Loyang Secondary School
Address
Map
12 Pasir Ris Street 11

Pasir Ris

Singapore
Information
TypeGovernment/mixed
MottoTo Excel with Dignity
Established1989
SessionSingle session
School code3049
PrincipalLee Hak Boon (2015-Present)
Enrolment1000+
LanguageEnglish, Mandarin, Malay, Tamil
Campus typeUrban
Colour(s)  Green
  white
UniformWhite top (both gender), short/long white pants (male), green skirt (female)
Websitehttp://www.loyangsec.moe.edu.sg/


Loyang View Secondary School Abbreviation: LYSS/LYS is a government Secondary School located in Pasir Ris, Singapore.

History

Loyang View Secondary School started in 2018. This school had absorbed both Greenview Secondary School and Loyang Secondary School. The former Greenview Secondary School was closed down.

Loyang Secondary School

Loyang Secondary School was founded in 1989. The school began operations with 14 teachers and 390 pupils in four Express and six Normal (Academic) classes. Initially housed in East View Secondary School at Tampines, the school moved to its present premises in Pasir Ris Street 11 in 1990. The school was officially declared open on 11 April 1992 by the late Senior Minister of State for Education, Dr Tay Eng Soon.

In 2004, the school underwent PRIME and saw a physical transformation with the completion of an enhanced campus. Today, the student enrolment stands at 1468 in 38 classes in a single session school.

Greenview Secondary School

Greenview Secondary School
File:Greenview Secondary School Crest.png
Location
Map
Pasir Ris
Information
TypeGovernment
MottoStrive for Success
Established1993
SessionSingle
School code3059
PrincipalMr Ng Boon Kiat
HeadmasterMr Roger Lim
Staff50+
GradesSec 2-5
GenderMixed
Enrolment1,000+
Average class size20-40
Student to teacher ratioapprox. 38:1
LanguageEnglish, Mandarin, Malay
Campus typeRural
Colour(s)Green & Yellow
Song"Greenview, Hand in Hand we Strive For Success"
SportsBadminton, Soccer, Basketball, Netball and Taekwondo
Test averagePSLE 180-220 O Levels ~19 (L1R2B2)
WebsiteLink

Greenview Secondary School is a secondary school located in Pasir Ris, Singapore. A relatively new institution, it celebrated its 15th anniversary in April 2008. In March 2016, it was announced that Greenview Secondary are part of the 11 schools that will merge due to less intake of students. This school will be closed down in 2018 and merged with Loyang Secondary School.[1]

In 2002 Greenview was featured in a Radio Television Hong Kong documentary about home-school-community collaborations. Despite its academically-average student intake, the school did well on the national level, winning the Sustained Achievement Award (out of 12 schools nationwide) as well as two Achievement Awards in the Ministry of Education's annual Masterplan of Awards in 2005. It took the Sustained Achievement Award for the first time in 2004.

The former school principal is Mr Ng Boon Kiat, and the Vice-principal is Miss Tan Chor Liang.

School Colours and Crest

The school flag consists of two main colours – white and green. The White signifies purity in thought, speech and deeds. The Green symbolizes youthful vibrance and natural goodness. The red crest stands for universal brotherhood and equality. The sides of the hexagon represent the six aspects of our educational emphasis – moral, intellectual, physical, social, aesthetic and vocational.

LY stands for LOYANG Secondary School. L represents the strong foundation provided by the school.

3 pillars of Y symbolize the collaborative efforts of parents, pupils and teachers to enable our pupils to gain all round education represented by the circle on top of Y.

Principals

Achievements in Mediacorp Shows and Programmes

The Arena

The school competed in the televised debating competition The Arena, shown on Mediacorp Channel 5. Loyang's team defeated Raffles Institution in the opening round and Xinmin Secondary School in the quarter-finals, before losing to Hwa Chong Institution in the semi-finals. (The competition was won by the United World College of South East Asia, which beat Hwa Chong in the final).

  1. ^ 22 secondary schools to merge over next 2 years due to falling demand