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Education as an Instrument of Policy in Southeast Asia: The Singapore Example

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 April 2011

Extract

The cultural and ethno-linguistic diversity, of Southeast Asia as a whole is reflected in the heterogeneous character of the populations of the individual states of the region, and everywhere problems associated with multi-lingualism and multiculturism challenge the authority of centralised governments. Modern education has increasingly come to be used as a means to confront and overcome these problems. Governments have sought to inculcate an acceptance of and a compliance with prevailing political systems, to detach disparate communities from their distinctive cultural affinities, and to promote a sense of national identity through formal public instruction. The purpose of this paper is to place modern education in Southeast Asia within its historical context, and to consider the ways in which several governments have used public instruction to achieve political ends.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The National University of Singapore 1977

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References

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4 Ibid., pp. 15–16. Probably the best account of education in traditional Vietnam is to be found in Woodside, Alexander B., Vietnam and the Chinese Model (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1971), pp. 181194CrossRefGoogle Scholar

5 Furnivall, J. S., Educational Progress in Southeast Asia (New York: Institute of Pacific Relations, 1943), pp. 1315Google Scholar. A valuable account of traditional education in Burma, which was similar in many ways to education in Siam, Laos and Cambodia, is provided by Kaung, U, “A Survey of the History of Education in Burma before the British conquest and after,” Journal of the Burma Research Society, 46, Part II (December 1963), 933Google Scholar. See also Mendelson, E. Michael, Sangha and State in Burma (Ithaca and London: Cornell University Press, 1975), pp. 150157Google Scholar. An illuminating first-hand account of traditional Burmese education is to be found in Yoe, Shway, The Burman: His Life and Notions (1882; rpt. New York: W. W. Norton & Company Inc., 1963), pp. 1420Google Scholar. The nature of education in traditional Malay society is suggested by Roff, William R., The Origins of Malay Nationalism (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1967), pp. 8485Google Scholar, and by Seng, Philip Loh Fook, Seeds of Separatism: educational policy in Malaya 1874–1940 (Kuala Lumpur: Oxford University Press, 1975), pp. 1112Google Scholar.

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14 In 1918, a total of (Straits Settlements) $365,159 or 2·3 per cent of the budget was spent on education in the Colony, which included Penang and Malacca. This figure rose to (S.S.) $2,827,569 or 6·9 per cent of the annual budget in 1938. The corresponding figures for Singapore alone were: 1918, (S.S.) $288,678 and 1938, (S.S.) $1,789,442. These figures include sums spent by the Public Works Department on the construction and maintenance of school buildings, and have been compiled from the Financial Statements appended to the Annual Departmental Reports for the years 1918 and 1938.

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24 Ibid., pp. 30–31. (There have been fluctuations in policy on second-language usage-Ed.)

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26 Far Eastern Economic Review, 26 December 1975, p. 24.