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Singapore Chinese Girls' School (Abbreviation: SCGS) is an independent, all-girls school in Bukit Timah, Singapore.

Founded in 1899, it is one of the oldest and best institutions in Singapore. It is a full school with both primary and secondary divisions, admitting girls between the ages of 6 and 16. The secondary division was among the first schools in Singapore to be accorded the status of an independent school in 1989, and entry is competitive.

History[edit]

Foundation Years[edit]

Singapore Chinese Girls' School (SCGS) was founded as an all-girls Peranakan school in July 1899 by a group of Straits Chinese men, namely Lim Boon Keng, Song Ong Siang and Khoo Seok Wan. The school's premises were located at Hill Street. The school’s faculty consisted of an English headmistress, and had an enrollment of seven girls.[1]

In 1923, the school left its premises at Hill Street (the site later became the Central Fire Station) and moved to Emerald Hill. The premises at Emerald Hill costed S$60,000. The school building was a two-storey block with 12 classrooms, an assembly hall, a staff room, and a principal’s office.

From 1905 to 1936, the school admitted a handful of male students, but afterwards reverted to being an all-girls school. After 1946, newly created government laws forced the school to accept girls of all races. By 1950, Singapore Chinese Girls’ School had an enrollment of 700 girls, which rose to 900 in 1952.

Attainment of Independent Status[edit]

In 1989, SCGS celebrated its 90th birthday and became an independent school, with more latitude to expand the curriculum. On 4 July 1994, after 70 years at Emerald Hill, the school moved to a newly built campus at Dunearn Road.

In 2011, SCGS was presented the School Excellence Award, a pinnacle award under the Ministry of Education's (MOE) Masterplan of Awards,[2] which recognizes schools for excellence in both education methods and results. In addition, SCGS received the Best Practice Award for all three categories (Student All-Round Development, Teaching and Learning, and Staff Well-being) and the Outstanding Development Award for National Education.[3] These achievements affirm the school’s holistic education for the pupils as well as the capacity and commitment of the staff.[4]

Introduction of Joint Integrated Programme[edit]

In 2012, MOE announced that SCGS and five other schools would offer the Integrated Programme (IP).[5] However, SCGS would continue to offer the Singapore-Cambridge GCE Ordinary Level Programme to existing and incoming students. In January 2013, SCGS accepted the first batch of IP students in the Secondary One intake alongside new students on the 'O' Level programme. After four years at SCGS, IP students will bypass the 'O' Level examination and move on to Eunoia Junior College.[6] The junior college was newly created as part of a Joint Integrated Programme (JIP) to accept IP students from SCGS, CHIJ Saint Nicholas Girls' School and Catholic High School starting from 2017. Besides IP students, Eunoia Junior College will also accept students from other secondary schools with 'O' Level qualifications. All students enrolled in Eunoia Junior College will sit for the Singapore-Cambridge GCE 'A' Level examination after a two-year programme.

School Identity & Culture[edit]

Crest[edit]

The colours of the school crest are jade and gold.

This reflects her time-honoured tradition, because jade and gold in Hokkien (Kim Gek), which is the colloquial name for SCGS girls and alumni, and in Mandarin (JinYu) connotes a young Peranakan Chinese girl brought up and educated in the best manner.[7]

The school motto is "Sincerity, Courage, Generosity and Service."

The Yin and yang aspects of the traditional Chinese culture symbol of balance are in jade and gold respectively. This symbol, which represents the universe, light, darkness, life and death, lies at the heart of the many branches of classical Chinese sciences, philosophy and medicine.[8]

Notable alumnae[edit]

Politics and government[edit]

  • Halimah Yacob: First Female President of Singapore, First Female Speaker of Parliament, National Trades Union Congress[9]
  • Thio Li Ann: Law professor, National University of Singapore; Former Nominated Member of Parliament[10]
  • Janice Koh: Nominated Member of Parliament; Actress[11]

Corporate[edit]

  • Jennie Chua: CEO, The Ascott Group; Chairperson, Community Chest Committee, National Council of Social Service;[12] former General Manager, Raffles Hotel[13]

Medicine[edit]

  • Dr Susan Lim: Prominent surgeon and medical researcher

Social[edit]

  • Euleen Goh: Chairman, Singapore International Foundation[14]

Entertainment and the Arts[edit]

  • Rui En: Actress/singer, Mediacorp

See also[edit]

  • Education in Singapore

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Singapore Chinese Girls' School". National Library Board, Singapore.
  2. ^ "MOE Masterplan of Awards for Schools" (PDF). Ministry of Education, Singapore. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-04-26.
  3. ^ "Recognising Best Practices of Schools in Delivering Holistic Education" (News release). Ministry of Education. 18 September 2011.
  4. ^ [1]
  5. ^ "More schools to offer alternative secondary school programmes". AsiaOne.
  6. ^ "New JC named Eunoia; to take in CHIJ St Nicholas, Catholic High, SCGS IP students in 2017". The Straits Times.
  7. ^ https://scgs.moe.edu.sg/about-scgs/our-beliefs/
  8. ^ "School Crest". Singapore Chinese Girls' School.[permanent dead link]
  9. ^ "Mdm Halimah Yacob's Profile". Archived from the original on 2012-12-03. Retrieved 2013-01-29.
  10. ^ "Professor Thio's Profile". Archived from the original on 2014-03-26. Retrieved 2013-01-29.
  11. ^ "Ms Janice Koh's Profile". Archived from the original on 2012-12-01. Retrieved 2013-01-29.
  12. ^ "National Council of Social Services: Organisational Structure". Archived from the original on 2011-09-01. Retrieved 2013-01-29.
  13. ^ An Interview with the Former President & CEO of Raffles Holdings
  14. ^ Singapore International Foundation Board

External links[edit]

  • Official website