16 February 2022
In Singapore, students from primary to tertiary level are now able to engage in a broad range of science, technology, engineering and mathematics (Stem) educational activities, with the support of a new $3 million investment from the James Dyson Foundation.
The investment will also help fund multidisciplinary engineering facilities in Singapore universities and a mentorship scheme with Dyson engineers here.
More than 100,000 students stand to benefit from collaborations between the foundation and the Ministry of Education, Science Centre Singapore and education institutions under the latest investment.
Over the next five years, the foundation will distribute resources to 50 primary and secondary schools, and help create an engineering innovation studio at the Singapore University of Technology and Design.