PSLE score - what's it to you?


By Michelle Wee


This year was the first time I went to school to collect the PSLE results. #3 asked me to go because both of her best friends' mums were going. Needless to say, the anticipation in the school hall was killing everyone. I don't know who was more anxious, the students or the parents.




Ok, I'm sure all of you want to know what #3 got, since I did put #1 and #2's scores up on my blog previously. Some people are secretive about it, but to me, it doesn't matter very much. So here it is. She got 4 'A's with an aggregate of 229. We are all very proud of her because even until P4, she was hyperactive and found it hard to sit for more than 15 minutes. She had always been in one of the last classes and was still failing some subjects at the beginning of P6. The fact that she took the exams very seriously, was motivated to do well and gave of her best efforts was already cause for celebration. She was jumping for joy and exclaiming "I got an A for Chinese!"



On the other hand, her best friend scored 246 and cried.



The whole day, my phone beeped non-stop with people enquiring about her results. I understand how anxious her tutors were to know if their hard work had paid off, and I understand the concern of family. But there were many other people who just wanted to know her score.



What is it about people wanting to know other people's kids' scores? So that they would feel better about themselves if their kid scored higher? Or that they could put a number to a child's intelligence? Or to make all sorts of judgements about the child and his family?



Poor kids. I really feel sorry for them when adults asked them their grades and they have to face their reactions, and worse, sometimes face expressions with a split second of "oh gosh, that's bad" before the adults regain their composure and said something positive. And strangely the adults seemed only interested in knowing the aggregate without asking them if they felt they had done their best, if they had shown an improvement, or anything else about the child as a person.



So before you ask a child his or her PSLE score, please ask yourself why do you want to know it, and what is the message you would want to tell the child after you hear it. Because kids are shaped in part by society, and your reaction to the child might stay in his or her mind for a long time. Please spare a thought for these children who are still grappling with what these 3 digits mean altogether.



This post was first published over at the Mummy Wee blog on 21 November 2014. It is reproduced with permission.

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A Singaporean kid's thoughts and troubles


Your PSLE score does not define you