Time To Remove Maszlee From Education
QUESTION TIME | Instead of worrying about the colour of students’ shoes and a cashless system in schools, Education Minister Maszlee Malik needs to focus on improving education, the most vital ingredient to upgrade skills, increase incomes, raise living standards and dispel ignorance
Maszlee’s task has been made much easier because there is already a comprehensive education blueprint which can be followed, and there is a mechanism for monitoring it. The new government, soon after it came into power, undertook to follow the blueprint
In 2007, in a McKinsey and Company study on ways to improve a school system, after it investigated 25 of the world’s school systems, including ten of the top performers, I found the most succinct executive summary on education that I have seen anywhere. Here is the key point:“The experiences of these top school systems suggest that three things matter most: 1) getting the right people to become teachers, 2) developing them into effective instructors and, 3) ensuring that the system is able to deliver the best possible instruction for every child.”This is quite intuitive, but as the executive summary pointed out, changing what happens in the hearts and minds of children is no simple task. Some do it successfully, while others do not - and money alone is not the sole determinant of what works
McKinsey suggested that the top school systems “demonstrate that the best practices for these three things work irrespective of the culture in which they are applied. They demonstrate that substantial improvement in outcomes is possible in a short period of time."Also, it came to three conclusions, which are logical, precise and to the point:1. The quality of an education system cannot exceed the quality of its teachers
2. The only way to improve outcomes is to improve instruction3. High performance requires every child to succeed
Clearly, the Malaysian education system is not anywhere near best practices and much needs to be done about education
McKinsey went on to help Malaysia produce a 292-page, 12-year education blueprint 2013-2025 focusing on preschool to post-secondary education, which was unveiled in 2013, over five years ago when the current home minister Muhyiddin Yassin was the education minister. There was another one for higher education, but our emphasis here is on the more basic one where considerably more effort is required
This comprehensive plan has laid out in detail what needs to be done to improve basic education in Malaysia. It identified six skills for students to excel globally - knowledge, thinking skills, leadership skills, bilingual proficiency, ethics and spirituality, and national identity
It also details eleven shifts to transform the system, including equal access to quality education, proficiency in Malay and English, making teaching a profession of choice, and using ICT for efficiency, and transparency. A perusal of the blueprint is instructive for the understanding of the Malaysian education system and what can be done to improve it
The report set targets and timelines for achievements and recommended a yearly assessment against the targets set
What Maszlee has to do is to return to this education blueprint, instead of being sidetracked by irrelevant issues which have no bearing on the improvement of the education system whatsoever - there is no evidence to show that students performance iimproves if they wear black shoes or if there were a cashless system in schools
He should be telling us what is happening in terms of achieving the objectives of the blueprint, and where we are now
Let’s take one example - bilingual proficiency. One way of increasing English proficiency is to increase usage of the language, for instance by teaching Science and Maths in English. Dr Mahathir Mohamad, during his previous term as prime minister, changed the system, for which he was largely responsible as an education minister in the seventies, to provide for the teaching of Science and Maths in English
This went on for several years until, ironically, his current home minister and then education minister Muhyiddin Yassin (above) under Najib Razak, overturned Mahathir’s move to allow teaching the subjects only in Malay and vernacular languages, turning back the clock
With Mahathir as PM again, Maszlee should have no problem reverting to teaching Science and Maths in English, but he has not done so
Let’s see what the blueprint says about bilingual proficiency: “ Every child will be, at minimum, operationally proficient in Bahasa Malaysia as the national language and language of unity, and in English as the international language of communication. This means that upon leaving school, the student should be able to work in both a Bahasa Malaysia and English language environment. The Ministry will also encourage all students to learn an additional language.”What better way to improve English than to have some subjects taught in that language? As it is, students from national schools are severely handicapped in job applications by poor English, especially since many of them enrol in local universities where teaching continues in Malay and the language gap widens
One more example. This is what the blueprint says about creating a national identity: “Every child will proudly identify as Malaysian, irrespective of ethnicity, religion or socio-economic status. Achieving this patriotism requires that every child understands the country’s history, and shares common aspirations for the future. Establishing a true national identity also requires a strong sense of inclusiveness. This can be achieved through not only learning to understand and accept diversity, but to embrace it.”Tell us, Maszlee, in concrete terms what you are doing about achieving this, where you are falling short, and what you will do to overcome them. Where exactly are we at now, and what will we achieve in the remaining six years to 2025? And tell us what have we achieved in the first half or six years of the education blueprint
Do we have enough qualified teachers to enable educational transformation now? If not, what are we doing and what are our targets? How far away are we from achieving them? One can ask similar questions about many other areas in education
Maszlee has shown so far no indication that he is the person to run the most important ministry there is in terms of the future of all Malaysians. If he fails, it will set the country back tremendously by many years and stymie the much-needed change in the education system
If he still shows no improvement and continues to focus on mosquito issues, instead of tackling the huge problems facing education, Mahathir must have no hesitation in removing him and putting in place someone else who can, even if that person is not from Bersatu, which has a paucity of good people. P GUNASEGARAM taught science and maths in the late Seventies in a government school and saw the deterioration in teacher standards then via the mass hiring of poorly qualified people. He says education is too important to be put in the hands of incompetent people, whether teachers or ministers or anyone else in between. - Mkini
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