The Havoc Education Reform Inflicts: Education Blueprint 2013-2025
Quality Schools Begin With Quality Teachers
[In Part One, I discussed the Blueprint’s
failure to recognize the diversity within our school system and the
need to have different solutions for different constituents. In this
Part Two, I discuss the particular challenge of having competent
teachers especially in science, English, and mathematics that is not
adequately addressed in the report.]
In the 1950s, the Headmaster of my
Tuanku Muhammad School, Kuala Pilah, lived in a palatial bungalow up on
the hill, next to the residence of the District Officer. Two decades
later, his successor was renting a modest house from my father, a
retired Malay primary school teacher. As for that hilltop house, it is
now occupied by a civil servant.
In the 1960s when the Minister of Education visited Malay College he was noticeably deferential to its Headmaster. Today, the threat of a visit by a lowly ministry functionary would throw the Headmaster and his senior staff into a tizzy.
Those are the realities of the teaching profession in Malaysia today. The folks who produced Education Blueprint 2013-2025 see the world of Malaysian teachers differently. They brag about having 38 applicants for every teaching slot, way over the eight in Finland, acknowledged as having the best schools and teachers.
What gives? Just a few lines away and easily missed by careless readers, the Blueprint reveals that over a third of those applicants lacked even the minimal (and very low) current qualifications. Imagine! The perception students have of the teaching profession is this: If you are not qualified for anything else, apply to be a teacher.
The panel wants to tighten the
qualifications so only those in the top third could apply. Great, but
how? As a mental exercise, I wonder how many of the current applicants
would qualify if the proposed higher standards were to be applied. If
the panel had done so, it would realize the magnitude of the problem.
They would then be dissuaded from resorting to simplistic solutions as
merely raising the entry requirements. The challenge is not with
imposing tighter criteria (that could be done simply with a directive)
but enticing those top students.
The panel’s approach to the teacher issue is reflective of its collective muddled thinking.
Its members are unable to look at data critically or know the
limitations even when those figures defy reality and common sense. They
are easily mesmerized and be taken in by such silly statistics as over
38 applicants per teaching slot.
Yes, there is a glut of applicants, but
only from those in Malay and Islamic Studies. They are unemployable
elsewhere. The critical shortage is in science, English, and mathematics
(SEM). The focus should thus be on this critical and difficult
challenge instead of searching for an overarching solution to all
problems, or ones that do not even exist, as with Islamic Studies
teachers. And some problems could be solved simply through less meddling
from the ministry.
Consider another set of figures cited in the Blueprint: Malaysian teachers have comparable pay to and are treated like their peers outside the profession.
Again, reality is far different, as attested to by that headmaster
renting a house. Salary figures alone do not tell the whole story, as
with that bureaucrat’s house on the hill.
As the Blueprint does not provide actionable recommendations
to address this critical shortage of SEM teachers, I put forth mine.
First, I would double their stipends during training. To help defray the
costs I would simultaneously reduce the stipends for the others,
especially those in Malay and Islamic Studies. We already have a glut of
them. If that does not attract enough top candidates, I would sweeten
the deal. Guarantee them scholarships to pursue a degree upon graduation
from teachers’ college. That would also encourage them to enhance their
qualifications to enable them to enter university.
If that still does not attract enough top applicants, then try
another tack. I would select from the next tier – those just below the
top third – but put them through six months to a year of rigorous “prep”
where they would undertake intensive classes in the three subjects.
Those who do well would then continue on. Again I would pay them during
this “prep” year.
While those thus chosen may not initially be in the top third as per ministry’s criteria,
but then as noted earlier, our national examinations do not correlate
well with international tests. It may well be that those not currently
in the top third by local criteria may be the truly smart ones. Another
factor to attracting top candidates would be to have superior teachers’
colleges. It is a sad commentary that despite the demonstrated critical
shortage, only one of the 27 teachers’ colleges is devoted to training
science teachers and one for international languages but not English
exclusively.
It is no better at the universities; not one has a dedicated
Department of English. That is the gulf between intent and action,
between talk and walk.
The Ministry’s perennial training mode is “crash” or short-term culup courses
of a few weeks or even days. It proudly proclaimed to have “trained”
thousands of such teachers. Ever wonder why our students have abysmal
results or why the talented are not attracted to teaching?
Convert a dozen existing colleges into exclusively English-medium for
training SEM teachers. This should have been done earlier in
preparation for the switch in teaching science and mathematics in
English. Had that been done, the initiative would have been more likely
to succeed, and we would have spared our children yet another disruptive
switch a few years later when we reverted to teaching those two
subjects in Malay.
Making those colleges all-English would also help attract top
students. Those smart students know that furthering their education in
English would expand their career, intellectual, and other horizons.
Look at the earlier experiences with Kirby and Brinsford Lodge
graduates.
To attract top candidates you also need a first class physical campus
and facilities, meaning among other things, not only air-conditioned
lecture theaters but also residence halls. I would also give trainees
free I-pads or laptops. I would pamper them beyond their college years,
as with extra allowances. If they were to serve in rural areas they
would get additional allowances that could effectively double their pay.
Beyond that I would ensure that they would get first priority for those
coveted on-campus quarters and government houses generally.
These tangible recognitions would be far more effective than such things are Tokoh Guru
(Champion Teachers) awards and other public ceremonies. Of course it
would help if the government were to also recognize outstanding teachers
and educators in its civil award lists.
The measures proposed here would produce not only competent SEM
teachers but also truly be bilingual ones. And bilingual teachers would
produce bilingual students, another stated goal of the Blueprint.
I applaud the Blueprint for advocating greater autonomy and authority for Headmasters.
However, it would be difficult for them to exercise both when those
bureaucrats at the ministry are paid and treated so much better. The Minister of Education in the 1960s was deferential to Malay
College’s Ryan not because he was the Headmaster rather that as an
expatriate he was paid so much more than the Minister! That was also the
reason why Ryan did not kow tow to those politicians and bureaucrats.
While issues of pay, autonomy and respect are important, those are
not the main considerations in opting for teaching. As a former teacher,
and as my parents who were longtime teachers demonstrated, the greatest
satisfaction is to see the sparkle in your students’ eyes when they
learn or discover something new, and the reflected glory you quietly
savor on seeing your former students achieve great heights.
Consider that as a physician, the best that I could do for my
patients is to restore them to their pre-illness state. For a teacher
however, there is no limit to the potential achievement of her
students.It is this professional satisfaction that drives teachers.
Before they can get to savor that, they first must be treated as true
professionals.
Training competent teachers takes time; meanwhile we have an
immediate problem in the classrooms with respect to SEM teachers.
Specifically for English teachers, Malaysia used to have a big pool of
them but we have squandered that precious resource. Attempts at enticing
them out of retirement have been marked by incompetence and outward
antagonism by those in charge. The reason is obvious. Those retired
teachers would put their present colleagues to shame. Thus instead of
encouraging them, current headmasters are intent on imposing obstacles.
There is another large pool, native English-speaking spouses of
expatriates and Malaysians. They can be trained “on the job” in the
manner of the old “Normal” teachers. We need to be flexible and
innovative.
One of the Blueprint’s consultants is the former South
Korean Minister of Education. I am surprised that he did not recommend
for Malaysia to import SEM teachers as South Korea and other (especially
Asian) countries are doing. Thailand demonstrates that you do not have
to pay exorbitant expatriate pay to recruit them. Malaysia has a small
program undertaken jointly with the Fulbright Foundation. I see no
reason why we cannot do it independent of American agencies.
Teachers do not operate in a vacuum; good teachers need good schools.
My greatest disappointment with this report is its lack of ideas on
revamping what is obviously a failing system – our national schools
(more on this later). Non-Malays have already abandoned the system; now
Malays too are joining them. This failure mocks the Blueprint’s claim to be transformational.
The only innovative idea was liberalizing local enrollment in
international schools, but that was done long before this report.
Besides, that measure is only the “letting out of steam” to satisfy the
elite.
In an earlier book, An Education System Worthy of Malaysia (2003),
I proposed charter schools and the decoupling of the identification of
vernacular schools with race. Charter schools would get the same
financial and other governmental support as national schools but would
be free of ministry’s control, especially with respect to the curriculum
and medium of instruction. The only stipulation is that their
enrollment must reflect the general society and their graduates must be
fluent in Malay and English. How that is achieved is left to the genius
of the school’s management.
The other is to make Sekolah Jenis Kebangsaan China for example, less
of a school for Chinese, more one using Mandarin as its medium of
instruction and catering to all Malaysians who desire such an education.
Meaning, these schools must make serious efforts at attracting
non-Chinese especially Malays, as with having halal canteens and
teaching Islamic Studies in Mandarin, as they do in China. Along the
same vein, I see no reason why there cannot be Sekolah Jenis Kebangsaan
Arab, Inggeris, or even Swahili, supported by the government as long as
they attract a broad spectrum of Malaysians.
Having students of all races study and play together would advance the Blueprint’s
unity agenda far more effectively than all the other measures combined.
As a bonus, diversity in the classrooms enhances the learning
environment.
For Malaysia, there is another and very special reason for actively
encouraging diversity in the classroom. If we continue with the present
trend of self-segregation, we would end up like Northern Ireland. That
wretched country has a well-educated populace; alas it is deeply and
viciously divided. Malaysia had a taste of its own Northern Ireland not
too long ago; we have no wish to repeat that bitter, bloody experience.
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