The agency will suspend such courses for three months, and prior to suspension bar their providers from promoting the courses or accepting new applicants. Training providers will have to use the suspension period, or longer if they choose, to improve their courses before rejoining the SkillsFuture directory.
This new measure, which has been in place since October, is the first of several that the national body for skills development will implement by 2026 to raise the quality of courses.
From Jan 1, 2025, courses due for renewal must meet new criteria, including achieving at least a 75 per cent attendance rate. Providers must continue to ensure their courses are relevant to industry needs.
By June 2026, courses will have to secure a minimum response rate of 75 per cent for their feedback survey, and not be ranked in the lowest-quality category, said Ms Angela Tan, group director of SSG's regulation and quality group, in an interview with The Sunday Times.
Ms Tan said the new measures are part of SSG's ongoing efforts to strengthen the quality of courses.
There are more than 29,000 SkillsFuture courses, offered by over 600 training providers. In 2023, 520,000 people took part in SSG-supported training programmes, around 200,000 of whom were mid-career workers.
Previously, the criteria for courses to be renewed included showing activity during their validity period – such as issuing certificates or having paid claims – and staying relevant to industry needs.
Since October, courses have faced suspension if they fail to meet certain requirements, said Ms Tan.
Those with the lowest quality ratings – based on survey feedback designed to capture participants' perceptions of SSG-funded courses – will be removed from the course directory before their planned expiry dates, she added.
Esta historia es de la edición November 24, 2024 de The Straits Times.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor ? Conectar
Esta historia es de la edición November 24, 2024 de The Straits Times.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor? Conectar
K-pop star Psy's home temporarily seized due to penalty arrears
Singer Psy recently had his luxury home in Seoul temporarily seized by the authorities after he failed to pay an administrative penalty imposed by the district office, local media outlets reported on Nov 25.
BTS' Jimin and Jung Kook face off at Billboard Music Awards
K-pop supergroup BTS members Jimin and Jung Kook will face off at the upcoming Billboard Music Awards (BBMAs), which will take place on Dec 12.
Stefanie Sun fails to nab Taipei Arena for 2025 world tour
It has been a decade since homegrown Mandopop star Stefanie Sun last headlined her own tour, so when her upcoming world tour Aut Nihilo Sun Yanzi In Concert was announced recently, fans went into a frenzy.
Society is sick': Actor Ryan Lian after netizens laugh at him for being attacked
Local actor Ryan Lian has hit back at netizens who were unkind to him after learning that he was injured in a recent knife attack.
Binge-worthy K-variety series is a celebration of tenacity and sisterhood
Iron Girls follows the trials and triumphs of four award-winning South Korean actresses who signed up for the toughest roles of their lives – participants of the 2024 World Triathlon Cup in Tongyeong.
Problemista's whimsy is wearying, Blitz a conventional WWII drama
Alejandro (Julio Torres) from El Salvador is an aspiring toy designer in New York City. With time running out on his American work visa, he becomes personal assistant to an erratic art critic (Tilda Swinton) as his only hope for a sponsored residency.
Moana 2 charts familiar waters, but stays buoyant
Disney's second voyage with Moana dives deeper into Pacific culture
Shrek director tackles animation taboo in Netflix fairy tale Spellbound
Animated films tackling parent separation and divorce are few and far between.
New head hopes to offer alternative to 'junk food'
General manager of SGIFF Jeremy Chua courts young viewers and social media
Music kings take back their crowns
Must-see MV: G-Dragon – 2024 Mama performance medley