English
Malaysia gives up
Abandoned: An education plan that could
emulate Singapore in producing English-speaking workers
to fit into the global economy. The Guardian.
July 11, 2009
Malaysia
has decided to abandon a six-year experiment in using English
in state schools to teach maths and science.
The
plan was intended to produce a new generation of global
communicators, but government officials say it has stalled
attainment and exposed a dearth of teachers able to deliver
classes in English.
Education
minister Muhyiddin Yassin announced last Wednesday that
the English-medium education policy introduced across the
country in 2003, known as PPSMI, would be phased out from
2012.
He said
that evidence gathered during a year-long assessment and
public consultation had convinced the government that PPSMI
wasn't working, and that the dominance of English in the
curriculum risked undermining students' grasp of their first
language.
"I
wouldn't say it's a complete failure but it has not achieved
the desired objectives that it was supposed to achieve,"
Muhyiddin told a press conference.
"The
government is convinced that science and maths need to be
taught in a language that will be easily understood by students,
which is Bahasa Malay in national schools, Mandarin in Chinese
schools and Tamil in Tamil schools."
But
supporters of the policy expressed dismay, calling the decision
a lost opportunity for Malaysia to emulate the economic
success of English-speaking Singapore, held up as an example
of how language skills can be a key to a connecting local
workers and industries to the global economy.
The
Parents Action Group for Education (Page), which had campaigned
to maintain PPSMI, said the change would be unfair on many
parents.
"There
might be some schools which would want to continue teaching
in English," Page chairman Azimah Abdul Rahim told
the New Straits Times newspaper.
"I
think there should be a choice. There are many Malaysians
whose first language is English."
The
use of English for teaching in class has been a politically
charged issue since it was decreed by Malaysia's autocratic
prime minister, Dr Mahathir Mohamad, months before he stood
down from office in 2003.
Since
he was a staunch nationalist during his 22 years in power,
Mahatir's move was a surprise acknowledgement that the post-independence
policy he had championed of promoting Malay identity and
downgrading the country's anglophone colonial past had been
a mistake.
English-medium
teaching was phased out of most schools by the 1970s. As
a result the economy stagnated and Malaysia needed to develop
a workforce skilled in the language of commerce and technology
if it was to catch up with its south-east Asian competitors,
he argued.
Many
schools struggled from the start to deliver maths and science
lessons in English, but the promise of future economic gains,
and enthusiasm among parents, particularly in urban areas,
for their children to acquire better English helped to maintain
government commitment to the policy.
But
in more recent years few have been able to ignore an emerging
skills gap between urban and rural schools as education
authorities outside the major cities failed to find enough
staff able to teach in English.
Meanwhile,
government opponents have fanned nationalist fears by claiming
that Malay culture was being undermined by PPSMI.
In 2008
the government responded to growing pressure by setting
up a review of PPSMI, and an expert panel delivered its
report to ministers in January, but a decision was stalled
until after parliamentary elections in April.
In March
police in Kuala Lumpur used teargas to disperse up to 5,000
ethnic Malays who took to the streets to voice their opposition
to the policy.
In his
statement, Muhyiddin denied that the government had bowed
to political pressure, stressing instead that the decision
had been taken on the basis of educational results alone.
He claimed
these showed that the students who had been taught maths
and science in English since they started primary school
were now performing less well in those subjects in national
exams than previous cohorts.
He said
the percentage of students who achieved grade A to C for
science had dropped by 2.5% in urban schools and 3% in rural
schools.
For
maths, the results had fallen by around 4% in both urban
and rural schools.
He added
that only 8% of teachers were using English exclusively
in classes while the use of Bahasa Malay was still common,
particularly in rural areas, with on average just over half
of PPSMI teaching time being delivered in English.
English-medium
instruction will be phased out from schools from 2012 and
the focus shifted to teaching English in separate language
classes alongside improved Bahasa Malay teaching, Muhyiddin
said.
He said
that up to 14,000 English language teachers would be recruited
by 2012, as well as specialist teaching assistants.
English
language teaching time will be increased by up to 30% a
week, Muhyiddin added.
However,
some critics were sceptical that qualified teaching staff
can be found.
"What
has not occurred to the authorities is that the education
system requires very competent teachers," Khoo Kay
Kim, emeritus professor at the University of Malaya's history
department, told the Reuters news agency.
Meanwhile,
the still influential architect of PPSMI was quick to rally
support for his policy.
The
octogenarian Dr Mahathir is using his popular blog to canvass
opinion.
"I
am not surprised over the disappointment and even anger
towards the government's decision ... Seems to me like the
government is not listening to the voice of the people,"
he wrote.
Within
hours of putting up his online poll, 40,000 people had responded
with a resounding 84% opposed to the changes.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/jul/10/malaysia-tefl