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Two Sides of a Coin

Two Sides of a Coin. Group 6-012 Team Members: Lim Jerome Ng Jia Neng Colin Ng Siong Haur Guo Zili. Why Two Sides of a Coin?. Coin - Singapore Two Sides Reasons why foreigners want too stay and take up citizenship or become permanent residences

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Two Sides of a Coin

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  1. Two Sides of a Coin Group 6-012 Team Members: Lim Jerome Ng JiaNeng Colin Ng SiongHaur GuoZili

  2. Why Two Sides of a Coin? • Coin - Singapore • Two Sides • Reasons why foreigners want too stay and take up citizenship or become permanent residences • Reasons why foreigners want to leave Singapore and go back to their own country

  3. Made up mainly of Singaporeans and foreigners, some becoming citizens and PRs • The difference in perceptions of Singapore by Singaporeans and foreigners

  4. Objectives To find out: • Singapore – truly multi-cultural? • Singapore – embraced people from different walks of life/culture?

  5. Methodology • Interview • Data analysis • Web report • Novella

  6. Rationale • Singaporeans – proud of having such a country that accepts people regardless of race, language or religion • To determine Singapore’s success in accepting different kinds of people who have come here to work and decided to stay in Singapore

  7. Timeline

  8. Interview • Participants (40): • Local Singaporeans • Non Singaporeans in Singapore

  9. Target Audience [interview] • Local participants (4 each) • Chinese/Caucasians/Malays/Indians/Filipinos • Non Singaporean participants (4 each) • PRCs/Caucasians/Malays/Indians/Filipinos

  10. Foreigners Questions • Which country are you from? • Why did you come to Singapore? • What were your impressions about Singapore before you came? • What were your impressions of Singapore after living in Singapore? Any changes? • Is it easy to live in Singapore for the first few months? • Are there any differences between your home country and Singapore? Please state 3 bad and good points. • Have you decided on being a Singapore PR/citizen? Why or why not? • Do you believe that Singapore is a truly multi-racial country? • Is Singapore really able to accept and embrace you?

  11. Singaporean Questions • What were your impressions of these PRs and foreigners before they came? • What were your impressions about the foreigners and PR after they came? Any changes? • Are you really able to accept these people? Explain. • If you have a choice, will you want to work and live with them? If not, what will you do? • Do you think there is any difference in culture between Singaporeans and PRs and foreigners?

  12. Interview • Indication on changes in mindset • Based on the responses, is Singapore truly multi-cultural?

  13. The Response

  14. Response Singapore is an advanced country which is very clean and safe. Things are very expensive.

  15. Novella “He learnt that Singapore was a systematic and advanced country where high-rise buildings could be seen anywhere. Being a popular tourist spot, Singapore was also very clean and safe. However, he was told that the cost of living in Singapore was very high and people were also not as friendly as people in India. With this information, he started to hesitate as he might meet with problems in Singapore.” - Chapter One

  16. Response Singaporeans are friendly and the pay is very high.

  17. Novella “Beaming, she sang praises of Singapore, “Singaporeans are friendly and the bosses are kind. Also, the pay as a domestic helper in Singapore is very high. Most of us are even allowed to have a day off on Sundays!”” - Chapter One

  18. Response Singapore is a well developed country. Can earn more money. Don’t like the communism in China.

  19. Novella “Singapore was well-developed and she was confident that her husband would be able to earn more in Singapore than in China. Also, she could not endure the communism in China. She was happy to be living in a democratic state. She felt that going to Singapore was going to be the path to her happiness even though they were poor now. She was confident they would be rich in no time.” - Chapter Two

  20. Responses Better living conditions. Very safe. Everyone is treated equally. Good education.

  21. Novella “Anwar imagined himself living in luxurious bungalow, eating delicious food and with a flick of a finger, a servant would attend to him. In school, the teacher teaches all of the students patiently with a happy smile and everyone is treated fairly. By the roadside, police can be seen patrolling around to ensure that everyone is safe. In offices and factories, the employers treat each and every employee with respect and award employees with high salaries for their hard work. Travelling from place to place seems quick and the walking distance is not long due to excellent transport system.” - Chapter One

  22. Response Chewing gums and vandalism are banned. Offenders will be punished by the law.

  23. Novella “The only things he knew about it was that it was a ‘fine’ country where eating gum and vandalism such as graffiti were all banned and any offenders would be fined or even punished heavily. This made Mike exceptionally fearful as he had the habit of chewing gum every time to make sure he could flex his muscles fully.” - Chapter One

  24. Data Analysis (Non-Locals) • Do you believe that Singapore is a truly multi-cultural country?/ Is Singapore willing to accept and embrace you? 70% 30%

  25. Data Analysis (Locals) • Are you really able to accept the foreigners?/ If you have a choice, would you want to work and live with them? 20% 60%

  26. Novella • Written using the feedback of the people from the interviews • the positive and negative experiences of the foreigners

  27. Novella • 5 people from 5 different cultural backgrounds or countries coming to Singapore and their lives thereafter • 50 pages with a compilation of the negative and positive experiences faced in Singapore • Each chapter does not only contains the storyline but also is like an ‘answer sheet’ for the interview questions

  28. Novella • Shows: • the area that Singapore is lacking in truly embracing the diversity of culture resulting from an influx of foreigners in Singapore • whether the foreigners are willing to give up current citizenship for Singapore citizenship

  29. Webpage Click Here

  30. Reflections • Through this project, I have learnt the factors that contribute to whether Singapore is multi-cultural or not by hearing others’ responses and thoughts on that matter. Are we able to embrace people from different cultures and races and understand them? Most Singaporeans may blindly believe Singapore is multi-cultural but actually there are still people from other cultures who are not adapted or dislike the way of life in Singapore. Therefore we know that Singapore has such a loophole and Singaporeans can work on it. In our project, we are creating awareness from our novella to change people’s mindset on whether Singapore is multi-cultural or not. • Lim Jerome(2O2)

  31. Reflections • Singapore may say that it is a multi-racial country, however, its what people thinks that affects this. Singaporeans may think that the foreigners are extra in Singapore and only serves as a competitor in finding good jobs and social standards, and this may cause discrimination and unfriendliness towards certain foreigners, and there are also people who thinks that foreigners are mainly labourers and helps to improve Singapore. Not a lot of people have a deeper understanding of how important foreigners are in terms of helping build a better Singapore. • GuoZi Li (2O2)

  32. Reflections • I personally feel that our project can enable us to really find out whether Singapore is a truly multi cultural and whether the foreigners can be accepted by the society. Through our interview, we found out that many foreigners feel that they are accepted by Singaporeans but on the other hand, many Singaporeans do not really want to live and work with these foreigners. There are many misunderstandings and misconception between the foreigners and Singaporeans. We can also know more about the positive and negative experiences faced by these foreigners to allow us to understand these foreigners better. • Ng JiaNeng(2O2)

  33. Reflections • For this part of the project, i start to feel that it is even more meaningful. In the process of this project, we actually did things such as surveys and also writing of a novella which are things that we did not do much normally but this project gave us the chance to do it all. Starting from the survey, while we are doing it, we learnt a lot of things. We received different answers from different people and these answers from different perspective had indeed changed our opinions some of the foreigners and also what kind of people we are ourselves. I feel that improvements is needed and Singaporeans like ourselves really needed to change the misconceptions we have. I believe we can use this project and try, using our limited abilities, to try and change the people' wrong view of each other (The Singaporeans having the wrong opinions of foreigners and foreigners having the wrong opinions of Singaporeans). • Colin Ng SiongHaur(2O2)

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