
Friday, June 12, 2009
Careers@Singapore - CG Tantra Expo 2009
Contact Singapore experienced an overwhelming response at Computer Graphics Tantra (CGT) Expo 2009, held in Mumbai on the 23rd and 24th of May 2009. The event was organised by the animation portal CG Tantra, as the largest job fair for the animation & VFX community in India.
Contact Singapore reached out to over 900 industry professionals and students at the event. Participants were keen to register themselves for job opportunities in Singapore’s interactive & digital media (IDM) industry. Nearly 200 professionals with experiences of up to 14 years submitted their CVs and show reels, applying for openings at Lucasfilm Animation Singapore (LAS) and Double Negative Visual Effects in Singapore. LAS also conducted on-the-spot interviews.
All in all, the event was a very good platform for animation and VFX professionals and students to learn about industry developments and work opportunities in Singapore. We will be closing the CV submission webpage shortly, so hurry and upload your CV if you have not done so. Alternatively, if you missed us, do get in touch with us at mumbai@contactsingapore.sg or chennai@contactsingapore.sg, and sign up for our job portal.
Posted by: Arthi Sai, Contact Singapore Chennai
Second United World College campus in Singapore - meeting the demands of expatriate parents
One of the things professionals ask us about is the quality of education for their children in Singapore. In fact, that sometimes becomes the make-or-break factor deciding whether they work in Singapore or another country. Amongst Indian expatriates, there are a number of good international or India-system schools that are popular in Singapore. One of them is the United World College of South East Asia (often called UWC for short).
Anxious parents will be happy to know that UWC is opening its second campus in Singapore to cater to strong demand. The good news, then, is that there will continue to be places for their children’s education even as more and more expatriates call Singapore home.
Article below is courtest of the Singapore Economic Development Board (EDB).
Second UWCSEA campus set to grow Singapore’s diverse talent pool
June 01, 2009
UWCSEA’s East Campus will help to meet demand by expatriate parents for high quality education for their children.
In Singapore, local and foreign talent are key drivers of the city-state’s economy. In order to ensure that Singapore continues to attract and retain talent, the provision of educational opportunities to both Singaporeans and non-Singaporeans alike has been identified as a key priority.
The expansion of the United World College of South East Asia (UWCSEA) to meet the demand from expatriate parents, reflects how Singapore is increasingly viewed as an attractive place to relocate families. UWCSEA will set up a second campus in Tampines to serve some 2,500 students from ages four to 18. The development of the new campus will be completed in two phases: facilities for K1, K2 and Grade 1 are slated to open in August 2010, with Grades 2-12 scheduled to start a year later, in August 2011.
The facilities at the 76,000-sq-m UWCSEA East Campus will match those of the school’s campus at Dover Road. It will include theatres, sports facilities, specialist music and art studios, fully-equipped design technology workshops, drama and performing arts spaces, two libraries equipped as state-of-the-art resource centres, and IT, language and science labs. While the East Campus is being constructed, a vacated primary school in Ang Mo Kio has served as a transition campus for some 500 students.
What sets the UWCSEA East Campus apart are its "green" features. The campus is designed to BCA Greenmark Platinum certification standards, the highest grade in Singapore’s green building grading and accreditation system. Built to be extremely energy efficient, it will consume 25 to 30 per cent less electricity than conventional buildings of similar size and function. It will also boast a solar powered air conditioning and hot water system - a first for Singapore.
Unique Learning Experience
With the second campus, UWCSEA will provide more students the opportunity to experience its holistic style of education. WCSEA is one of 12 non-profit UWC Colleges around the world. "What UWCSEA offers is a unique experiential, multi-cultural, holistic education with the goal of shaping responsible citizens. We have a strong ethos where students are encouraged to stretch, take risks and to think for themselves. In today’s globalised society, our values are more important than ever. Students develop a sensitive awareness and respect for other cultures as well as a deep appreciation for environmental issues," says Simon Thomas, Project Director, UWCSEA.
UWCSEA’s unique learning experience also sees its students growing and developing through non-academic activities. For example, community work is an important element in the school’s extracurricular programmes.
Currently, UWCSEA’s student profile ranges across 60 nationalities, with the largest numbers coming from the UK, US, India and Australia. New students come from families who have already lived an average of five-and-a-half years in Singapore. In addition, since most UWCSEA families are long-term residents, this has resulted in a low turn-over rate for the school, and in turn, a longer waitlist. "For many expatriates, UWCSEA is their school of choice and they are prepared to wait to get a place. Opening a second campus eases that wait," says Thomas.
While the quality of the teaching staff, the size of the school and its principles and ethos are some important decision-making factors for parents, location has become a correspondingly significant consideration for them as talent becomes increasingly mobile. As Singapore continues to grow from strength to strength as a business hub for Asia and the world, talent will not only be drawn by the business opportunities available to them, but also by the educational opportunities for their children provided by schools such as UWCSEA. "Singapore is booming. However, its growth as a global economic and business centre requires the availability of quality international schooling opportunities for the children of the global talent that Singapore is keen to attract." says Kishore Mahbubani, Chairman, UWCSEA Board of Governors. "Hence a second campus will both enable the College to spread the values of the UWC movement further and Singapore’s economy to soar to greater heights."
Singapore the Ideal Place for Quality Global Education
The expansion of UWCSEA will certainly boost Singapore’s reputation as an ideal place for expatriates to build a home. As they recognise that there are increasing opportunities for their children to enjoy high quality education in Singapore, it is also becoming more attractive for expatriates, together with their families, to call Singapore home.
At present, Singapore has 45 Foreign School Systems which offer a broad range of curricula, from the internationally recognised International Baccalaureate (IB) to country-specific curricula such as that of the Japanese, Australian, American or British. These schools also teach a range of age groups, from kindergarten to Grade 12.
In addition, there are three local international schools which include ACS International, Hwa Chong International and SJI International whose student population comprises half locals and half international students. To ensure learning and interaction in an environment that nurtures a Singaporean spirit and character, these schools abide by the Ministry of Education’s bilingual policy and incorporate National Education along with other national practices into their curriculum. These allow non-Singaporean children to better understand and integrate into the local community, while giving all students the opportunity to study an international curriculum. These three schools, which complement the foreign system schools and the local public schools, are becoming more popular with the expatriate community and have increased the diversity of Singapore’s educational landscape.
Source: Singapore Economic Development Board
Tuesday, September 30, 2008
1,500 new jobs for Barclays in Singapore
Amidst all the bleeding on Wall Street, it’s good to know that Singapore’s finance industry is staying strongly in the black.
Barclays, for example, is expanding its operations here.
Article below is courtesy of the Straits Times.
1,500 new jobs for Barclays hereUK bank to hire highly skilled staff over next few years to run its technology centre
By Grace Ng
Straits Times, Sep 29, 2008BRITISH banking giant Barclays is going full steam ahead with its plans to hire up to 1,500 highly skilled staff over the next few years in Singapore, undeterred by a credit crunch that has crushed thousands of jobs in the financial sector.
The new hires will be mainly local, the bank said.
The high-end technical jobs will be located at Barclays’ newly set-up technology centre in Singapore, which will support the group’s retail and commercial banking businesses across the globe.
While the financial turmoil is expected to fester for at least another 18 months, Barclays sees this as ‘a good time to expand’, said Mr Frits Seegers, the chief executive of the bank’s global retail and commercial banking.
Noting that the group is still making profits and has not suffered ‘the losses that some other banks have had’, Mr Seegers said: ‘We decided to expand and to invest because we can.
‘Now, prices are substantially lower, so it is a good time to expand. We have a top-notch team...and we can pounce very quickly,’ he said in an interview last Friday.
He was speaking after the opening ceremony of Barclays’ Business Technology Centre at Changi Business Park Central 1.
Barclays has already hired about 110, mainly local, staff, including engineers and information technology professionals. It plans to add another 300 to 400 by the end of next year, before ramping it up to 1,500 in ‘three to five years’ time’, said Mr Seegers.
This headcount is in addition to the 2,500 that Barclays already has for its investment banking and wealth management businesses in Singapore.
Barclays was in the headlines last week for capitalising on its relative financial strength to snap up the American assets of bankrupt Lehman Brothers, which Mr Seegers noted was a ‘terrific deal for Barclays’.
The London-based bank has moved quickly to grow its commercial and retail banking presence outside its home market into growth markets, such as India, Pakistan, Africa and China.
Mr Seegers said ‘it is still quite costly’ to acquire banking franchises in emerging markets, while some buying opportunities had emerged in the United States. Barclays’ commercial and retail banking businesses will continue to grow in emerging markets through organic growth, as well as acquisitions that are ‘priced right’, he said.
Last month, Barclays snapped up a small Indonesian lender Bank Akita and launched its line of retail banking products in Pakistan. It also planted some 1,500 branches across Asia in the past 15 months, said Mr Seegers. This growth is supported by back-end operations, which have been consolidated into three centres in Singapore, Shanghai and the Indian city of Pune.
‘We picked Singapore to be the technology heart for Barclays… We will put the high-value jobs in Singapore, as it offers the quality staff we need,’ said Mr Seegers.
He said the selection process for these jobs had been very rigorous, with each successful applicant undergoing some 16 interviews.
Singapore, Shanghai and Pune are providing technology services to 14 emerging markets and seven Western European counties.
Besides Barclays, financial institutions such as Merrill Lynch, Citi, Credit Suisse and UBS have also located their back-end operations in locations like Harbour Front and Changi, hiring thousands. However, hiring for support and technology functions is said to have slowed down as these banks cut costs and lay off front-end staff, said industry watchers.
Mr Seegers dismissed suggestions that Temasek Holdings’ share in Barclays had an influence on the bank’s decision to hire hundreds more new staff in Singapore.
The veteran banker, who lived in Singapore for six years, noted: ‘We have a good relationship with Singapore, with the Government and with Singaporeans.
‘We chose Singapore because of the quality and dedication of the people here.’
He warned that there would be ‘tough times ahead for the next 18 months’, as the US, United Kingdom and Asia were all experiencing a slowdown.
‘But we have to be where the people are,’ he said. ‘ Asia has a 2.6 billion population and this is where we want to be’.
graceng@sph.com.sg
Copyright © 2007 Singapore Press Holdings. All rights reserved.
Friday, August 24, 2007
SPANDAN 2007: Do you know your overseas medical career opportunities?
This blog post is for the medical students participating in JIPMER’s SPANDAN 2007.
After seeing our banners, you might wonder what Contact Singapore is, and what medical career opportunities you can have in Singapore as a medical student in India.
First, the quick answer:
- Singapore has a strong (and growing) demand for doctors, and there are many opportunities for employment, training and even research for you in this environment.
- Contact Singapore is an organisation that promotes working and living in Singapore. Thus, our work includes informing you about these opportunities.
- SingHealth (doctors.singhealth.com.sg) and the National Healthcare Group (www.lokun.nhg.com.sg) are the largest healthcare establishments in Singapore, running many hospitals and speciality centres. They are actively looking for medical talent around the world, including India. Even if you’re not graduating just yet, do check out their web portals.
- Medical talent should possess qualifications recognised in Singapore. For basic medical degrees, at this point in time, the Singapore Medical Council (SMC) recognises MBBS degrees from 5 medical colleges in India: JIPMER, AIIMS, Maulana Azad, CMC Vellore and AFMC.
Interested? Read on for the details:These questions and answers have been summarised from the International Manpower Graduates portal.
- Are there really opportunities in Singapore?
Yes, there are opportunities for international medical graduates in Singapore, because our medical tourism/travel pie is growing, and there is also growing domestic demand for healthcare. We’re serious enough about this rising demand to run roadshows for hundreds at Puducherry and Delhi to promote opportunities in Singapore. If that doesn’t convince you, the Singapore Ministry of Health maintains a page listing 10 reasons to work in Singapore as a doctor.
- OK, I am interested. But how do I get registered to work as a Medical Officer in Singapore when I finally graduate?
First, you will need to possess a recognised basic medical degree - as mentioned above. Secondly, secure a job with a Singapore healthcare establishment. Your employer will help you with your registration and accreditation procedures, with your certificates and supporting documents. A very helpful flowchart on the whole process can be downloaded here. If you prefer a more expansive technical guide to getting registered in Singapore, go here.
- What are the career paths available to me in Singapore?
There are a few main paths open to doctors in Singapore: to go into medical practice (become a specialist or family physician, or progress along the resident physician track), medical research (become a clinical scientist/investigator), or medical education (become an academic).
Key Singapore healthcare industry players: 
Interested but forgot to register for our mailing list?Get in touch with the SPANDAN organisers, who are helping us to collate names and particulars. Or sign up here directly for our mailing list. We will regularly send you news and updates about opportunities in Singapore.
Have questions you feel were not answered? Drop us a comment or email at . However, before that, do take a look at this FAQ page to see if it addresses your queries.
Tuesday, August 14, 2007
Medical Careers Opportunities roadshows at Puducherry and New Delhi
You might not know this, but Singapore attracts more than 400,000 international patients each year seeking all sorts of medical services. There are even plans to grow this to 1 million by 2012. On top all this, Singapore’s own domestic demand for healthcare is rising steadily, due to affluence and a greying population.
These converging trends all mean one thing: a great demand for doctors that is driving our hospitals and healthcare establishments to look worldwide for medical talent.
So in end July, we ran roadshows in Puducherry and New Delhi to spread the news about opportunities in Singapore. And we’re happy that some 250 medical students, doctors and specialists from top colleges like AIIMS, Maulana Azad and JIPMER turned up to hear what we had to say.
HR directors from our healthcare clusters, NHG and SingHealth, gave in-depth presentations at the roadshows on employment, training and research opportunities in the many hospitals and speciality centres in Singapore. We also managed to get Professor Ho Lai Yun, a senior member of our Specialists Accreditation Board (SAB), to share on the career and specialisation paths available for foreign doctors working in Singapore.
True to our expectations, the medical students and professionals had many questions to ask. Topics like qualifications, working hours, wages, opportunities for postgraduate training came up - just to name a few.
All in all, it was definitely a fruitful session for everyone involved. NHG/SingHealth and professionals/students were able to directly engage one another about working in Singapore. For us, the greatest benefit is that we could spread the word that Singapore is an attractive and viable employment destination, a definite alternative to more traditional "hot" locations like the USA and UK.
This is certainly not the last you will hear of us at medical colleges. We’ve already signed up to support JIPMER’s SPANDAN 2007 and reach out to more medical students whom we didn’t have a chance to meet in July. Watch this space for an update!
Friday, July 20, 2007
Hello and a very warm welcome
Hello and a very warm welcome from me, Vimal…….your contact person in Chennai, India.
With the introduction of this blog feature, I look forward to interacting and engaging with my fellow bloggers on issues that can help us in creating a better working and living environment, for everyone…..
So, feel free to get together on this blog and start a healthy and lively information interchange…… Till we connect….cheers..
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Vimal Harnal
I am a person who looks forward to discovering new places and meeting people from various walks of life with a open mind. I like the outdoors though I am equally at ease, curled up with a nice book, by the fireside. I have a weakness for oriental rugs and carpets as well as antiques (but by no means a connoisseur of either of them - and this is for the record).
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