Very fair? How are they footing the bill? You mean with the tax dollars all citizens, PRs, and foreigners are paying? So really, PR are partially and foreigners completely double paying.AllBiz wrote:In looking at primary and secondary school education costs for permanent residents, I came across this helpful page: http://www.moe.gov.sg/media/parliamenta ... idents.php
Basically it says citizens can expect to pay $200 per year, permanent residency $800 per year. I assume these figures are based upon the status of the parents, not the children.
Those seem like very fair numbers for me, as the government is footing 90% of the bill even for permanent residents.
Is the same true for higher education? If anyone is willing to share, I'd like to know the cost of higher education for students of permanent resident parents, thank you.
It would depend on the school. Read this from NUS:AllBiz wrote:Fair enough, I was just trying to suggest that the costs seemed reasonable to me (I'm currently in Thailand where a foreign child would expect to pay $20,000 per year for primary school).
Anyways I didn't mean for this thread to be about fairness, just curious what permanent resident parents can expect to pay for their kid's college.
The kicker is hearing about international students being rejected for employment passes and not having a way to actually work in SG to meet the conditions of that bond.All Singapore Permanent Residents and international students (except those already in receipt of a service bond from the PSC or the Ministry of Health) will be required to undertake a service bond under the terms of the tuition grant to work for a Singapore-registered company for three years upon completion of their degrees so as to discharge some of their obligations to the Singapore public for the high subsidy to their university education.
if i'm not wrong, fees are charged according to the child, not the parents.AllBiz wrote:In looking at primary and secondary school education costs for permanent residents...
Basically it says citizens can expect to pay $200 per year, permanent residency $800 per year. I assume these figures are based upon the status of the parents, not the children...
there are a bunch of other fees you'll have to pay for your child too. i remember when i was in school in singapore, i was the only one that did not qualify for "EduSave" - essentially an account for singapore citizen children that the government sticks money in every year for stuff like extra/co-curricular activities not conducted by the school (??? i can't remember exactly).AllBiz wrote:Fair enough, I was just trying to suggest that the costs seemed reasonable to me (I'm currently in Thailand where a foreign child would expect to pay $20,000 per year for primary school).
Anyways I didn't mean for this thread to be about fairness...
Kids of PR parents and PR kids are different things. I hope you are not mixing them.AllBiz wrote:Fair enough, I was just trying to suggest that the costs seemed reasonable to me (I'm currently in Thailand where a foreign child would expect to pay $20,000 per year for primary school).
Anyways I didn't mean for this thread to be about fairness, just curious what permanent resident parents can expect to pay for their kid's college.
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