Graduates
In
America
Where Malaysian-Singapore students learn to live in the
real world. Kakak. malaysiakini.
June 12, 2005
I have
been reading various comments about unemployed graduates.
It amazes me that while Malaysia is recruiting hundreds
of thousands of workers from other countries, we have so
many unemployed graduates.
I think
the main problem is the Malaysian mindset about social class
and attitude towards work in general.
We tend
to regard certain work with disgust while employers just
don't pay enough for certain kinds of work.
We cannot
be telling unemployed graduates to take ‘those jobs’
when society itself looks down on those jobs.
I am
a Malaysian citizen living in a large US city as a US permanent
resident. I have had the privilege of befriending a large
group of Malaysian students at two local universities.
There
are about 200 Malaysian students in all, some on government
scholarships and some self-paid.
I am
quite amazed at how these Malaysian students adapt to the
American mentality - in a good sense - about work ethics
and their place and role in society.
Within
a year of schooling here, many of them went and got work
permits (foreign students at American universities are allowed
to work at university jobs and may apply for special work
permits to work elsewhere).
Earning
money to pay for their cellular phones, clothes and travel
seems to be their main motivation; work experience is just
a byproduct.
Many of them go to places like New York, London or Italy
for their short school breaks.
These
Malaysian students come from different backgrounds with
some growing up with maids in their homes. Yet they were
willing to do all kinds of work, just like their American
counterparts.
It is
well understood in the US that a person starts from the
bottom, and goes up from there.
One
girl studying marketing, and who comes from an upper class
Malay family in KL, started working as a janitor and is
now a part-time manager with Starbucks.
As a
result of her work experience, she plans to own several
coffee shops when she goes home after graduation.
A Malay
boy of 21, studying chemical engineering, works as a part-time
dishwasher and server at a restaurant. An Iban girl from
a prominent family, who aspires to be a cardiologist, works
as a cashier at a book store.
Another
student, a Chinese boy who is currently applying to do his
PhD in polymer chemistry at an Ivy League university, works
as a parking garage attendant.
One
23-year-old student from Singapore spent the last two summers
working on fishing trawlers off the coast of Alaska, earning
enough to pay for his university fees thus giving his parents
a break.
When
I was in Malaysia around Christmas last year, I had a conversation
with two of my nieces who are university students in Malaysia
and was encouraging them to find part-time work for experience.
I gave
them, as examples, how Malaysian students in the US were
getting work experience as cashiers, janitors and dishwashers.
These
two young women started to laugh out loud, saying, ‘How
horrible!’. But when I told them that these students
earn about US$10 (RM38) an hour, they became quiet.
I think
one of the reasons why employers prefer to hire Malaysian
graduates of foreign universities is because these people
have changed their attitude about work.
(This
article "Graduates need to look at work differently"
posted by a Malaysian was posted by kakak in malaysiakini
on June 10, 2005)