Manjusri Secondary School

Manjusri Secondary School (MJR) is a co-educational secondary school affiliated to the Singapore Buddhist Federation in Ubi, Singapore.

Manjusri Secondary School
文殊中学
Sekolah Memengah Manjusri
Address
20 Ubi Avenue 1, Singapore 408940
Information
TypeGovernment-aided
Co-educational
Motto智行慈愿
(wisdom conduct benevolence aspiration)
Established1982 (1982)
SessionSingle session
School code7307
PrincipalMr Sim Cho Boon
Enrolmentapprox. 1,069
Colour(s)Maroon, light blue
Websitewww.manjusrisec.moe.edu.sg

School History

The school was set up by the Singapore Buddhist Federation in 1982 at 149 Sims Drive, Singapore 387380. In 2009, the school moved to a new campus at 20 Ubi Avenue 1, Singapore 408940 which was officially opened on 22 April 2010. The move allowed the school to share resources with its affiliated primary school, Maha Bodhi School. James Cook University Singapore currently occupies the campus and continues to use its buildings.

The school celebrated its 30th anniversary in 2012. The annual school anniversary concert was held in April 2012 at the LASALLE College of the Arts in conjunction of the school's 30th Anniversary. In November, the school organised a home-coming dinner for past-and-present staff and students, with then-Education Minister Heng Swee Keat being the Guest-of-Honour.[1]

Affiliation

Manjusri Secondary School is affiliated with Maha Bodhi School and Mee Toh School. [2]

Identity & culture

School song

The school song is sung every day during the school's morning assembly, after the singing of the National Anthem "Majulah Singapura" as well as before the recitation of the Singapore National Pledge. The school song is sung in Chinese. There is also a morning recital after the school song.

Notable alumni

References

  1. Chia, Stacey (November 23, 2012) Manjusri Secondary celebrates 30th anniversary. The Straits Times.
  2. Wong, Lester (7 March 2017). "The complete list: 27 secondary schools and their affiliated primary schools". The Straits Times. Retrieved 11 March 2020.
  3. Goh Qiu Bin Archived 27 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine on Singapore National Olympic Council website
  4. Lim, Say Heng (September 26, 2014) Asian Games: No pain, no gain for Wushu exponent Yan Ni. AsiaOne.
  5. 唐婕, 文 / (17 November 2019). "首当女主角与戚玉武演夫妻 雅慧嫌亲密戏不够多". 早报 (in Chinese). Retrieved 11 March 2020.
  6. "Koh Min Hui". Retrieved 11 April 2020.

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