271 |
ANGLO-CHINESE SCHOOL (INDEPENDENT) | 256 | 274 |
VICTORIA SCHOOL | 254 | 268 |
CEDAR GIRLS’ SECONDARY SCHOOL | 254 | 264 |
RIVER VALLEY HIGH SCHOOL | 253 | 272 |
SINGAPORE CHINESE GIRLS’ SCHOOL | 253 | 270 |
CATHOLIC HIGH SCHOOL | 253 | 270 |
TEMASEK JUNIOR COLLEGE | 253 | 265 |
ST. JOSEPH’S INSTITUTION | 253 | 265 |
BUKIT PANJANG GOVT. HIGH SCHOOL | 247 | 272 |
ANDERSON SECONDARY SCHOOL | 247 | 266 |
CHIJ SECONDARY (TOA PAYOH) | 247 | 255 |
PAYA LEBAR METHODIST GIRLS’ SCHOOL | 247 | 250 |
NAN HUA HIGH SCHOOL | 245 | 261 |
ST.ANDREW’S SECONDARY SCHOOL | 245 | 249 |
ST. MARGARET’S SECONDARY SCHOOL | 244 | 252 |
NAN CHIAU HIGH SCHOOL | 243 | 266 |
CRESCENT GIRLS’ SCHOOL | 243 | 260 |
FAIRFIELD METHODIST SCHOOL (SECONDARY) | 243 | 254 |
SWISS COTTAGE SECONDARY SCHOOL | 241 | 257 |
ANGLICAN HIGH SCHOOL | 240 | 261 |
CHUNG CHENG HIGH SCHOOL (MAIN) | 239 | 266 |
COMMONWEALTH SECONDARY SCHOOL | 239 | 253 |
ANGLO-CHINESE SCHOOL (BARKER ROAD) | 239 | 248 |
NGEE ANN SECONDARY | 238 | 263 |
YISHUN TOWN SECONDARY SCHOOL | 237 | 262 |
CHUNG CHENG HIGH SCHOOL (YISHUN) | 237 | 258 |
TANJONG KATONG GIRLS’ SCHOOL | 236 | 258 |
XINMIN SECONDARY SCHOOL | 236 | 252 |
MARIS STELLA HIGH SCHOOL | 235 | 253 |
Related Links:
SEC 1 (2018) MATH ALGEBRA HEAD START
TUITION FOR INTEGRATED PROGRAMME (IP) STUDENTS
LATEST! – List of ‘Top’ Secondary Schools (2017) in Singapore by Cut-Off PSLE aggregate score
(1) Choosing a sec school: Is it more important to be in a ‘Top’ school or the Top class?
(2) Choosing a secondary school …
(3) Beware the critical years in math education in Singapore …
(4) JOIN THE SINGAPORE LEARNER ACADEMY – PRIVATE SECONDARY EDUCATION
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By EX-MOE TEACHERS & EXPERIENCED TUTORS
@ BLK 644, BUKIT BATOK CENTRAL, #01-68. S(650644).
CALL 65694897 OR SMS 98530744 OR 97860411.
Choosing a sec school: Is it more important to be in a ‘Top’ school or the Top class?
If you are confident of being in the top class of a top school, go ahead and choose that school. This normally happens to students who have PSLE aggregate scores of more than 270. But if you happen to be in the bottom 20% of those admitted to a particular school, chances are, you will eventually not be in the top class of that school for your level.
What are the implications of not being in the top 20% of a school? In many schools, only the top 80 pupils get to do the Triple Pure Sciences plus A. Math in Sec 3, the subject combination that gives you the most choices when choosing subjects to do for the A-levels. Some schools even have only one such class. These top students are selected based on their end-of-year streaming exams in Sec 2.
The exams in top schools are of course difficult, thus many Sec 2 pupils in top schools find themselves disqualified from doing the Triple Pure Sciences (TPS) in Sec 3. If you are in IP school and doing badly, you may be barred from doing at least one Pure Science subject in Year 3. Thus a student who scored 240 in the PSLE may end up doing TPS in a ‘neighbourhood’ sec school whereas one who scored 252 to enter a top school may eventually be deprived of doing A.Math or one of the pure sciences only because the latter school set much harder exam questions in Sec 2!
Parents often forget that their once top-performing children may end up being the worst performing students in a top school, a result of being a small fish in a big pond, a possible reality that many students and their parents are not ready to face, after spending 6 years in a primary school where the child was the “darling” of the principal, HODs and teachers. Let me give you a few examples of the devastating effects of being an average or bottom student in a top school. I shall begin with my own experience:
(1) I did not work hard enough when I was in Sec 2 in RI in 1986. RI test and exam papers were tough so I had mediocre grades. Thus I was not given the option of doing Pure Biology. I could only take the Physics-Chemistry-History-Literature combination, in addition to other compulsory subjects. That meant I would not be allowed to do Biology at A-level, and at that time, Biology was a compulsory subject for choosing Medicine and Dentistry at the NUS. Thus many of us could not eventually become doctors simply because we did not do very well at RI’s sec 2 exam papers. Had I gone to a school near my home then, I’m sure I would have been in top 20% of that school as I was already in the top 2% at the national level for my cohort!
(2) Very recently, an NJC student has not been allowed to do H2 Math or H2 Chemistry in his Year 5. This means he will be excluded from ALL Science, Engineering or Medicine-related courses at most universities. With a PSLE score of 257, I’m sure he wouldn’t have been in the same predicament had he gone to do O-levels in a sec school whose COP is around 235-240, as NJC papers are way tougher than the papers of most schools at Sec 4 level.
(3) An RVHS student was retained in his Year 4 because of poor results. Imagine that your friends from non-IP schools getting places in JCs while you still have to struggle to pass your own school exams in Sec 4 again chiefly because your school sets harder exam papers. Repeating a year can be very hard for a student, both academically and psychologically.
(4) A HCI student was asked to take the O-levels instead because of poor performance. I found his academic standards below that of students from lesser known schools. This must have been a case of being demoralised from right from Sec 1. And he was NOT the only such case from HCI or NYGH that ended up with me since I started tutoring in 2004.
The above are just a few real examples. There many more cases of IP students being asked to do O-levels or leave the school to find an O-level school, or students in some top schools (IP or non-IP) being retained. The less serious cases involve students in top schools not being allowed to do certain subjects such as A. Math or a Pure Science. My point is that these very good PSLE performers might have fared better in less ‘prestigious’ schools, acing the O level exams and going on to top JCs and eventually getting 4 A’s at the A-levels. For example, I had a tutee (with very good PSLE score) who came from Tanglin Sec, went on to PJC and obtained enough A’s at the A-levels to get a place in a much-sought-after course in a prestigious university.
Some parents and students also have this mistaken idea that top schools have better teachers and better academic materials. BOTH of these perceptions are often wrong. If you are in a top school, most of the teachers EXPECT you to be either smart (can’t blame them on this right?) or have tuition. They teach fast and set very hard test and exam papers. Do they sound like nurturing or caring teachers to you? Top schools become top schools simply because they take in top students to begin with, not because they take in poor-performing students and are able to turn them around through skilful teaching.
In summary, to me, consistently being in the top class of your school is very important, regardless of which school you are in. And it’s just common sense that it is easier to academically dominate a good school than a top school.
There is NO NEED to compare your results or choice of school with friends or relatives or neighbours, or desire to be part of a ‘Top’ school. There is no need to be egoistic or elitist. There is no need to be exclusive, else you’d find yourself being excluded from many good things in life. Let others do what they want. You must have your own clear idea what success means. The end is almost always more important than the beginning. How you END your formal academic training matters more than how you started.
Ilyasa
About myself:
I was a secondary school teacher for 3 years before becoming a tutor in 2004. I also taught in a private school and in an international school. I’ve taught Math, Science, Physics and Chemistry to all kinds of students from Pri to JC and from all streams: Express, NA, NT, IP and IB. From my students and their parents I’ve learnt a lot about the various schools in Singapore, their problems, their strengths and so on. I also come from a family of teachers, and many of my friends are also teachers, HODs, VPs and Ps. I tutor my own children and they all have become proficient in Math and the Sciences. My youngest daughter just got her PSLE (2016) results and this will be the 3rd time I’m going through this school selection process. If you have any questions regarding schools, education or about tuition, feel free to contact me at 97860411. I will help answer your questions as best as I can. All the best!
(1) Choosing a secondary school …
(2) Beware the critical years in math education in Singapore …
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EDUCATIONAL SERVICES:
By EX-MOE TEACHERS & EXPERIENCED TUTORS
@ BLK 644, BUKIT BATOK CENTRAL, #01-68. S(650644).
CALL 65694897 OR SMS 98530744 OR 97860411.
List of ‘Top’ Secondary Schools (2013) in Singapore by Cut-Off PSLE aggregate score (2012)
Name of School | COP 2013 | Highest Score |
NANYANG GIRLS’ HIGH SCHOOL | 265 | 280 |
RAFFLES INSTITUTION | 263 | 284 |
RAFFLES GIRLS’ SCHOOL (SECONDARY) | 263 | 280 |
HWA CHONG INSTITUTION | 261 | 277 |
NATIONAL JUNIOR COLLEGE | 259 | 272 |
RIVER VALLEY HIGH SCHOOL | 256 | 282 |
DUNMAN HIGH SCHOOL | 256 | 278 |
CHIJ ST. NICHOLAS GIRLS’ SCHOOL | 253 | 275 |
METHODIST GIRLS’ SCHOOL (SECONDARY) | 252 | 267 |
CEDAR GIRLS’ SECONDARY SCHOOL | 251 | 272 |
TEMASEK JUNIOR COLLEGE | 251 | 270 |
SINGAPORE CHINESE GIRLS’ SCHOOL | 251 | 260 |
ANGLO-CHINESE SCHOOL (INDEPENDENT) | 249 | 261 |
CATHOLIC HIGH SCHOOL | 249 | 261 |
BUKIT PANJANG GOVT. HIGH SCHOOL | 246 | 274 |
VICTORIA SCHOOL | 246 | 268 |
ANDERSON SECONDARY SCHOOL | 246 | 265 |
NAN HUA HIGH SCHOOL | 245 | 265 |
ST. JOSEPH’S INSTITUTION | 245 | 262 |
CRESCENT GIRLS’ SCHOOL | 244 | 269 |
CHIJ SECONDARY (TOA PAYOH) | 243 | 251 |
ANGLICAN HIGH SCHOOL | 242 | 262 |
ST. MARGARET’S SECONDARY SCHOOL | 241 | 251 |
NAN CHIAU HIGH SCHOOL | 240 | 266 |
CHUNG CHENG HIGH SCHOOL (MAIN) | 239 | 258 |
FAIRFIELD METHODIST SCHOOL (SECONDARY) | 239 | 251 |
COMMONWEALTH SECONDARY SCHOOL | 238 | 251 |
SWISS COTTAGE SECONDARY SCHOOL | 237 | 256 |
TANJONG KATONG GIRLS’ SCHOOL | 236 | 271 |
Related links:
O-LEVEL | SEC | PHYSICS TUITION
O-LEVEL | SEC | A. MATH TUITION
O-LEVEL | SEC 1-4 | MATH TUITION
O-LEVEL | SEC | CHEMISTRY TUITION
O-LEVEL | SEC 1-4 | ENGLISH TUITION
O-LEVEL | SEC 1-4 | MALAY LANGUAGE TUITION
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By EX-MOE TEACHERS & EXPERIENCED TUTORS
@ BLK 644, BUKIT BATOK CENTRAL, #01-68. S(650644).
CALL 65694897 OR SMS 98530744 OR 97860411.
Is every school in Singapore a good school?
When we are talking about good schools, are we referring to the schools’ (1) teachers, (2) facilities, (3) programmes or (4) students?
If we are referring to just aspect (1), yes, I would agree that all schools here are good schools, in the sense that most of the teachers are qualified, experienced and dedicated to their profession.
But if we are talking about facilities and programmes, we know that some schools get more funding and more autonomy in deciding their curriculum. We can see with our own eyes that some school complexes are physically much bigger and in some schools nearly all or all of the classrooms are air-conditioned, which really makes learning more comfortable. We also know for sure that some schools provide more CCA options and have a greater variety of enrichment activities. So with respect to (2) and (3), it’s kind of a stretch to say that every school here is a “good” school.
Through the PSLE system and streaming, we have created elite schools and ‘neighbourhood’ schools. Do you think students in these two kinds of schools perform and behave in classrooms the same way? Many of my family members, in-laws and relatives are teachers or ex-teachers. We meet at least once a year, often sharing stories of what goes on in the schools. The result? Suffice to say that I will not send my children to certain schools. Because of this, it will be against my conscience to say that every school in Singapore is a good school.
It is a good and noble aim, to make every school in Singapore a good school. But to achieve results, it has to be done sincerely and with a strong will, because teachers, parents and students can see for themselves what actually happens in the schools. How schools are viewed by parents and prospective students cannot be changed by oral persuasion alone.