Singapore Sports School

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Singapore Sports School
Logo of the Singapore Sports School.jpg
Address
1 Champions Way

737913

Coordinates1°25′36.21″N 103°47′18.19″E / 1.4267250°N 103.7883861°E / 1.4267250; 103.7883861Coordinates: 1°25′36.21″N 103°47′18.19″E / 1.4267250°N 103.7883861°E / 1.4267250; 103.7883861
Information
TypeIndependent
Private
MottoLearned Champions With Character
Established2 April 2004; 16 years ago
PrincipalOng Kim Soon
GenderMixed
Age13 to 19
CampusUrban; 7 hectares
Colour(s)  Red   Orange
Websitehttps://www.sportsschool.edu.sg/home

Singapore Sports School (abbreviation; SSP) is a Specialised Independent School in Singapore that offers an integrated sports and academic programme for secondary and post-secondary students. The school was officially opened on 2 April 2004 by Goh Chok Tong, Singapore’s second Prime Minister.

Management[]

Moo Soon Chong was the first principal of Singapore Sports School.[1] He was assisted by Chua Choon Seng, Director of Corporate Services and Dr Irwin Seet, Director of Sports, Seah Poh Chua, Director of Academics and School Administration, who was Dean of the Academic Wing then, and a core team.

Mr Moo retired on 14 December 2007 and Deborah Tan was appointed as the new principal of Singapore Sports School on the following day.[2] Mrs Tan was appointed to a senior position at the Ministry of Education and left the school on 14 December 2013.

Followed by Mrs Tan's departure, Tan Teck Hock is appointed as the new principal of Singapore Sports School. Mr Tan has served in the Education Service since 1992. He was the principal of Yishun Town Secondary School from December 1999 to December 2005 and Serangoon Junior College from December 2006 to December 2010. Mr Tan was the founding Principal of the Physical Education and Sports Teacher Academy in 2010.

On 15 December 2019, Singapore Sports School announced that Ong Kim Soon will replace Mr Tan following his departure. Mr Ong was a PE and English teacher, head of department, vice-principal and special assistant of Principal at St Hilda’s Secondary School, and Director of Physical, Sports, and Outdoor Education in MOE Headquarters.

Sport Programmes and Achievements[]

Student-athletes in Singapore Sports School are either in an Academy Programme or in an Individual Programme.

The Academy Programmes are in the following sports:

  • Badminton
  • Bowling
  • Fencing
  • Football
  • Netball
  • Sailing
  • Shooting
  • Swimming
  • Table Tennis
  • Track and Field

Singapore Sports School also welcomes high-performing youth athletes to join the Individual Programme sports such as Artistic Swimming, Golf, Gymnastics, Pencak Silat, Sailing and Wushu.

Athlete-Friendly Academic Pathways[]

The Sports School offers the GCE "O" Level Examinations and several post-secondary through-train pathways. Student-athletes on the through-train pathways bypass the GCE "O" Level Examinations and progress onto one of three pathways conducted at Sports School: the International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme (IBDP), the customised Diploma in Sport Management (RP-SSP DSPM) from Republic Polytechnic or the customised Diploma in Business Studies (Entrepreneurship Management Option) (BS-EMGT) from Ngee Ann Polytechnic.

Singapore 2010 Youth Olympics Games[]

Singapore Sports School was the venue of the Aquatics (Swimming), Modern Pentathlon and Shooting.[citation needed]

National Youth Sports Institute[]

The National Youth Sports Institute (NYSI) is a youth-centric and youth-focused sporting organisation that aims to value-add and positively impact the Singapore youth sports ecosystem. Initiated by the Ministry of Culture, Community and Youth.NYSI works closely with the Singapore Sports School and Singapore Sports Institute to drive youth sports development through four functional areas: Talent Identification and Development, Youth Coaching, Sports Science and Athlete Life Management.[3]

Notable alumni[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Sports school trials under way". Today. 7 August 2003.
  2. ^ "S'pore Sports School to get new principal next year". The Straits Times. 10 October 2007.
  3. ^ "ABOUT US". www.nysi.org.sg. Archived from the original on 19 January 2018. Retrieved 19 January 2018.

External links[]

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