Written Answer to Unanswered Oral Question

Criteria for Admission of Foreign Students to Public Education Institutions

Speakers

Summary

This question concerns the admission criteria, student caps, and fee structures for foreign students in Singapore's public education institutions, as raised by Mr Seah Kian Peng. Minister for Education Ong Ye Kung explained that Singaporeans are prioritized for admission to ensure no citizen is displaced, with foreign students admitted only after local demand is met. Currently, foreign students comprise less than 5% of enrollment in schools and junior colleges and under 10% in polytechnics and autonomous universities. Fees are heavily differentiated by nationality, resulting in foreign students paying significantly higher amounts, such as up to $15,240 for secondary school compared to $300 for locals. In higher education, foreign students receiving the Tuition Grant pay at least double the fees of Singaporean students and are subject to a service obligation.

Transcript

57 Mr Seah Kian Peng asked the Minister for Education (a) whether he can outline the criteria for admission of foreign students to our public education institutions (primary, secondary, polytechnics, junior colleges and tertiary institutions); (b) whether there are specific caps on the numbers of foreign students in these institutions; and (c) how are the fees charged for foreign students vis-á-vis that for local students.

Mr Ong Ye Kung: Our public education system is designed and developed to cater to the needs of Singaporeans. Singaporean students are admitted first, before we consider taking in a small number of foreign students. Hence, no Singaporean student will be displaced by a foreign student.

For example, foreign students seeking admission to our Primary schools can only register in Phase 3 of the Primary 1 Registration Exercise, after all Singaporean children have been allocated a place under earlier phases.

Likewise, the Institutes of Higher Learning (IHLs) first admit Singaporean students who are able to meet their admission standards. Thereafter, they will raise the admission criteria, and then admit a small proportion of foreign students.

In our Primary schools, Secondary schools and Junior Colleges, less than 5% are foreign students. In Polytechnics and Autonomous Universities, the proportion is less than 10%.

Fees are differentiated by nationality to reflect the privileges of citizenship, and so foreign students pay significantly higher fees than local students. In primary school, a Singaporean student pays $156 in fees every year while a foreign student pays up to $8,556. For Secondary school, the annual fees for Singaporeans and foreign students are $300 and $15,240 respectively. For pre-university, the corresponding figures are $396 versus $19,524 per year.

Foreign students at our Polytechnics and AUs may apply for the Tuition Grant in return for a service obligation. Those who receive the Tuition Grant will pay at least double the amount of fees that a Singaporean student pays.