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PAP Community Foundation to add 15,000 more places for pre-schoolers in next 5 years: PM Lee

Kopi0Kosong

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PAP Community Foundation to add 15,000 more places for pre-schoolers in next 5 years: PM Lee
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Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said that providing affordable and high-quality pre-school education is an important way that the Government, and the PCF, are helping young families to cope with the cost of living.PHOTO: LIANHE ZAOBAO
PUBLISHED 8 HOURS AGO UPDATED 1 HOUR AGO

Adrian Lim
Transport Correspondent

SINGAPORE - The PAP Community Foundation (PCF) will add 15,000 more places for pre-schoolers in the next five years, by building larger pre-schools and upgrading existing ones.
The PCF - the People's Action Party's charitable arm which runs the Sparkletots pre-schools - will also enhance the learning and development of its educators and staff, and push out more initiatives to support needy students.
Announcing this on Sunday (Sept 9) at the foundation's annual Family Day, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said that providing affordable and high-quality pre-school education is an important way that the Government, and the PCF, are helping young families to cope with the cost of living.

The PCF also runs Sparkle Care senior care centres to help families with elderly parents, and through Sparkletots and Sparkle Care, both young and old can have opportunities to interact with one another, he said.
"Dual-income families can be particularly confident that their children will be well taken care of when both parents are at work," added PM Lee, the PAP's secretary-general.
"And I hope, with less to worry about, parents will consider having a few more kids and enjoy more family time together."

The PCF is the largest pre-school operator with 360 Sparkletots centres in Singapore, with 40,000 places. Close to 10,000 of these places were created in the last three years.


The PCF also plans to open two more Sparkle Care centres by the middle of 2019, bringing the total number of senior care centres to five.
Mr Victor Bay, PCF's chief executive, said the foundation is expanding its capacity in early years and senior care.
"We are also creating more opportunities for the young to build stronger bonds with our seniors by organising inter-generational activities at both PCF Sparkletots and PCF Sparkle Care," said Mr Bay.
Madam Leong Ah Nooi, 94, who visits the Sparkle Care @ Yew Tee once a week. said she enjoys the time spent with the Sparkletots kids, as they take part in sing-alongs and art and craft sessions together.
“I’m happy and I’m reminded of my son and grandson when they were children,” she said.
Parents like Mr Mohammad Zulkiffli Abu Bakar, 46, a teacher,said they appreciate the well-rounded education which the PCF Sparkletots preschools provide, and the convenience of having centres located near their homes.
His two daughters, aged 16, and 11, and two sons, aged 14 and eight, have all attended PCF Sparkletots.
His youngest daughter, six, is currently attending PCF Sparkletots @ Kembangan Chai Chee Block 326.
“My kids are academically okay, but some of them are artistically inclined, and there’s an avenue for them to grow their talent,” he added.
Ms Gayathri Suganathan, 35, whose six-year-old daughter is at PCF Sparkletots @ Teck Ghee Block 466, said: “The centre she is studying at offers the option of learning Tamil, which I feel not many private schools in Singapore offer.”
But she hopes the PCF Sparkletots programme can have more vacancies and provision for special needs children, as her five-year-old son has mild attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, and has to attend a private school.
As part of Sunday’s event held at Gardens by the Bay, $666,000 was also raised by the PAP’s Members of Parliament and the funds will benefit 21 charities and causes.
The beneficiaries include the Assisi Hospice, Fei Yue Family Service, the Handicaps Welfare Association and the Singapore Cancer Society.

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Kopi0Kosong

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PAP Community Foundation to add 15,000 more places for pre-schoolers in next 5 years: PM Lee

Food for Thought:

15 000 more places? Why is there this need?
Is the birth rate going to increase over the next few years?
Is there gonna be an influx of alien children coming from outside the country?
Is this organisation, with the use of Government resources, going to cannibalise other providers and monopolise the market?
If not, does this indicate that there are insufficient places to cater for the present cohorts of 1.5 to 6 years old?
 

Kopi0Kosong

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Loyal
[B said:
The PCF - the People's Action Party's charitable arm[/B] which runs the Sparkletots pre-schools - will also enhance the learning and development of its educators and staff, and push out more initiatives to support needy students.
Announcing this on Sunday (Sept 9) at the foundation's annual Family Day, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said that providing affordable and high-quality pre-school education is an important way that the Government, and the PCF, are helping young families to cope with the cost of living.

How is PAP Community Foundation, a charitable foundation, linked to PAP, a political party? Is it a closed coupling?
In Singapore, is a charitable foundation or a political party allowed to operate a BUSINESS?
Is PCF a genuine charitable organisation/charity? What can lead to a disqualification of a charity?
 

JohnTan

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
How is PAP Community Foundation, a charitable foundation, linked to PAP, a political party? Is it a closed coupling?
In Singapore, is a charitable foundation or a political party allowed to operate a BUSINESS?
Is PCF a genuine charitable organisation/charity? What can lead to a disqualification of a charity?

It's all okay. PCF, just like NTUC, operates like a social enterprise.
 

JohnTan

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
PAP is a political party. Social enterprise my foot.
Child care is for the government to provide, not a political party.

PCF is aggressively expanding to ensure that private operators like Mindchamps are not profiteering and rewarding shareholders like myself excessively. While PAP's move to expand PCF has hurt my wallet, I have to support PAP for the greater good of Singapore. Majulah PAP! Majulah Singapura!
 

Kopi0Kosong

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Loyal
post: 2786197 said:
SINGAPORE - The PAP Community Foundation (PCF) will add 15,000 more places for pre-schoolers in the next five years, by building larger pre-schools and upgrading existing ones.

Announcing this on Sunday (Sept 9) at the foundation's annual Family Day, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said that providing affordable and high-quality pre-school education is an important way that the Government, and the PCF, are helping young families to cope with the cost of living.

Affordable? Is it affordable? Who is paying and who is giving?
Are there instances whereby PCF refuses to accept a child applicant or expels a child from its centre?

High-quality pre-school education? Is this a joke? How much truth is there in the claim? Self-praise is NO-PRAISE!
Survey/Research findings, local and international, have proven otherwise. Hence the reshuffling, re-defining and re-packaging.


Why is the PAP-led Government biased towards one organisation? Is the Government so incapable that its relevant ministries have to depend on non-governmental resources and agencies? Should Pre-school education be public education?

Is the PAP-led Government trying to right a wrong policy which it has DONE TO the people of Singapore?
 

JohnTan

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
Affordable? Is it affordable? Who is paying and who is giving?
Are there instances whereby PCF refuses to accept a child applicant or expels a child from its centre?

PCF's main competitor is Mindchamps kindergarten. It is a publicly listed company. Its fees are much higher and demand is also hot. PCF's fees are already considered low.
 

Kopi0Kosong

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Loyal
PCF's main competitor is Mindchamps kindergarten. It is a publicly listed company. Its fees are much higher and demand is also hot. PCF's fees are already considered low.

PCF is a CHARITABLE ORGANISATION. There is COMPETITION and COMPETITORS when it is DOING BUSINESS. Can a charity take the law into its own hands and punish according to what it deems appropriate? Can a charitable foundation make money from DOING NOTHING?
 

Kopi0Kosong

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Loyal
"The PCF is the largest pre-school operator with 360 Sparkletots centres in Singapore, with 40,000 places. Close to 10,000 of these places were created in the last three years."

Is PCF pre-schools a charitable organisation or is it running a money-making business: How much is it making from the parents or guardians, and how much is it TAKING FROM THE PAP-led Government annualLEE? Who is doing the external audit? Can PAP MPs make use of PCF resources, including PCF staff, without paying a cent? Shouldn't there be a clear demarcation between the two entities?
 

Kopi0Kosong

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Loyal
"The centre she is studying at offers the option of learning Tamil, which I feel not many private schools in Singapore offer.”

How many of such centres are there? What about learning the Malay Language? Does the PCF look after and afford equal resources and attention to all races or have certain minority races being marginalised? SeriousLEE, I, like many Singaporeans, have no idea at all and wish the relevant authorities can enlighten.
 

JohnTan

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
Does the PCF look after and afford equal resources and attention to all races or have certain minority races being marginalised?

There are specialized kindergartens that cater for the learning of malay, arabic and islamic studies. Don't worry. Singapore will not marginalize our aborigines. They have special privileges granted only to their race in our Constitution.
 
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