Monday, March 29, 2010

Traffic Light Party



Curtin, ECU and Murdoch Singapore Student Associations present Traffic Light Party!

Party out all night with Singaporeans at The Library Nightclub, Northbridge.

All are welcome! Special priced drinks before 11pm!

$10 for pre-sales ticket
$15 for door-sales ticket

For more information and tickets, please call:
Roy 0411 738 793 (ECU)

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Insights@Singapore: Tourism & Hospitality



The Tourism & Hospitality sector is an important pillar of Singapore’s economy, accounting for 4% of GDP, 150,000 jobs and S$10.8 billion in Tourism & Hospitality receipts. Singapore has big plans to grow Tourism & Hospitality into a key economic engine – tripling Tourism & Hospitality receipts to S$30 billion, doubling visitors arrivals to 17 million, and creating an additional 100,000 jobs in the services sector by 2015. These targets will drive future initiatives and catapult growth in the Tourism & Hospitality industry over the next decade, catalysed by a S$2 billion Tourism Development Fund.

Be there at Insights@Singapore: Tourism & Hospitality, jointly hosted by Contact Singapore and the Singapore-Western Australia Network (SWAN), to find out more about the Tourism & Hospitality industry in Singapore.

Date: Tuesday, 23 March 2010
Time: 6pm
Venue: Duxton Hotel
Cove Private Dining Room
1 St Georges Terrace
Perth WA 6000, Australia

To Register click here

Friday, February 12, 2010

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

How do expatriates feel about Singaporeans?



Yahoo! SEA speaks to expatriates in Singapore to find out their thoughts on how they feel about the locals.

Friday, January 22, 2010

Students-led forum 2010 - Outcome

Students overseas: Don't worry about jobs when you return
by Saifulbahri Ismail

SINGAPORE - There is no need for Singaporeans studying overseas to be paranoid about their employment prospects when they return, said Minister for Community Development, Youth and Sports Vivian Balakrishnan.

At a forum here attended by about 300 Singaporeans studying in Australia, he addressed their concerns about the competition from local graduates for jobs here.

Case in point: An IT graduate who returned to Singapore last month after studying in Brisbane, Australia for a year. Though it is still early in his job search, he is worried: "I think employers in Singapore would prefer graduates from local universities ... They might not even look at my resume at all, knowing I'm an overseas graduate."But Dr Balakrishnan assured the students that Singapore is a meritocratic society. "We will select the best person for the job based on his or her ability, and performance and it doesn't depend upon your race, religion, gender, wealth, social class or where you happened to have studied in, whether it's in Australia or Singapore ... You will be judged on your own merits," he said.

He observed that many overseas graduates have returned and been offered opportunities because of the value employers saw in them.But he also reminded the students to manage their expectations - they should not expect and demand success to be delivered to their doorsteps. Last year, some 7,800 Singaporeans enrolled to study in Australia.

Source: Today

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