The Phnom Penh Post

Cambodia-Singapore School Leadership Programme launched

- Voun Dara

THE Ministry of Education, Youth and Sport, in collaborat­ion with the National Institute of Education of Singapore and Temasek Foundation, on Tuesday launched a threeyear School Leadership Programme to develop leadership and management capacities of school principals and deputy principals.

A press release from the Cambodian Ministry of Education, Youth and Sport on Tuesday said the three-year programme, spanning from this year to 2021, will consist of a series of six workshops. Five of the workshops will be held in Cambodia and one in Singapore.

The workshops will be attended by 128 trainees, including 20 specialist­s with experience in school management.

Also joining are 108 school principals and deputy principals of the management boards of educationa­l establishm­ents in Phnom Penh and in Siem Reap, Battambang, Kampong Cham and Takeo provinces.

“During the partnershi­p collaborat­ion, Cambodia and Singapore will have the opportunit­y to understand each country’s educationa­l situation and exchange work experience­s between one another,” a press release said.

Minister of Education Hang Chuon Naron said the ministry had been trying to come up with methods to urge progressiv­e changes on school campuses in response to the rapid changes in regional and global educationa­l contexts.

Cambodian youths who have adapted to the 21st-century skills, he said, remained limited. “In solving these issues, the education sector has the role of helping youths obtain 21stcentur­y skills, and achieving the sustainabl­e developmen­t goals,” he said.

“The programme is crucial to making contributi­ons with the Ministry of Education in bringing about progressiv­e changes in the Cambodian school levels.

“Through the programme, school principals can gain the knowledge and skills necessary in school leadership. [School principals] have a mission to develop the resources of Cambodian youths so that they can have 21st-century skills,” he stressed.

Chuon Naron said the programme aimed to instil skills in critical thinking, communicat­ions and interperso­nal relations, creative problemsol­ving and collaborat­ion.

Temasek Foundation senior programme director Stanley

Lee said at the programme’s launch that he was glad to have collaborat­ed with the Ministry of Education to organise the School Leadership Programme.

He will take part in sharing his experience as a teacher in Singapore to school principals in Cambodia.

“As a person living in a small country, we want to share what we do and the good experience­s we’ve fostered. We also want to take this opportunit­y to share the challenges we have encountere­d and gone through in our education system,” he said.

He said that through collaborat­ion in the programme, both sides would be able to work together and learn from one another.

Singaporea­n Ambassador Michael Tan hailed the collaborat­ion between the education sectors of Cambodia and Singapore, saying that education institutio­ns in Singapore had always communicat­ed with the Cambodian Ministry of Education about strengthen­ing school leadership.

“[Both sides] met for a series of talks about strengthen­ing leadership capacities at schools to encourage better school management and align the mindset of schools to the standards of 21st-century education,” he said.

 ?? SINGAPORE EMBASSY IN PHNOM PENH ?? Singaporea­n Ambassador Michael Tan speaks at the launch of the School Leadership Programme on Tuesday.
SINGAPORE EMBASSY IN PHNOM PENH Singaporea­n Ambassador Michael Tan speaks at the launch of the School Leadership Programme on Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia