Breaking
AUKaniva Gains Mains Drinking Water Supply After Century of Reliance on Rainwater and Bore WaterBRCasa da Mulher Brasileira em Manaus segue sem previsão de inauguraçãoBRQuatro pessoas morrem em acidente entre dois carros em Rosário OesteBRHomem é preso após agredir ex-companheira com capacete e tentar atropelar pessoas em UberabaBRPolícia Civil investiga venda de senhas para agendamento da nova Carteira de Identidade Nacional em ROINARAI Report Highlights E20 Fuel Concerns for E10 VehiclesCN幼兒園負責人與園長聯手凌虐3歲童遭判刑INAllahabad HC asks Centre, ASI to respond to plea challenging Taj Mahal survey refusalKRSouth Korea, Singapore Begin Second Round of FTA Upgrade TalksKR북한 전 지역에 비 예보…일부 지역선 폭우·벼락·돌풍 주의AUKaniva Gains Mains Drinking Water Supply After Century of Reliance on Rainwater and Bore WaterBRCasa da Mulher Brasileira em Manaus segue sem previsão de inauguraçãoBRQuatro pessoas morrem em acidente entre dois carros em Rosário OesteBRHomem é preso após agredir ex-companheira com capacete e tentar atropelar pessoas em UberabaBRPolícia Civil investiga venda de senhas para agendamento da nova Carteira de Identidade Nacional em ROINARAI Report Highlights E20 Fuel Concerns for E10 VehiclesCN幼兒園負責人與園長聯手凌虐3歲童遭判刑INAllahabad HC asks Centre, ASI to respond to plea challenging Taj Mahal survey refusalKRSouth Korea, Singapore Begin Second Round of FTA Upgrade TalksKR북한 전 지역에 비 예보…일부 지역선 폭우·벼락·돌풍 주의
Newsgather
BackHarvard Grad's Speech Sparks Debate on Singapore's Education System
Harvard Grad's Speech Sparks Debate on Singapore's Education System
Developing
SCMP Economy6/17/2026Education1 min readChina

Harvard Grad's Speech Sparks Debate on Singapore's Education System

Quick Look

A Harvard graduate's speech highlighting the importance of opportunity over innate talent has reignited discussions about Singapore's competitive education system and whether it adequately supports students whose abilities develop later.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

A Harvard graduate's speech at a hooding ceremony highlighted the role of opportunity in his success, prompting debate about Singapore's education system.

Font size

“I often think about how much of my life depended on someone, somewhere, deciding that my past performance did not have to define my future potential,” said Tan, who delivered the student address at the Harvard Medical School-affiliated PhD programmes’ hooding ceremony on May 28.

“Someone opened the door that had been closed to me, and because of that I eventually found my way here to Harvard … being here is an incredible privilege, but it’s also a reminder that talent is everywhere, opportunity is not,” he added.

His 12-minute speech, posted on YouTube, has since revived debate on whether Singapore’s high-performing but intensely competitive education system gives enough room to students whose interests and abilities emerge later.

Singapore regularly dominates global education assessments such as the Programme for International Student Assessment and the Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study. In recent years, it has introduced reforms to give students more flexibility, including broader post-secondary pathways, aptitude-based admissions and subject-based banding.

Open Questions

  • Does Singapore's system adequately support late bloomers?
  • Are recent reforms sufficient for flexibility?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by SCMP Economy.

Related Stories

More on this topiceducation system