http://www.qdwork.com/Recruit_view.aspx?clID=1&id=7133
Job Advertisement Details
• Recruitment Project: Singapore SBS Passenger Bus Drivers
• Number of Vacancies: 80
Requirement
• Minimum age and height requirement: 23-45 years of age (1967-1989), minimum height (male): 160-180cm, minimum height (female): 155cm
• Type of license: Type A (A1, A2 or A3)
• Minimum driving experience: 2 years of bus driving experience; minimum attainment of driving license ≥ 2 years; driver’s license validity: ≥ 12 months
• Physical condition: no color blindness, color weakness, tuberculosis, hypertension, heart disease, diabetes, kidney and gallstones, epilepsy, venereal diseases, infectious diseases, mental illness and other diseases affect the driving duties; hearing and liver function must be normal.
• Personality Trait: warm personality, friendly, kind, sincere and humble, groomed; willing to collective life and be able to adapt to the new environment.
• Communication Skills: Able to communicate in Mandarin fluently with basic spoken English skills.
Salary and Employment Package
• Salary: 1438 SGD/month (training period and during the probation period 1025 SGD/month), the annual income of 100-110K RMB
• Working hours: 48 hours per week (6 days, 8 hours), overtime pay overtime by 1.5-2.0 times, morning and evening shifts, arranged by the Company
• Overtime and allowances: about 388 SGD/month
• Accommodation arrangements: Provided. (HDB 3 pax / room). Meals are not provided.
• Transportation: Free transport on company operated bus services only.
• Contract period: 2 years (with possibility of contract renewal subject to performance.)
• Annual leave, sick leave: entitled to 14 days paid annual leave each year
• Insurance: Insurance coverage will be provide per company’s policy which includes professional liability insurance (as required by the law), hospitalization insurance and industrial injury insurance
• 13th month bonus and year-end awards: Minimum one year’s service in order to be entitled for 13th month bonus. Year end bonus will subject to attendance, individual performance and safety record Comprehensive Assessment.
• Pre-job training: Successful candidates must attend 10 sessions of pre-job training and obtain a 4A driver’s license. Training period only made a base salary of SGS1025 per month
Others
• Documents Required
• Resume, photo / diploma ID card / 2-inch color passport size photograph
Interview Details
• Date: October 30
• Venue: Changchun, Jilin interview
• Agent Fees: RMB26,000 including airfare. Exclude other related fees such as examination hall fees and training administrative fees.
are they looking for driver to drive in sg or china.... one of the requirements is that they must be fluent in mandarin with basic spoke english skills
the salary should be lower since the benefits are quite high...
Do the chinese know how to read the english road signs?
More buses in terrible state,Breakdowns,Accidents etc..Haiz why can't they recruit Myanmar instead?Theyre 100x better drivers than these Cheenas.
Originally posted by carbikebus:Theyre 100x better drivers than these Cheenas.
They don't understand the ang moh road signs.
Fluency should be in English with basic Mandarin skills. Singapore is a world city after all. Stupid leh
Originally posted by BusAnalayzer:Singapore is a world city after all.
what is world city?
Fluency should be in English with basic Mandarin skills.
Why?
Fluency should be in English with basic Mandarin skills. Singapore is a world city after all. Stupid leh
Harry Lee Kuan Yew made this country english speaking so as to weaken the political power of the chinese and secure the power of the english speaking elite from colonial times, mostly peranakans and eurasians.
World city has no mother fucking thing to do with it. lol.
Endangered species?
For goodness sake, Lee Kuan Yew practically filled the entire cabinet with inbred Peranakans.
For the last few decades in Singapore, the top positions in civil service, statutory boards, armed forces, GLCs have all along been going disproportionately to the Peranakans. That is one reason why Singapore has been run to the ground.
Lee Kuan Yew worked with the Japanese Kempeitai and later the British colonizers to suppress the non-Peranakan Chinese.
That's why he has always been wary of non-Peranakan Chinese and could only entrust power to his own family members and his other Peranakan cronies.
http://tomorrow.sg/archives/2009/02/17/peranakans__going_the_way_of_the.html
What makes Singapore different? The majority of Singapore's population is ethnically Chinese, but Singapore is largely free of corruption, has sound institutions and the rule of law dominates. It's nothing like China. The answer lies in a historical division in Singapore's Chinese community between the babas and the sinkeh. The sinkeh, comprising the majority of the city-state's population, were the recent immigrants from China, or whose parents were born in China. They spoke Chinese, lived like Chinese and considered themselves overseas Chinese. In Indonesia, such Chinese were called the totok...
Lee Kuan Yew, who became prime minister of Singapore aged just 35, is the most obvious example. He claims a Hakka heritage, although his upbringing was that of a baba: at home, he spoke English with his parents and baba Malay to his grandparents. "Mandarin was totally alien to me and unconnected with my life," Lee said of his childhood...
http://www.managementtoday.co.uk/news/648273/
However, I really do not understand why our Biligual Language, especially when you are seeking work in Singapore, it must be English and Mandarin. I really don’t understand because the Chinese themselves in China wants to learn English.
When it comes to language policies, the main considerations in Singapore are mostly about effects on political power between the english speaking elites and the non elites.
Once you understand that, things will be clearer. These things are always about political power.
Originally posted by Dalforce 1941:When it comes to language policies, the main considerations in Singapore are mostly about effects on political power between the english speaking elites and the non elites.
Once you understand that, things will be clearer.
Originally posted by zulkifli mahmood:
hmmm....you know back in the mid 80s there were Mandarin speaking campaigns and the reasons they gave was to make Chinese in Singapore understand one another better due to the presence of various Chinese dialects.
I think at the time there was a backlash against the PAP for destroying chinese schools, so they had to launch a propaganda campaign as wayang that they care about mandarin. But they still wanted to use it as a cover to suppress dialects.
The second reason was because China was opening their market and we need to speak Mandarin if we want to do business with them.....
This was probably the main reason why.
Basically both mandarin and chinese dialects have been run to the ground in Singapore by the peranakan Harry Lee Kuan Yew and his clique.
Malay he also suppressed.
At the same time, Singapore was also the center of the Malay literary world, and most of the major writers worked and lived in the island. Strong anti-colonial sentiments among the Malay intellectuals were fanned by the influential daily Utusan Melayu, then under the charge of Yusof Ishak and Samad Ismail. In the fifties a major debate arose in the Malay literary world in Singapore, on the issues as the proper function and responsibility of the writer, between the proponents of what came to be known as Art for Society as opposed to Art for Art’s sake. The polemics which engulfed the Malay literary world in the period led to the formation of Angkatan Sastrawan 50s (ASAS 50), who argued for and advocated the view that writers had a clear and obvious social duty and responsibility. The debate was more than a difference in literary style or preference. It hinged on the more important issue at that juncture as to whether the writer should stand aside from the emerging anti-colonial struggle. Usman was one of a whole generation of writers including M S Masuri, A Samad Said, Keris Mas, Arena Wati, who took cudgels on behalf of the cause for a literature of social concerns and social relevance. Among them were a group of socially engaged students, including Ali Aziz, Kassim Ahmad and Syed Hussin Ali who were then studying at the University of Malaya located in Singapore, who were to pay major roles in subsequent years in literature and politics.
This debate had its reverberations in the Chinese literary world at the time, which was embroiled in a similar debate on broadly the same issues. Accordingly the debate generated considerable interest in Chinese literary circles, creating an empathy for ASAS 50 among many Chinese writers.
At the same time, the debate on the issue of the National Language came to the fore. It is now conceded that the left wing trade unions under Lim Chin Siong, took a decision early on in support of Malay as the national language and at the same time arguing for a reduction in the role of the English language and the elevation of the languages of the local communities, principally Chinese and Tamil. Lim’s role in this has been acknowledged by Usman and Samad Ismail and others.
The left wing support for the use of Malay as the national language and the common lingua franca, created a strong surge of interest for the learning of Malay. This momentum was accelerated after 1959, when widespread classes for Malay in night schools, adult education centres and private tuition was widespread and extensive.
This movement for the study of Malay declined after Singapore left Malaysia after 1965. Since then, the island republic had gone on to embrace the English language with a new fervour and intensity, bringing in its wake the widespread dissemination of western values, culture and mores...
Originally posted by Dalforce 1941:I think at the time there was a backlash against the PAP for destroying chinese schools, so they had to launch a propaganda campaign as wayang that they care about mandarin. But they still wanted to use it as a cover to suppress dialects.
This was probably the main reason why.
Basically both mandarin and chinese dialects have been run to the ground in Singapore by the peranakan Harry Lee Kuan Yew and his clique.
Malay he also suppressed.
Originally posted by zulkifli mahmood:
I didn't know SMM Lee Kuan Yew is Peranakan.....really!!!???
If the majority of Singaporeans knew that Harry Lee Kuan Yew is peranakan, he would have been thrown out of power long ago.
Which idiot would go and believe that a peranakan destroying chinese schools, suppressing dialects, force english to be dominant language is purely for the sake of the interests of Singapore?
Only deranged idiots would go and believe.
Originally posted by Dalforce 1941:Do the chinese know how to read the english road signs?