AFTER my last article, Jacqueline from one of my active chat groups asked that I write a wish list to our Education Minister. Instead of talking about the IIUM president’s job that he insist on keeping, I challenged the group members to focus on our primary and secondary national schools by asking them to give me their personal top three wishes for the wish list that I can compile and message to Dr Maszlee Malik via this column.
Within the next hour, my phone pinged non-stop from this highly educated group of opinionated professionals and entrepreneurs.
Faris ‘the progressive professor’ said he wrote a mini thesis on our education system way back in 2009 and was dismayed at how things were (and are). This led him to home school some of his kids with the eldest son now getting a scholarship from a Japanese university. Being a devout Muslim has not stopped him from allowing his son to seek science and technology knowledge in a different country. He also has a very talented daughter who is artistic and imaginative in drawings and graphics.
Sharman our CPA chipped in that financial literacy should be included in the secondary school syllabus so that the young should learn how to manage their finances. Mohammad our insurance veteran agrees on financial literacy and recommended that our children should also be taught communication skills and critical thinking skills.
Siti, our fleet taxi entrepreneur, wants Kemahiran Hidup (living skills) to be reinstated, critical thinking class in secondary, one foreign language (besides Malay and English) and IB ( International Baccalaureate) curriculums in secondary schools. Jacqueline, our lawyer agrees with Siti on IB CAS which focuses on community service and projects.
BC, our bank manager, feels that our teachers should be facilitators and coaches rather than the old school type of “I told you so” mentality. He is impressed with Finland’s school education system. Nathan, our bachelor entrepreneur based in Sabah, wants to see less conventional education, more sports and our children taught more problem solving and social skills.
Aaron, our roof contractor, wants more allocation for scheduled building maintenance, build more asrama for students from rural areas and build more sport halls. Dr YC Lee, ex CFO of a PLC, feels that examination results should be the initial driver for educational change, widening to a more holistic approach. He feels strongly that the examination marks and subsequent distribution curves for grades be made public.
ST Muk the “Idealist” Sabahan wants to integrate all primary schools into a single curriculum system to nurture integration amongst all races at young age. The three main languages to be taught so that the young ones have a basic grasp of Bahasa Malaysia, Mandarin and Tamil but Science and Maths be taught in English. No religious classes during school hours. Have a balanced gender and racial mix of teachers and set KPIs for promotions of teachers.
I then asked them what is more important for our education system now? Integration, religion or academic excellence? Integration means students from all races study in national schools from young. The emphasis of one religion in national schools will keep the non-Muslim students from joining hence the popularity of the vernacular schools which is anti-integration. Academic excellence means merit-based examination results which will polarise the poor students even further from the smart students.
At this moment, these three priorities are mutually exclusive as far as our education system is concerned. Thirty years of poor education policies caused by politics along racial lines plus the encroachment of religious phobia have resulted in a broken and divided education system. National schools are divided along racial and religious composition whilst academic standards have dropped to an all-time low. We are producing students who lack in problem solving skills, creative leaning skills and communication skills.
I stand to be corrected on these viewpoints and observations:
Examination grades have been lowered to cater to the weak students on the national bell curve. This could be probably due to the pressure on the Education Ministry to show positive year on year performance of our national education system.
The increasing Islamic curriculum and culture in national schools have driven the non-Muslim students to join the vernacular schools from young and now extended into the secondary schools as well.
Most Malay school students have a poor command of English whereas most Chinese school students from Chinese speaking families have a poor command of English and Bahasa Malaysia.
Most of the teachers in national type schools are Malays and mostly females. The Chinese teachers are mostly in Chinese vernacular schools and private schools. Most teachers have a poor command of the English language.
National type schools are slacking in teaching of Science and Maths with fewer teaching hours per week which is the opposite of vernacular schools. Some textbooks are inaccurately written with twisted facts and some exam questions are racially insensitive with regard to national unity.
Teaching of Science and Maths in English across all national schools would be difficult as there is a big shortage of English-speaking teachers and retraining of 500,000 teachers would be an impossible task.
Taking religious classes out of national type schools would be difficult as most Muslim parents want it to be part of the school curriculum. Similarly, the vernacular schools will be here to stay if the national schools continue with their current path.
Raising the academic standards would be difficult but doable if there is political will. Just be transparent with our grading standards and raise the bar on a gradual basis.
Dear Dr Maszlee, you have been handed the toughest job of all the Cabinet ministers.
We would like to offer you some practical solutions and our “Professor” Faris to your council of eminent educationist as you ponder on overhauling our education system beyond the white or black shoe saga.
Faris and Wong, our automobile expert has this vision of a Malaysian Vision school where you can incorporate national unity, academic excellence and religious studies of all faiths. Siti, Jacqueline and BC hopes that you can incorporate best practices from the Finnish education system (which you yourself admire) highlighting creative thinking and IB elements.
For national unity, set a flexible quota as per racial composition of our citizens. Bring in retrained teachers in English, Maths, Science and IB with a more balanced gender composition. Bahasa Malaysia is the main language except for teaching of Maths and Science in English.
Add in another foreign language option. Have a modified IB curriculum to suit our local standards but focus more on creative thinking and problem solving. Let the children play more sports and enjoy extra curricular activities whilst allocating some hours per week for living skills and religious classes. Curriculum should be skewed towards Science, Maths and IT/Technology.
Just convert 5% of current primary and secondary schools in all states and towns to the new concept Malaysian Vision schools. It might take you five years to convert as it requires a steep learning curve for the teachers. I assure you that there are many parents from all races (who cannot afford private schools) who would love to send their children to this Malaysian Vision school.
As for the rest of the schools, you will have to allow the parents to decide. If the parents want to send their children to national type schools and religious schools, just improve the syllabus with more hours given to Science, Maths and IT/Technolgy. In addition, please encourage more sport activities and if possible encourage more English lessons and throw in a foreign language or two.
If the parents want to send their children to vernacular schools, just improve the syllabus with more hours spent on Bahasa Malaysia, English and a foreign language or two. In addition, more sports please and less homework.
Faris feels that you might need to overhaul your Ministry team and culture. I personally feel that you should look into textbook quality and factual accuracy.
It has taken the previous government 30 years to polarise our schools and the education ministry to lower our academic standards. It will take you and the future Education Ministers another 30 years to achieve your dream of a “Cambridge” level education system that will be relevant and comparable to the world’s best.
Just remember that you will need to feed “Cambridge” level students into our local universities so that our universities can be of “Oxford” standard. My group of non-Oxbridge friends would not be able to advise you on how to improve our local universities. Anyway, you will be too preoccupied with one university under your purview so we hope you can assign your deputy to look after the interest of the other universities.
If possible, please ask your deputy to build University Malaya to become the next “Harvard” University. Like you, I have a sentimental attachment to my alma mater.
https://www.thestar.com.my/business/business-news/2018/09/29/a-wishlist-to-the-education-minister/
Created by savemalaysia | Nov 29, 2024
Created by savemalaysia | Nov 29, 2024
Created by savemalaysia | Nov 29, 2024
Created by savemalaysia | Nov 29, 2024
Created by savemalaysia | Nov 29, 2024
Created by savemalaysia | Nov 29, 2024
Created by savemalaysia | Nov 29, 2024
Created by savemalaysia | Nov 29, 2024
Engineeringprofit! I completely agree with you! Unfortunately this Mazlee is uselss! What do you expect from PPBM! Just repeat of old 'tuan melayu' agenda!
2018-09-30 12:19
My. Son study IB in Amsterdam and find the education there very useful for them when they come out to work. Why don’t msia education is copy them instead try to be creative and come out a lot of funny things .
2018-09-30 15:21
my son and daughter says...school is for play. no teaching and no learning in school.
tuition is for passing exams.
2018-09-30 15:42
Mazlee major accomplishment, introducing black rubber shoes for schoolgoers! Next will be teaching Bahasa to our MPs! Boy, and i thought Mohiden was the dummiest we ever had!
2018-09-30 16:47
And to think our MPs left schools like decades ago! And this dimwit education from PPBM wants our MPs to go back to school to learn Bahasa!
2018-09-30 16:48
i remember last time education minister under tun musa hitam, the education progress very well.
now it seems like we are going back to ape age.
2018-09-30 16:56
its not about Mazlee .....
the issue is.....how do u turn pig iron into quality steel with this bunch of teachers?
2018-09-30 17:02
I hope Gobind Singh will revamp our education system once he is done with his current ministry! This dude is awesome!
2018-09-30 17:04
.....and to stop wasting public fund
https://sg.news.yahoo.com/student-exchange-programme-required-developing-124010201.html
2018-09-30 22:27
a.k.a. EngineeringHonestCommunity (against unholy in disguise)
"The first decade of Reformasi taught me never again to fully trust politicians in power, high or low ranking religious officials proclaiming the morality of Islam while collecting honourifics and projects, vice-chancellors of public universities without conscience, and the police force which has neither the morality nor the integrity to uphold the law." by Tajuddin Rasdi
https://www.freemalaysiatoday.com/category/opinion/2018/10/04/what-the-1998-reformasi-taught-me/
HONESTY......NO LONGER A POLICY IS SCHOOL....
.......DISHONESTY THRIVES
PARADOX IN SCHOOL
When a school.host a competition
Participants tend to get cheated
Dishonest, biased outcomes a repetition
True sporting spirit is indeed most wanted
More frequent prayers, lack noble value
Confession to mistakes is no longer valued
Denying seems to be the preferred way
Honesty has become a treasure of good old days
Garbage in, garbage out
Dishonesty in, honesty out
Cheating in, sporting spirit out
P...........in, universal values out
More prayers heard, less honesty seen
Better exam results, using sinful means
Hiding all the wrong doings, dishonesty thrive
For a brighter nation future, what factors drive?
2018-10-04 07:59
Former minister Rafidah Aziz gave Pakatan Harapan leaders a lashing today for having to backtrack on what she said were good decisions due to their election manifesto.
One such decision was the initial plan to have Prime Minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad to also take on the portfolio of education minister.
"I'm sorry that Mahathir didn't become education minister. When at first, he told me he was going to (become education minister), I was so thrilled.
https://m.malaysiakini.com/news/446634
2018-10-10 07:23
EngineeringProfit
The only right things to do......
1. overhaul our education system beyond the white or black shoe saga......so can focus in reform that have meaningful long-term implications
2. include financial literacy in the school syllabus......as bankruptcy rate just unacceptably high among the young ones
3. incorporate learning how to learn, critical thinking, time/emotion/change managemenr and extra foreign languages (besides Malay and English) into Kemahiran Hidup (living skills)
4. be transparent with our grading standards, and make public the distribution curve for examination results which must be used as the initial driver for educational change towards a more holistic approach
5. take religious classes out of national schooling hours.....replace with one that fosters unity.....that every pupil would talk in the same wave length.......and share a common agenda.....'Genuine Patriotism, Country Vision and Engineering A Brighter Future For The Next Generations'
6. encourage more sport activities ........as nearly half of Msians are unhealthily oversized
7. ensure only the key points would be tested in exams.........do as much as possible.....away from rote learning........as not every pupil should be a historian, for example, hence need not memorize all the unnecessary details
2018-09-30 10:04