DOI: 10.1177/09579265261457564 ISSN: 0957-9265

Shadow education signage and educational subjectivity: Meritocracy and responsibilization in Singapore

Carl Jon Way Ng, Garene Tay

Shadow education, particularly private supplementary tutoring, has become a prominent feature of competitive, high-stakes schooling systems. Situated within Singapore’s meritocratic educational context, where educational success is seen as the product of strategic planning, this article examines the semiotic landscape of a shopping mall housing a dense concentration of tuition centres. Through an analysis of tuition-related signage emplaced across corridors, storefronts, glass railings, lift-lobby areas, and escalator balustrades, it identifies four salient discursive framings: credentialized achievement, anticipatory preparedness, aspirational trajectories of learning, and competitive differentiation. The analysis shows how these framings are realized through linguistic, visual, and spatial modalities, and how they derive their force through visibility, emplacement, recurrence, accretion, and situated encounters within the mall’s publicly accessible spaces. The article argues that this semiotic landscape functions as an affective infrastructure, orienting parents, students, and visitors towards particular understandings of shadow education while normalizing neoliberal meritocratic rationalities in everyday commercial space.

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