Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Punggol_Green_Primary_School&oldid=1022072671"
Primary schools are typically mixed-sex, though there are a number of single-sex schools. Some primary schools are affiliated with a secondary school, and such schools may have a lower requirement for students from the primary section to enter the affiliated secondary school. At the end of the six years in primary school, students sit for the ...
Before the school was established, the school compound was a temporary campus for Holy Innocents' High School in 2004.. In 2005, principal Mary Koh, together with other teaching staff were transferred to the school to prepare for its opening and in 2006, Greendale Secondary School was operational and took in its first batch of Secondary One students.
Punggol Cove Primary School opened in 2016 along with Oasis and Waterway Primary Schools. Punggol Green Primary School opened in 2013 to serve the Punggol West community. It is located at 98 Punggol Walk, next to Punggol Sapphire and Punggol Ripples. [56] Punggol View Primary School, opened in 2013, operating as a single-session school so as to ...
Edgefield Secondary School: Government: 3075: Punggol: Evergreen Secondary School: Government: 3623: Woodlands: Fairfield Methodist Secondary School: Government-aided Autonomous: 7309: Queenstown: Affiliated to: Anglo-Chinese Junior College (Non-IP) Fairfield Methodist School (Primary) Fuchun Secondary School: Government: 3024: Woodlands: Fuhua ...
An LMS delivers and manages all types of content, including videos, courses, workshops, and documents. In the education and higher education markets, an LMS will include a variety of functionality that is similar to corporate but will have features such as rubrics, teacher and instructor-facilitated learning, a discussion board, and often the use of a syllabus.
The North-East Region (Malay: Wilayah Timur Laut, Chinese: 東北區) of Singapore is one of the five regions in the country. The region is the most densely populated and has the highest population among the five, with Sengkang being its most populous town as of 2020 and Seletar as the regional centre.
The area was featured in a January 2009 New York Times article headlined "Singapore prepares to gobble up its last village," which covered how the kampong was due to be demolished and redeveloped into two schools (primary and secondary), and also a road linking Buangkok Drive and Yio Chu Kang Road.