Children at a Singapore school will need to think twice about playing truant now that a text message system automatically alerts their parents.
"I was hoping that through this system I actually reduce the amount of administrative work for teachers (and) enhance the home-school links," Tan Teck Hock, principal of Yishun Town Secondary school said today.
Following today's launch, teachers will mark the names of absent students in an electronic database.
The mobile phone text message or Short Message Service (SMS) broadcast system, supplied by local technology provider WorldRemind, taps into the database and automatically sends out a message to parents telling them their child is missing from class.
Parents can choose from one of four pre-set SMS replies providing an excuse for the child's absence or stating they are unaware of their child's whereabouts.
Teachers will obtain a summary of the day's attendance once the system has received parent's replies.
Close to 400 13-year old students will test the system initially but Tan plans to have the 1,400-strong school fully wired before the end of the year. About 70 percent of parents have mobile phones, Tan said.
The system cost about S$5,000 (stg 1,938).
Text messaging, introduced to the city-state in 1995, has become an extremely popular means of communication with users punching out millions of messages per day.