“It’s like an enforced time to study,” Andrew Koh, a parent, said of private tuition.
Koh, a 45-year-old father of two, reckoned he spends between $700 and $800 a month on tuition classes for his Primary 4 daughter.
On average, his daughter attends five hours of classes per week after Koh noticed that her grades were dropping.
Koh told AsiaOne: “The problem was that [my daughter] spends a lot of time watching TV or YouTube.”
“That’s confirmed,” his daughter interjected, leading to laughter from Koh.
He continued: “[They also] play with their devices – if they go for tuition, I think that will help them to spend their time more meaningfully.”
$1.8 billion spent on private tuition in 2023
Koh is one of many Singaporean parents who have contributed to the $1.8 billion spent on tuition in 2023, according to a report by The Straits Times on Jan 20, citing the Singapore Department of Statistics’ Household Expenditure Survey 2023.
The survey, which polled 13,100 households between December 2022 and December 2023, is conducted every five years.
The amount spent on tuition, which includes lessons at home or at centres, has risen from $1.1 billion in 2013 to $1.4 billion in 2018 before reaching $1.8 billion last year, The Straits Times reported.
In 2023, households spent approximately $404 per month on education, of which almost $105 was spent on tuition.
In the previous survey, families spent $340 each month and about $88 on tuition.
The amount of money spent by households varied according to their income, with the top 20 per cent spending almost $163 per month while the bottom 20 per cent spent $36 within the same period.
Money for grades
For Koh and other parents AsiaOne spoke to, the money pumped into their children’s private tuition has been worthwhile.
Koh shared that his daughter’s results for Mathematics and Chinese Language have gone up by two grades each, and that they’ve only just enrolled her in Science tuition.
“Class sizes [in school] are a bit big, I think we definitely need extra tuition… School teachers are overworked and can’t afford the attention that tuition teachers can give to students in class,” he told AsiaOne.
Father-of-three Sivashankar, 41, has all three of his children attending tuition classes.
His two Primary 6 boys attend six hours of tuition a week, while his Primary 1 girl goes for two hours of tuition each week.
Across all three children, Sivashankar said that he spends about $275 per child per week, or over $3,300 a month.
He decided to start sending his boys for tuition as a “boost” to cover gaps in their school education and for academic guidance in ways that parents cannot provide.
“The tutors are there actually as guidance to fill up the hours when they (children) are at home, for them to do their revision and prepare them for examinations,” he explained.
Different reasons for tuition
But tuition results have been a mixed bag for Sivashankar, he added.
While one of his boys has benefitted significantly from tuition, the other has not.
“It varies child to child… the child’s perspective and dynamic must suit the tutor, and the method of tutoring must suit the child,” Sivashankar said.
For one of them, tuition is mostly a means of “filling up time” so that he can spend it productively. For the other boy, however, it helps polish up his understanding of curriculum.
While he feels that not all Singaporeans are overly reliant on tuition, the majority of parents he’s spoken with or seen online do rely on tuition a lot.
“There are other parents who feel that what the school is providing is sufficient,” he also said. “If they (children) need any support, it would be more of what the household can do for them.”
For Eric Yap, a 46-year-old father of two, tuition has been crucial in helping his children make the passing grade for their Chinese Language exams.
Both his boys, Primary 3 and Secondary 1, attend two-and-a-half hours of tuition each week, costing Yap $500 a month in total – $300 for his older boy and $200 for his younger child.