Hi folks, below is an article by Dr Bakri Musa, a Malaysian surgeon residing in the US, who ften writes about education. I think this is one of the more erudite essays on this very emotional subject of the PPMSI.
Chaining The Children of the Poor
The ancient Chinese bound the feet of their baby daughters so they would grow up with deformed tiny feet, thus limiting their mobility and participation in life outside the little world of their homes. These women would then be totally dependent on their men.
In rescinding the policy of teaching science and mathematics in English, the government is likewise binding the intellectual development of our children. They and future generations of Malaysians would grow up with warped intellect. They would then be totally dependent on the government, just as ancient Chinese women with tiny feet were on their men.
My friend and fellow commentator Azly Rahman has a more apt and colorful local metaphor; we are condemning future generations to the Pekan Rabu economy, capable only of selling pirated versions of Michael Jackson albums. That would be the extent of their entrepreneurial prowess and creative flair. They are only subsistence entrepreneurs and ‘copy cat’ creators.
Make no mistake about it. The government’s professed concerns for the poor and those from rural areas notwithstanding, reversing the current policy would adversely and disproportionately impact them. The rich and those in the cities have a ready escape; the rich through private English classes, urban children from the already high levels of English in their community.
The most disadvantaged will be the poor kampong kids. That means Malay children. Thus we have the supreme irony if not perversity of the champions of Ketuanan Melayu actively pursuing a policy that would ensure Malay children be perpetually trapped economically and intellectually. I thank Allah that I grew up at a time when the likes of Muhyyuddin were not in charge of our education system. Otherwise I would have been trapped in my kampong.
The idiocy of the new move is best illustrated by this one startling example. In 2012 when the new plan will be implemented, students in Form IV will be taught science and mathematics in Malay, after learning the two subjects in English for the past nine years. Then two years later when they will be entering Sixth Form or the Matriculation stream, they will again have to revert to English.
Pupils in the vernacular schools would have it worse. They would learn the two subjects in their mother tongue during their primary school years, then switch to Malay for the next five while in secondary school, and then switch again, this time to English, in Sixth Form and university!
Had these policymakers done their homework and diligent downstream analysis, such idiocies would not crop up. Then again this is what we would expect from our civil servants. They have been brought up with their minds bound up; they cannot think. They have depended on others to do the thinking for them.
Najib Razak’s flip-flopping on this major national issue eerily reminds me of similar indecisiveness and lack of resolve of his immediate predecessor, Abdullah Badawi. No wonder he supports Najib in this policy shift. Najib should not take comfort in that, unless he expects a similar fate as Abdullah’s. Abdullah was kicked out by his party; with Najib, it would be the voters who would be kicking him out. Public sentiments are definitely against this policy switch.
Failure of Policy Versus Failure of Implementation
The cabinet reversed course because it deemed the policy did not produce the desired results. However, in arriving at this pivotal decision the cabinet failed to address the fundamental question on whether the original policy was flawed or its implementation ineffective.
It just assumed the policy to be flawed. Muhyyuddin and his senior officers relied heavily on the 2005 UNESCO Report which suggests that “‘mother tongue first’ bilingual education” may (my emphasis) be the solution to the dilemma of members of minority linguistic groups in acquiring knowledge.
Muhyyuddin and his advisers seriously misread the Report. It was concerned primarily with the dilemma at the societal level of members of a linguistic minority having to learn the language of the majority (“national language”) versus the need to maintain linguistic diversity generally and minority languages specifically. UNESCO was rightly concerned with the rapid disappearance of languages spoken by small minority groups. The report was not addressing specifically the learning of science and mathematics.
Malay language is not at risk of disappearing; it is the native tongue of literally hundreds of millions. To extrapolate the UNESCO recommendations for Malay language is a gross oversimplification and misreading of the report.
The UNESCO Report does not address the issue of when and how best to introduce children to bilingual education. Later studies that focused specifically on the pedagogical and psychological aspects instead of the sociological and political have shown that children are quite capable of learning multiple languages at the same time. Even more remarkable is that the earlier they are exposed to a second language the more facile they would be with that language. They would also learn that second language much faster; hence second language even at preschool.
The acquisition of bilingual ability at an early age confers other significant cognitive advantages. These have been documented by clinical studies with functional MRIs (imaging studies of the brain). Malaysia should learn from these more modern studies and the experiences of more advanced societies, not from the UNESCO studies of backward tribes of Asia.
The other basis for the cabinet’s decision was ‘research’ by local half-baked and politically-oriented pseudo academics. They should be embarrassed to append their names to such a sophomoric paper. The quality is such that it will never appear in reputable journals. As for the Ministry’s own internal ‘researchers,’ remember that they came out within months of the policy’s introduction in 2003 documenting the ‘impressive’ improvements in students’ achievements!
The one major entity that would be severely impacted by the cabinet’s decision is our universities. Yet our Vice-Chancellors have remained quiet and detached in this important national debate. They have not advised the cabinet nor lead the public discussions. Again that reflects the caliber of leadership of our major institutions.
Had the cabinet decided that the policy was essentially sound but that the flaws were with its implementations, then measures other than rescinding it would be the appropriate response. This would include recruiting and training more English-speaking teachers and devoting more hours to the subject.
What surprised me is that when Mahathir introduced the policy in 2003, he was supported by his cabinet that included Najib, Muhyyuddin, Hishamuddin, and over a dozen of current ministers who now collectively voted to reverse the policy. Likewise, the policy was fully endorsed too by UMNO’s Supreme Council then. Like the cabinet, many of those earlier members are still in that body today. Yet today the Council also voted to disband the policy. Muhyyuddin, Hishamuddin and the others have yet to share with us why they changed their minds. The conditions that prompted the introduction of the policy back then are still present today. This reversal will do not change that.
Najib, Muhyyuddin and Hishamuddin are “lallang leaders,” they bend with the slightest wind change. Unlike Margaret Thatcher’s famed resolve of “This lady is not for turning,” with Najib, Muhyyuddin, et al., all you have to do to make them undertake a U turn would be to blow slightly in their faces. Blow a bit harder and they would scoot off with their tails between their legs. These leaders will never lead us forward.
This reversal will not solve the widening achievement gap between urban and rural students. The cabinet has yet to put forth new ideas on ameliorating that problem. So, just as ancient Chinese women were physically handicapped because of their bound feet, rural or more specifically Malay children will continue to be intellectually handicapped by their warped and small minds, the consequence of this policy shift. Perhaps that is the real objective of this policy reversal, the shackling of the intellectual development of our young so they will forever be dependent on their ‘leaders.’
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p/s I am away on holiday with only sporadic internet connections. So please forgive the relatively long gaps between posts. Thanks.

38 comments:
Dear Parents,
PAGE Response to Minister's decision on PPSMI
GIVE PPSMI OPTION TO SELECTED SCHOOLS
Since the decision to switch to the mother tongue is to accommodate the rural students who have been made to appear to have ‘lost’ from the policy, the Parent Action Group for Education (PAGE) wishes to request to the Minister of Education to consider the PPSMI option be made to schools that desire to retain the existing policy in the form of SK(PPSMI) and SMK(PPSMI). This fourth option has been glaringly ignored.
If the Minister is willing to accommodate vernacular schools, he should rightly do the same with schools that wish to maintain status quo who have benefited from the policy and are confident of the ‘intended objective’ being met.
PAGE will be formulating a plan of action for parents that desire their schools to have the PPSMI option. In the meantime, we request that parents nationwide including Sarawak and Sabah:
1 Indicate to us the name/s of your school/s that may want to maintain PPSMI; or
2 Ask their PIBGs to liaise with us through pagemalaysia@gmail.com .
Please help by forwarding this message to as many parents as possible. We have 9,000 schools to reach!
Thank you.
For Our Children
Datin Noor Azimah Abdul Rahim
Chair
PAGE
care to visit http://jaringanluar.blogspot.com
Just reintroduce the English School and call it the Sekolah Kebangsaan Jenis Inggeris and then let the parents choose which school they want their childred to attend. By doing this we would be able to produce thousands of English educated graduate in one generation.
Why is it so difficult to understand that an English educated graduates would easily get employed both at the local level and internationally.
Another important aspect is that English Speaking graduates are thinker and we need thinkers to develop the country.
Thanks.
Unfortunately the Minister of Education has declared that the policy will not be changed - so perhaps concerned parents need to change the government.
But that can only happen after 2012and your children may still be affected by the latest "flip-flop".
If you are thinking of sending your children to study in Singapore, you can be assured they will receive a world-class education. You can read an article on my family's experience
here
Somehow I think the problem isn't so much "learning Science and Maths in English" as "learning English". Learning Science and Maths in Malay won't bring any disadvantages if there is a way to teach English effectively. Unfortunately I am for the moment unable to think of a
solution that would work all over the country...
i totally agree with Pak Idrus about Sek Kebangsaan Jenis Inggeris.
Just as the PPSMI is going to be abolished to cater to the rural's children of understanding better in BM, I think urban children should be given the chance to study in a language they understand the best.
Give us that choice!!
Dear H J Angus,
What change of governemnt that you are talking about... I think even our opposition vote for change in the PPSMI policy...even worse, they ask for the change to be done ASAP....what kind of leader that we have here....both side are the same...
Did anyone stopped to think that the government is doing this intentionally so that the deprived groups remain deprived and be cut off from the actual world, to curb their knowledge so thay don't ask too much quaestions...in simple terms to keep them stupid so they can be controlled.
Where previously we had 1 common policy for the whole country, now everyone is divided.
That's the legacy our clueless and jingoistic Education Minister Muhy, PM Najib, the Cabinet and the whole UMNO/BN/MIC Govt have proposed to bequeath to our innocent children.
And they decided that on selective statistics and taking things out of context from UNESCO reports to satisfy Gapena and some rabid right wing so-called super patriots!
No Indian or Chinese, rural or urban, is born with an Oxford Dictionary in his/her mouth or quoting Shakespeare! So, if rural Malays are the ones with the problem in grasping English quickly, then we just have to allocate more resources to crack the problem - more well trained and well paid teachers. That's what the NEP should have all been about!!
Instead we spend billions ($9 billion to be exact, not to mention $500 million 'admin & facilitation' fees (NOT A COMMISSION) to Razak Baginda's Perimekar S/B) on Scorpene Submarines and Sukhoi jets which will gather dust and rust at our naval bases and airforce hangers.
There's also the at least $5 billion (possibly $12 billion)PKFZ fiasco and another $5-8 billion humdinger on Khazanah's foray into chip manufacturing in Silterra. Here and there, if you look closely, will be several more billions wasted on anything from prawn cultivation to Govt sponsored theme parks.
Don't forget how the IPP's have raped Tenaga and the toll operators the PWD for at least 20 billion over the last decade. We are now charged a fortune for what could have been had for a fraction of the cost these robber barons have taken us for!
If Education, Health, Employment & Welfare are not this Govt's top most priority, then they should tell us NOW, so everyone knows who to cast their votes for, come GE 2013.
We will not be taken for a ride by these bunch of no hopers!!
Tun Dr Mahathir should launch an ending, unceasing, untiring, relentless, hard-hitting, no-holds-barred campaign to either get it restored or come up with another workable alternative.
And we should support him unendingly, unceasingly & unrelentlessly.
Only in this matter-lah, I mean.
surely he got good points, but this fella IS residing in the States. any goods in that for us in Malaysia (besides his words)?
Bakri: "Even more remarkable is that the earlier they are exposed to a second language the more facile they would be with that language."
Remarkable or disastrous? Depending on how credible the person (read: teacher) who is entrusted "to expose" the second language.
The indisputable fact shows that: "Only 19.2% of secondary teachers and 9.96% of primary teachers were sufficiently proficient in English."
I certainly don't want any of my kids 'exposed' to English in the wrong way. Kami penduduk Sabah mempunyai kebarangkalian lebih tinggi untuk terdedah kepada 'ajaran sesat' itu -- sebab for sure, those 19.2% and 9.96% proficient teachers would be most likely teaching in Semenanjung and urban areas.
Why would we listen to someone residing in UK (who probably has never been to any rural schools in Sabah and Sarawak), and ignore the voices of thousands teachers all over the country (ingat: semua PERSATUAN GURU menyuarakan tentangan terhadap PPSMI), who are actually on 'the real ground'? What sort of mentality we are promoting here?
Sometimes, when we're born rich -- and we get everything in life -- we tend to lose perspective. We’re starting to think that this world is perfect – and we see things based on “how IT SHOULD BE”. Not how IT REALLY IS. This is generally put. I’m not aiming it to anyone.
(1) Political groups need to be relevant in order to continue existing.
(2) Why do they want to continue to existing? So that there is a chance to wield power? Why do they want to wield power? Well, some for patriotic reasons, some for slightly-less-than-patriotic reasons.
(3) How to be relevant? Well, show the grass-roots that they still need protection & make them believe that these same politicians are the only ones who can protect them.
(4) How to make the grass-roots believe them?
(5) Aha....to make them ignorant for the long haul!
Simple!
And now for the billion-dollar (literally, actually) question - how to make them ignorant?
I rest my case.
is the Government supposed to serve the people or is it the other way round ?
What kind of future will our country become if our future leaders who do not understand or speak English?
Not only to foreigners but locals ,too.Will we become Asian animals?
Dear aziz
It is not only on this English "flip-flop" that we should change the government to whatever that may be.
We have the billion RM PKFZ scam, the Lingam tapes, the IPCMC failure and the tainted Judiciary.
Our systems are broken and BN will not/cannot fix the problems as they created many of the problems.
Of course PR is not perfect - which government is? . But if we simply just moan without action, we may as well just grin and bear it.
We should move towards a 2-party system to ensure a better check and balance.
To me this flip-flop in education is the GREATEST tragedy for the children.
I support mother tongue education for primary school with BM and English as important subjects.
For secondary school, the students should be introduced to Maths and Science in English or they are going to struggle in university; especially in technical subjects.
I do not believe that graduates in languages are competent to translate technical subjects like engineering or computing.
Typo -
"Why do they want to continue to existing?"
should have been
"Why do they want to continue existing?"
UNESCO Resolution (1951:691) on education:
"On educational grounds we recommend that the use of the mother tongue be exerted to as late a stage in education as possible. In particular, pupils should begin their schooling through the medium of the mother tongue, because they understand it best and because to begin their school life in the mother tongue will make the break between home and school as small as possible."
UNESCO doesn't come out with this resolution from nothing. Ia digubal berdasarkan pendapat dan cadangan tidak kurang daripada 300 orang!) pakar pendidikan SELURUH DUNIA. From a group of experts who really know every single underlying issue in education. Bukan pendapat rambang seorang pakar bedah, atau lontaran-lontaran logik seorang aktivis AIDS. :)
hi MM
i suggest Maths n Science being taught in Mandarin. mandarin will be a fast moving languange.
China will dominate world soon. so why bother english? we should prepare for mandarin.
any takers?
Hi Marina,
Pak Idrus, what a 'choice' comment, pun fully intended.
totally disagrees with any of u guys.
Malay is our native language. Why should we use foreign language as our education language? Do they contribute anything to our country? Why should we even give them a chance to conquer our students? I don't know what others think. But what I think is, this is one of the signs of the demolishing of Malays' identities. We don't even know how to appreciate and keep our mother tongue safe. Think about the future generations folks!
"Why should we use foreign language as our education language?Do they contribute anything to our country?"
-The Indians use English up to university level. I notice that they're as Indian as can be. The Singaporean Chinese study all their subjects in English & they're very chauvinistically Chinese. Does the use of English contribute anything to our country? Observe India & Singapore & I'll ask "are you blind or what?"
"Why should we even give them a chance to conquer our students?"
- wow, you're smart !!
"this is one of the signs of the demolishing of Malays' identities"
- let cleverness be one of our identities, ok?
"We don't even know how to appreciate and keep our mother tongue safe"
- friend, we need to keep our race safe!!
"Think about the future generations folks!"
- that's true! How does one do it? Become a frog under a tempurung? Hmmm....maybe, you see, I've got this froggy friend...well, he's smart...........
"i suggest Maths n Science being taught in Mandarin. mandarin will be a fast moving languange.
China will dominate world soon. so why bother english? we should prepare for mandarin."
Friend, studying Maths & Science in mandarin is not even useful if you want to work in China because they put no premium on those who know the molecular structure of the butane molecule in the Mandarin glossary. They put a premium on those who can communicate in English!
China will not dominate the world in a hundred years if you think of domination in the American sense.
So, I'll place my bets on the English horse.
Besides, given the historical legacy we have, your suggestion is doomed to failure. A practical nation like Singapore will not even dream of studying Science in Mandarin; at most, they may want to strengthen their Mandarin curriculum.
Given the choice of Mandarin or BM for Sc & M, I pick BM any day. That's our national language, babe!
Dear Miss Dearly Pinky,
I am appalled by your comments. What do you mean by " other ppl conquering our students". For crying out loud, we are living in the borderless world today. Learning is no longer confined to classrooms and texbooks anymore. The internet has helped a lot in making learning fun and more enjoyable.
Furthermore, go to any bookstores like MPH for instance, you will find many interesting children books on science and maths from abroad which are all in English.
Early last month when the flu H1NI resulted in schools like SRK Assunta PJ to close for a week, students were required to continue their lessons through the net. Again, it is all in English.
Malay being our national language and all of us should be proud of it. But the importance of English is the one determines one's career and ultimately the nation's growth and development.
Buyung Adil: "The Indians use English up to university level. I notice that they're as Indian as can be."
Yes, the Indians and Africans use English up to university level. And those decisions have been made long-long years ago. Now, look at this for comparison. The Iranians and Koreans stick to their own languages.
Who dominate at the annual Geneva invention (where almost 95% of the competing innovations are maths- and science-based)? How many medals Indian and African scientists won at last year's Geneva?
My point is, despite not teaching Maths and Science in English -- if the Iranians and Koreans can still find a way to learn and master English (so that they can be equally competitive internationally) -- why can't we?
Please, don't force this crazy idea of "PPSMI is the only way to learn English, without which.. our students will be doomed as far as English is concerned". Come on, this weak-and-super-pathetic argument is becoming so repetitively cliché now. Come with something fresher and better, please -- if you guys really want to defend PPSMI. :-)
Why everyone is so obsessed in pointing out how bad our English is -- that we have to optimise every single opportunity to improve it? Do you think that our Malay is any better -- and we don't face any problem when it comes our national language?
Masih ada kalangan doktor-doktor warga Malaysia yang tidak fasih bertutur BM. Ini menimbulkan banyak masalah bila mereka ditugaskan di kawasan luar bandar. Or even in the urban area.
Terjemahan-terjemahan yang bodoh di skrin TV juga bukan disebabkan oleh penguasaan English yang lemah. Itu sebenarnya adalah bukti betapa lemahnya penguasaan BM kalangan penterjemah kita. Sebab terjemahan dari English ke BM mesti dibuat oleh seorang yang 'fasih English'. Bukan sebaliknya.
"You father has just passed away? I'm sorry!"
"Bapa kamu baru MATI? Saya minta maaf!"
Contoh di atas bukan rekaan. Selalu sangat keluar dalam skrin ASTRO. Inilah bentuk terjemahan daripada seorang penterjemah yang penguasaan BM-nya sangat cikai dan ciput. Why we are so concerned about competing with the world -- when we can't even provide good service to our own people?
Rem, good comments overall.
But I beg to differ in the case of Indian science. Many of her scientists are top-rate ones (but many reside outside of India). I can't say much about Iranian science though. I've never heard of Iranian break-throughs.
It's true that our standard of BM can be quite atrocious to the point of irritating. But our locals, if only educated in Malay, will miss out on a lot. That's an undeniable fact.
“But I beg to differ in the case of Indian science. Many of her scientists are top-rate ones (but many reside outside of India).”
I did my postgrad and postdoc in UK for 5 years. I met many top scientists (both pure and applied sciences – e.g. programming, engineering, etc) and mathematicians, from middle-east countries, working in the UK universities. Most of the Indian and African academics that I knew, were mainly in the field of social sciences, humanities and literatures.
“I can't say much about Iranian science though. I've never heard of Iranian break-throughs.”
Then you may consider to attend the prestigious Geneva Invention annual event. It’s the “Olympic version” of innovation in science and technology. Last year, a Korean inventor won the BEST OVERALL INVENTION award. And, Iran won the biggest number of gold medals (among the Asian countries). Surprisingly, despite the fact that many African countries have fully switched to English years ago – they have never been the factor when it comes to global technology and invention. I wonder why? :-)
“But our locals, if only educated in Malay, will miss out on a lot. That's an undeniable fact.”
I agree with you. We MUST NOT EDUCATE our locals in Malay only. Tapi pemansuhan PPSMI bukan bermakna kita akan mengabaikan Bahasa Inggeris. In fact, by doing so – the government compensate it by ‘strengthening’ the English Language curriculum. Saya fikir tidak logik dan tidak benar untuk mengatakan bahawa golongan anti-PPSMI adalah golongan anti-BI.
Here my point is, and I don’t think those so-called pro-PPSMIans really understand it (due to their extreme obsession of English!). Maths and Science are two of the most difficult subjects in school for MOST students. Believe me, majority of the kids (in both primary and secondary levels) will find learning Maths and Science painfully torturous.
Oleh sebab itu – kita memerlukan metod pengajaran terbaik untuk dua subjek yang susah ini. We want the teachers to have all the helps needed and to minimise as much constraints as possible – so that they can really teach “this two difficult subjects” very effectively. So that, they would at least help easing the pain for the kids too.
Now, we have only 19.2% of secondary teachers and 9.96% primary teachers who are proficient in English. But we know for sure that 95% of teachers (primary and secondary) all over the country – are very competent in Malay. So, instead of teaching Maths and Science in English (which could potentially victimise the students) – what is wrong switching back to BM?
Seriously, I REALLY DON’T understand with these pro-PPSMI people. Ya, saya tau. Ada segolongan pelajar yang lebih suka dan selesa belajar Maths dan Sains dalam BI. But can’t these people make a compromise? Until this very day, they are still trying very hard to make the government to SERVE FIRST the already “privileged minority”. Do they really believe that the “underprivileged majority” (Sabahans and Sarawkians, especially) are less important?
On a different note…
I’m a Dusun from Ranau. I was born and grew up, in typical Dusun upbringing. The only language I speak was Dusun – until I went to school and pick up Malay as my second language, English as the third and Arabic being the fourth. I know that it is my ability to communicate in other languages (Malay and English, especially) that brings me to where I am now. And, having the life I’m living now.
Tapi kalaulah pada hari ini saya diminta untuk memilih HANYA SATU BAHASA untuk kekal dalam diri, dan semua bahasa lain yang saya kuasai itu WAJIB dihilangkan (hypothetically speaking, of course) – without a slight doubt I would choose to keep my Dusun language. Seriously, no joke. Life is not all about competing with the world. Or being able to connect with the bigger global arena – where technology and material are waiting for you as the ultimate reward. Life is more than that. The most important one is probably your “very own existence” (that comes with “an identity”). Without which, we are no more, no less - than just a mechanic humanbeing.
Sometimes people tend to forget this. That is why – we have someone residing thousands miles away in US – obsessively pretending to know what is the best for thousand kids in Sabah and Sarawak, whom he never know or meet. What a sad soul.
salam,
soalan saya, jika kita MAMPU bina litar F1, Putrajaya, KLIA, KLCC, pun masih mampu bersaing di pertandingan-pertandingan sains dunia,
maka HALANGAN apa pula yang mengganggu kita untuk membina sekumpulan penyelidik+penterjemah, (dengan bantuan ITNM)untuk menterjemah berjuta-juta 'terminologi' yang sangat ditakuti itu?
pendapat saya mudah, berbalik kepada budaya kita,(orang dulu dah lama tahu tabiat keturunan kita)jika NAK, 1000 DAYA, jika TIDAK MAHU, 1 000 000 000 ALASAN..
betul atau tidak?
REM, I appreciate the points you make. It would be nice if they could be laid out without having to call me and other parents who don't agree with you stupid, ignorant and even racist. I understand that I don't have a doctorate in anything and am just a lowly AIDS activist.
But ultimately we are just parents who want the best for our children. In that I'm sure we have in common with the parents who would prefer to have their children taught in BM or Dusun or whatever language they prefer, including you I guess.We may have different ideas about it but that doesn't make us stupid. It is enough that we get insulted by politicians who call us unpatriotic, traitors, doomed to have children who will only become maids (because they speak English) without also having to endure it from other citizens, albeit those who have doctorates like you.
I invite you to insult me all you want in your own blog. But my blog is my house and I believe hospitality is not normally repaid by insulting the host anonymously. Thank you for your understanding.
Hi dear Miss Marina
Thanks for allowing us put the links to our blogs in your comment that enable us being reached by your fans. Aha!
I am the organiser of the blogs called Jaringan Luar Pemerhati Media. Of which I acknowledge the works done by Mr. Abror Rivai, you might know him. Aha! The upcoming young film director of our scenes.
So, if you do like that blog.. hopefully you will put the links to it in your blog. We shall appreciate your contribution.
Oh! PPSMI. We support both views. Agreed and disagreed on whatever reasons given. Thanks you lots.
Rem you sound very much like a frog under 'temburung', while boasting how big your world is... err, I think you are the one who don't know what's the best for your children because your hypothesis doesn't exist. This world is and will be dominated by English speaking people. Unfortunately, people who think like you are losing out and yet at the same time cry foul for an unfair world that marginalize you.. Pity you (even though you don't feel that way).
Keep the country folks "under-educated " , intellectually undernourished , naive and gullible .... & they can rule them for the next couple thousand years.
Angus , I totally agree with you on seeking an education in Singapore.
Singapore has been accepting our As students into their colleges and universities for years.
Just afew years before they become professions & productive citizens .
Then give them PR status .... & it's Hello Singapore ! and bye bye Malaysia .
A national language and a language used as a medium of instruction are 2 different things. Nonetheless, for different countries around the world they are one and the same. However, there is nothing wrong with having a national language that differs from the medium of instruction. It is just a different way of doing things. The issue for Malaysia lies in the fact that language plays a role in establishing the identity of a community. This is an issue that has burdened us as we have been trying to establish and affirm who we are as a nation. The decision to overturn a policy that has been in place for less than a decade seems short-sighted, especially since English teachers in training in recent years have been practically drilled with this teaching in English for Maths and Science issue. What now?
As an English teacher in training I believe that in the long run, the main issue we should be considering is teaching students to be literate. This is not just limited to being able to read and write, but also to be able to understand, critique and interact with a text. Any text. Not just stories, but journals, information databases from various sources, and theories and studies that shape what we call the body of knowledge. It is not enough to be able to look at symbols on a page or on a screen and know what sounds they make or what words they are. There is a necessity to be able to view it in its entirety objectively for its worth and applicability, and take into the consideration of its source. It is also just as important to be able to add to the knowledge that we have as a literate nation.
As such, literacy should be the what we are aiming for. I know this sounds incredibly idealistic and naive, but I really feel that to be able to make progress and construct an identity that is uniquely our own, we need to address the issue of developing an intellectual nation that can think for herself. How do we do this? Its hard to think of a solution right now when education is heavily underpinned by political agendas, our history, etc etc etc.
At the end of the day, the world we live in is constantly changing. We need to prepare our children for a future we cannot see but can only predict. This is what we need to do, in English or not, because they will be the ones living with the consequences of education policies made today. They will be the ones who need to cope and keep up.
Simple and easy. Some people think that intellectualism can only be achieved in English. They cannot reach orgasm when sex is not in English.
The confuse these issue, mixed up and jumbled:
- Learning & Teaching & The Importance of English
- Learning & Teaching & The Importance of Mathematics
- Sex
hanizar
I guess you have some confusion about sex and English.
It seems you have a preoccupation with SEX.
Angus,
Get well soon..
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