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This news was the headline of NST today. What are my views on this?

As I have said before, I totally support this stand as we have so many local public and private universities in the country. There is no need for us to send our citizens to the foreign universities using our tax payers money. However, I have one question: Will MARA follow the same principle?

Probably many do not know that MARA sponsors more students to overseas universities than JPA. For medical courses alone, MARA send about 300-400 students annually. Where did the money come from? MARA scholarships and loans are only for Bumiputeras. What was originally for poor bumiputera students were slowly hijacked by the elite bumiputeras. Now, we have children of Datos and Tan Sris being given MARA scholarship to go overseas. I have MARA sponsored students in Monash doing medicine, who drives bigger cars than me! BTW, for MARA loans, the students need to pay only 1% back upon completing their course. Pathetic! The best part : they are not bonded!!! After completing the course they can stay back and work overseas and many of them do this.

Of course, we can’t question this as it is under the “Malay rights” issue and we are forbidden from talking about it!

The 56:46 ratio of JPA scholarship is total bullshit as they always exclude MARA sponsorship!If it is included it is probably 90:10!

PSD to end sponsorship of undergrad studies abroad

2010/06/14
By Masami Mustaza
news@nst.com.my

// // KUALA LUMPUR: The 1,500 scholarships offered by the Public Service Department (PSD) for undergraduate studies overseas will be phased out from next year.However, those who have secured entry for undergraduate studies at top foreign universities such as Oxford and Cambridge may still apply for such scholarships.

Scholarships for postgraduate studies will also be available.
Minister in the Prime Minister’s Department Datuk Seri Mohd Nazri Abdul Aziz said the move was aimed at increasing the number of scholarships for those studying at local universities and to address complaints that there were not enough scholarships for outstanding Sijil Pelajaran Malaysia (SPM) students.

These scholarships are awarded on merit and take into account the student’s background.

Nazri said this would not affect the Perdana Scholarship—the 300 scholarships awarded by the PSD entirely on merit, regardless of race.
This is the second year of the Perdana Scholarship, which is solely for students doing a master’s degree or doctoral programme in all fields with emphasis on science
and technology,at world-renowned universities.

Nazri, who is also the minister in charge of PSD scholarships, said that there would always be complaints that the government was not providing enough scholarships.

“There are just too many outstanding students. Even with the new grading system, where grades are divided into three classifications, for example, A-, A and A+, there are still many students who are able to get with outstanding results.

“It’s impossible to increase the number of scholarships because we don’t have enough money for that when we also need money to focus on other areas,” he said told the New Straits Times yesterday.

The 1,500 overseas scholarships given out under the PSD’s Program Ijazah Luar Negara (PILN) overseas programme are awarded according to a race quota with 56 per cent going to Bumiputera students and 44 per cent to non-Bumiputeras.

This year, more than 15,000 students applied for the scholarships.

Nazri also refuted a claim by Federation of Malaysian Indian Organisations president A Rajaretinam that 80 per cent of the scholarships were awarded to Bumiputeras, calling it a “blatant lie”.

Read more: PSD to end sponsorship of undergrad studies abroad http://www.nst.com.my/nst/articles/PSDtoendsponsorshipofundergradstudiesabroad/Article/#ixzz0qpjTu1xT

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This was the best that I have heard coming from the Ministry of Education itself.

 The following “exam questions” were taken from the recent “Ujian Pengesanan Pencapaian Sekolah Rendah 2010 Negeri Pahang for the Science Paper (018) (Primary School Achievement Evaluation Test 2010 for Pahang). It was written by a doctor from Pahang in the Star today (see below).

Now you know the standard of English among our great teachers!!!! as I have said before. I think the teacher needs an assessment

 

The diagram shows three animals which have the difference way to survive of their species.

· What is inference based on this investigation?

· Give observation to support the inference in (a)

· Predict what animal Q do if enemies disturb their eggs?

· What is conclusion can be make from this investigation?

· What conclusion can be make from this investigation?

They notes their investigation below.

(Mereka mencatat penyiasatan seperti di bawah)

· One week life spent
(Satu minggu jangkahayat)

· Tree days life spent
(Tiga hari jangka hayat)

· What is observation from this investigation?

Predict the distance of the ping pong balls move which on carpet surface.

The diagram shows the relationship between a distance of ball from the torch and the size of the shadow.

 

Errors in state exam paper – theStar

PARENTS and teachers are aware that the majority of our students are generally poor in English but let’s not exacerbate this difficulty by taking a lackadaisical approach when setting exam papers.

We have often seen glaring language errors in many examination papers in the past — both in English and Bahasa Malaysia at all levels – and unless this is tackled with earnestness, we are making the students more confused and our education process a sham.

Pedagogically, the exam process is in itself a learning process.

We should not treat the former in isolation and with indifference. A badly written exam paper reflects the quality of our education.

The recent Ujian Pengesanan Pencapaian Sekolah Rendah 2010 Negeri Pahang for the Science Paper (018) (Primary School Achievement Evaluation Test 2010), is one of the many examples.

The paper which was meant for all standard six pupils in Pahang had glaring grammatical errors, and those who set the questions were not serious in ensuring that they were written in proper English.

As a result there was some confusion as pupils were unable to understand the questions.

The questions below are examples of bad sentence construction, inappropriate phrases and wrong tenses.

The diagram shows three animals which have the difference way to survive of their species.

· What is inference based on this investigation?

· Give observation to support the inference in (a)

· Predict what animal Q do if enemies disturb their eggs?

· What is conclusion can be make from this investigation?

· What conclusion can be make from this investigation?

They notes their investigation below.

(Mereka mencatat penyiasatan seperti di bawah)

· One week life spent
(Satu minggu jangkahayat)

· Tree days life spent
(Tiga hari jangka hayat)

· What is observation from this investigation?

Predict the distance of the ping pong balls move which on carpet surface.

The diagram shows the relationship between a distance of ball from the torch and the size of the shadow.

All exam papers should manifest quality in them. Language teachers on their part have been emphasising on correct language structure when teaching, and it is thus the onus of the school or education department to ensure that all question papers are written in proper English or Bahasa Malaysia.

Having an apathetic attitude towards the issue will not only confuse students but also affect the learning process and the quality of our education.

Unfortunately, this laid-back stance has crept into our education system and exists from primary to tertiary levels.

When we stress on quality education, we should equally stress on excellence when preparing exam papers.

This is taught in training modules for all teachers, and is at all times emphasised in the education process in the developed countries.

Just browse through any of the exam papers prepared by schools and colleges in the developed countries and see how thorough and specific the papers are.

The language used is precise. Many of the exam papers are compiled and sold to the public and those interested can also view them on the Internet.

DR M A NAIR
Via e-mail

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Again, I just received this SMS from a good friend of mine:

Just saw a secondary school English teacher, “Dr, why my head is so pain?”

trust me, I have seen and heard worst than this. It would have been better if he has said “Dr, why my head is so paining?”

I have seen teachers who suppose to teach Maths and Science in English but can’t complete a sentence in English. That’s the reason why teaching Maths and Science in English never succeeded.

I even heard, that in one school in JB, the teacher teaches English in Malay!!! WTH

God bless this country…………………

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Finally someone in BN seem to be making some noise about this. I wonder whether anyone will listen! I would not repeat what I have said before in this blog and in my MMA article.

Halt mushrooming of medical schools
//
Vasugi Supramanian
May 20, 10
2:42pm
 
Gerakan has urged the government to stop issuing new licences for medical schools until the availability of sufficient training facilities and the necessary infrastructure are in place.

NONEAddressing the issue at the party headquarters in Cheras, Kuala Lumpur, today, vice-president Dr Teng Hock Nan (left) called on the government to ensure that the doctors produced are of a high standard.

“The sudden mushrooming of medical schools over the past 10 years has resulted in a shortage of qualified and experienced lecturers to accommodate the increasing number of medical students,” he said.

There are today 24 medical colleges operating in the country, all of which are recognised by the accreditation authority, Malaysian Quality Assurance.

Dr Teng said the wards in some of the bigger hospitals were filled with so many housemen that, in some wards, there were not enough patients for these housemen to attend to and hone their skills.

He also expressed concern that the quality of doctors produced would be compromised if the country did not have enough houseman positions to train the graduates effectively. 

 

Maintain entry standards

“Inadequate training for medical students who may not be exposed to the spectrum of diseases and disorders will put the lives of patients in danger,” he added.

gerakan youth agm 2007 051007 mah siew keong“At the same time, it is also important to ensure that entry requirements into medical schools meet the required standards, as some schools may lower their admission requirements due to the fierce competition,” he said.

Dr Teng also said a memorandum, with public opinion on this vital issue included, would be sent to the Health Ministry as soon as possible.

Adding to the these concerns, Gerakan central committee member Dr Hsu Dar Ren said: “Licence to cure can become a licence to kill if these problems are not addressed immediately.”

Also present at the press conference were party national speaker Dr Chin Fook Weng and vice-president Mah Siew Keong

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As I have written numerous times in my MMA article and here, in my blog, the mushrooming of medical and nursing colleges in this country has made a mockery of the education system. Not only there are so many nursing colleges in Malaysia(106 as mentioned in this article below), the quality of their products are questionable. I was told that you can get into a nursing college even if you have failed SPM! You don’t have to pay anything as the college will apply for PTPTN loan for you.

I heard that due to shortage of teaching staff, they have started to recruit nurses who are just 1 year in service to become clinical tutors. What experience do they have? Some colleges have tutors from other countries like Myanmar and Philipines. Since I am in medical field, I can clearly see the poor quality of these nurses. They don’t even understand a word of english at times. The mentality is so low that sometimes you feel like you are talking to a wall.

It is good that the government is going to stop new nursing colleges but will this solve the problem? The existing nursing colleges itself are producing thousands of nurses of doubtful quality and they will keep producing  them to get profit. So the number of new nurses will continue to be produced by these colleges, or may even increase! Even now, there are fresh nurses who are unable to find a job as the government service seem to be saturated with them. To absorb more nurses into the civil service, the government decided to promote more nurses to sister’s post. Thus, junior nurses ended up being promoted to sisters so much so that now we have 2 sisters in each wards!! Quality ? you know the answer!

In another 5 years time, the same situation will occur to the medical doctors. We can already see it coming with the poor quality of doctors that are being produced over the last 3-5 years. Be very worried! these are the people who are going to treat you in the near future, hopeless nurses and doctors (sorry to say this, but it is the truth!)

 

No more nursing schools from July

KUALA LUMPUR: The mushrooming of private nursing colleges will soon be a thing of the past. Applications to set up new institutions will not be accepted from July.

Higher Education Minister Datuk Seri Mohamed Khaled Nordin said a moratorium was necessary to prevent an oversupply of nurses and other problems arising from graduate unemployment.

“The move will also prohibit the launch of new diploma programmes in nursing as the ministry wants existing providers to concentrate more on degree courses.

“There will be no more private institutions providing nursing courses as we are already on the right track to achieve the recommended World Health Organi­sation nurse to population ratio of 1:200,” he said in a press conference at Hotel Istana yesterday.

“The moratorium will be in place as long as the supply of nurses meets market demand.”

Malaysia’s current nurse to population ratio is 1:490.

Speaking after launching Masterskill Education Group Sdn Bhd’s prospectus in conjunction with its proposed listing on the main market of Bursa Malaysia, Mohamed Khaled said Malaysia had enough institutions to achieve the ideal ratio.

“There are 106 higher education institutions that train nurses in the country and we (the ministry) want them to concentrate on improving quality,” he said.

“Currently, most programmes in nursing and the allied health sciences are at diploma level and Malaysia requires more trainers and students at degree levels in these fields,” he added.

Of the 106 institutions, 66 are private providers, 11 are public institutions and the rest are run by the Health Ministry.

He added that established private higher education providers like Master­skill could contribute to Malay­sia’s aspiration of becoming the region’s education hub by recruiting more international students.

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University of Malaya use to be one of the best Universities in the world back in the 70s and early 80s. The medical school of University of Malaya use to be ranked among the top 10 medical schools in the world. Where are we now?

Prof TJ Dhanaraj, the founder dean of the medical faculty of University of Malaya were forced to step down as the dean as he disagreed with the quota system for the medical school. He was a person with principles and refuse to accept any tom, dick and harry into the medical schools. The NEP and ketuanan crap took the toll on him and he decided to step down and became a normal professor for a few more years before developing Parkinson’ s disease.

Well, what he predicted then has come true now. University Malaya is nowhere to be seen now. We are not even in the top 100 universities in the world. We lost our GMC (General Medical Council)accreditation in 1988. The unwritten rule by Mahathir was that all VCs and deans in the public Universities must be a Malay. After Prof Dhanaraj stepped down, there was never a non-Malay dean in the medical faculty, if I am not mistaken. The next most senior person was  a Chinese public health professor who was appointed as an acting dean for a few years before a junior Malay Professor was appointed as a official dean. The worst part was : he was a student of the acting Dean! How demoralising would that have been for the senior professor!

From that point onwards, our Universities started to go down the drain. We have Professors now who can’t speak English. We hardly see any of our academicians presenting in International Conferences. In fact there are more Indonesian academics presenting papers than Malaysians. We have built so many universities without taking into consideration the human resource issues. We just wanted to print a paper with ” bachelor of …….., awarded to ………” at the end of 4-5 years of so-called university life. Thousands of unemployable graduates are being produced. You can go to my education page for further info on the issues surrounding our education system.

The article below did not mention anything about Malaysian Universities………………………… BTW, why are we still sending students under MARA and JPA sponsorship to overseas when we have so many public and private universities in the country!!!! I always wonder? Or are these reserved for the Malay elite groups, so that they can continue to suppress the poor and keep the rest under the tempurung!

The Rise of Asia’s Universities

By RICHARD C. LEVIN
Published: April 20, 2010

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/21/opinion/21iht-edlevin.html

The rapid economic development of Asia since World War II — starting with Japan, South Korea and Taiwan, then extending to Hong Kong and Singapore, and finally taking hold powerfully in India and mainland China — has forever altered the global balance of power. These countries recognize the importance of an educated work force to economic growth, and they understand that investing in research makes their economies more innovative and competitive.

Beginning in the 1960s, Japan, South Korea and Taiwan sought to provide their populations with greater access to post-secondary education, and they achieved impressive results. Today, China and India have an even more ambitious agenda. Both seek to expand their higher-education systems, and since the late 1990s, China has done so dramatically.

The results of Beijing’s investment have been staggering. Over the past decade, the number of institutions of higher education in China more than doubled, from 1,022 to 2,263. Meanwhile, the number of Chinese who enroll in a university each year has quintupled.

India’s achievement to date has not been nearly as impressive, but its aspirations are no less ambitious. To fuel the country’s economic growth, India aims to increase its gross enrollment ratio in post-secondary education from 12 percent to 30 percent by 2020. This goal translates to an increase of 40 million students in Indian universities over the next decade.

Having made tremendous progress in expanding access to higher education, the leading countries of Asia are focused on an even more challenging goal: building universities that can compete with the finest in the world. The governments of China, India, Singapore and South Korea are explicitly seeking to elevate some of their universities to this exalted status because they recognize the important role that university-based scientific research has played in driving economic growth in the United States, Western Europe and Japan.
 
Developing top universities is a tall order. World-class universities achieve their status by assembling scholars who are global leaders in their fields. In the sciences, this requires first-class facilities, adequate funding, and competitive salaries and benefits. China is making substantial investments on all three fronts. And beyond the material conditions required to attract faculty, an efficient system of allocating research funding is also needed.

It takes more than research capacity alone for a nation to develop economically, however. It takes well-educated citizens of broad perspective and dynamic entrepreneurs capable of independent and original thinking. The leaders of China, in particular, have been very explicit in recognizing that two elements are missing from their universities: multidisciplinary breadth and the cultivation of critical thinking.

The traditional Asian approaches to curriculum and pedagogy may work well for training line engineers and midlevel government officials, but they are less suited to fostering leadership and innovation. Students who aspire to be leaders in business, medicine, law, government or academia need “the discipline” of mind — the ability to adapt to constantly changing circumstances, confront new facts, and find creative ways to solve problems. Cultivating such habits requires students to be more than passive recipients of information; they must learn to think for themselves.

There has already been dramatic movement toward American-style curriculum in Asia. But changing the style of teaching presents a more challenging problem. It is more expensive to offer classes with smaller enrollments, and it requires the faculty to adopt new methods.

Not every university can or needs to be world class. Japan and South Korea have learned this lesson and have well-funded flagship universities. China understands this strategy, too. But India is an anomalous case. It established five Indian Institutes of Technology in the 1950s and 1960s, and 10 more in the past two decades. These are outstanding institutions for educating engineers, but they have not become globally competitive in research. The egalitarian politics of India make it difficult to focus on developing a small number of world-class research universities.

In one respect, however, India has a powerful advantage over China, at least for now. It affords faculty members the freedom to pursue their intellectual interests wherever they may lead and allows students and faculty alike to express, and thus test, their most heretical and unconventional theories — freedoms that are an indispensable feature of any great university.

As barriers to the flow of people, goods and information have come down, and as the process of economic development proceeds, Asian countries have increasing access to the human, physical and informational resources needed to create top universities. If they concentrate their growing resources on a handful of institutions, tap a worldwide pool of talent, and embrace freedom of expression and freedom of inquiry, they will succeed in building world-class universities. It will not happen overnight; it will take decades. But it may happen faster than ever before.

Richard C. Levin is president of Yale University. A fuller version of this article appears in the May/June Issue of Foreign Affairs.
Tribune Media Services

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This letter below was written in Malaysiakini by a person who called himself “Professor Kangkong“. We must accept the fact that our universities have become the laughing-stock of the nation. The letter below is a clear example of what is happening in our universities.
 
I was made to understand that in some local universities, you are given an A/Prof post if you just publish 3 papers in any journal or conference publication. This means that if you publish 3 abstracts in any conference (conference publications) you can be considered for an A/Prof post. The same goes if you can publish 3 papers in any journals, it does not matter whether it is an index journal or no impact factor journal! At first I did not believe this untill I saw it with my own eyes! I have even seen so-called “A/Prof” who can’t speak proper English!
 
Compare this with Monash university Australia where almost 80% of their academics retire at the level of Senior Lecturer after years of service! They not only look at the number of publications but the impact factor and the quality of the publications. Conference publications, abstracts, letters to editor, images are not considered. Case reports are also not considered equivalent to a full article.
 
I have given up on our local universities. What is the failure rate of our university students? Any guess? I am sure it is 100% pass rate unless the students drop out by him/herself.
I just hope my children will be able to study in some prestigious universities overseas. For that I need to save lots of money from now onwards…………….. and that’s the reason I am going full-time private from June 2010!
 
UPM – a ‘research university’ condoning plagiarism
//
Professor Kankong
Apr 6, 10
3:34pm
Last year, two Universiti Putra Malaysia (UPM) academics, a professor and deputy dean and a senior lecturer, were exposed for plagiarism, the most serious offence in academia.

Both of them plagiarised from the Internet and used the material for their ‘book’- ‘Writing an Effective Resume.’

No action was taken against these two, the UPM vice-chancellor Prof Dr Nik Mustapha R Abdullah said a warning was adequate – they both kept their job and titles and did not lose anything.

How can UPM – a research university – condone plagiarism? You call yourself a world-class university and yet allow your staff to plagiarise with impunity. Is it any wonder that standards in Malaysian universities are dropping like stones?

Worse still, the book is still available on the market. It looks like in Malaysian universities, research means copying from the Internet. Worse still, they are both still doing ‘research’.

If Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak wants to improve the standards of our public universities, the first thing he needs to do is to take action and punish these so-called professors. Worse, one of them is now a member of the National Professors Board. What a joke.

What does it take to clean up the monkeys in our public universities? UPM – University of Plagiarists Malaysia?

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A doctor too many

 
The article below was written by Dr.Hsu in The Malaysian Insider today. He is spot on, regarding the problems we are currently facing due to over-supply of doctors from all these medical schools. I wrote an article way back in 2006 in the MMA magazine regarding the impending disaster that was waiting to happen due to the mushrooming of the profit based medical schools in the country(please read my article under My MMA Articles page). I have also written about it again last year regarding the qualities of house officers and this month(out soon), I have also written an article about the future prospects of doctors in this country.
 
Well, whatever I have predicted has become a reality now. There are 50 housemen in each department now with no proper supervision from the consultants. They are of so poor quality that many consultants have totally given up. As one consultant rightly puts it “we are not here to teach the housemen basic medicine”.
 
I am really sad but need to accept the fact that these doctors are going to be running our health sector in the near future. I pity the poor rakyat who will die in the hands of these underqualified and undertrained doctors. They will have the “license to kill” !!!! but then again Malaysia Bolehmah………………..
 The next in line will be the nursing colleges,  have lost count of the numbers. Even if you have failed SPM you can enroll yourself in nursing colleges!!!!Trust me.
 
Soon, in less than 5 years you will be seeing jobless doctors who will be venturing into other fields to stay alive
 
BTW MasterSkills will be opening a medical school at their Pasir Gudang branch soon. They have just advertised in the paper for academic recruitment!
 
 
Dr Hsu Dar Ren is a medical doctor and blogs on socio-economic issues; he believes that a fair and equitable society with good governance is the key to the future of this country.

A doctor too many

MARCH 26 — Malaysia, a country with about 26 million inhabitants, boasts of 24 medical schools now.

Just a few years ago, the number was less than 10. In fact, when my eldest son entered medical school 10 years back, I could count the medical schools with my fingers. Now even with my toes and my fingers, I can no longer. Some of the names are so new that I, as a doctor, did not even know they existed until I did some research for this article.

The list is below:

Public universities:

* University of Malaya, Faculty of Medicine

* Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia, Faculty of Medicine

* Universiti Sains Malaysia, School of Medical Sciences

* Universiti Putra Malaysia, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences

* Universiti Malaysia Sabah, School of Medicine

* Universiti Malaysia Sarawak, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences

* International Islamic University Malaysia, Kulliyyah of Medicine

* Universiti Teknologi Mara, Faculty of Medicine

* Universiti Sains Islam Malaysia, Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences

* Universiti Darul Iman, Faculty of Medicine

Private Universities and Colleges

* UCSI University, Faculty of Medical Sciences — School of Medicine

* Monash University Malaysia, School of Medicine and Health Sciences

* International Medical University, Faculty of Medicine

* AIMST University, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences

* Allianze College Of Medical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine

* Management and Science University, Faculty of Medicine

* Cyberjaya University College of Medical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine

* Royal College of Medicine Perak, School of Medicine

* Melaka Manipal Medical College, School of Medicine

* Penang Medical College, School of Medicine

* MAHSA University College, Faculty of Medicine

* Newcastle University Medicine Malaysia (NuMED)

* Taylor’s University College, School of Medicine

* Utar

These are the medical schools in Malaysia. These schools, when fully functional, will produce about 4,000 doctors a year.  There will be thousands more Malaysian doctors being produced overseas, since many Malaysians are studying medicine in the UK, Australia, New Zealand, India, Indonesia, Russia, Taiwan and even Ukraine.

The sudden mushrooming of medical schools is apparently due to shortages of doctors in the public sectors. This is because most doctors in government service resign after their compulsory services and opt for the supposedly greener pasture in the private sector.

In most other countries, the logical thing to do to counter this brain drain of doctors to the private sector  is to find out why doctors are resigning from government service, and then try to address the woes of the doctors, and hopefully, keep them  in service.  I call this common logic.

The Malaysian solution, like in many other instances, does not take common logic into account but rather uses the sledgehammer approach. After all, we do have Malaysian logic, which is different from common logic practised in most other countries. For example, if we cannot have spacecraft of our own, we can still produce astronauts by sending Malaysians into space, hitchhiking on other countries’ spacecraft.

In most other countries, the common logic will be to try to improve the working conditions in public sector so that doctors will stay back. But Malaysian logic is sledgehammer logic, and is very different.

If the doctors do not want to stay in government service, then Malaysia shall flood the market with doctors, so goes the Malaysian logic. Never mind that setting up of medical schools and training doctors are expensive businesses. We have petroleum and huge amount of development funds.

By building more buildings and buying expensive medical equipment to equip these medical schools, billions will have to be spent and, of course, in the Malaysian context, everyone will be happy, down from the planners, the contractors, the parents  and all others involved, since the perception is that  projects in Malaysia inevitably will have some leakages and wastages, and many people are very happy with these leakages and wastages.

Never mind that we may have the hardware but we may not have enough qualified people to man these medical schools.

The Malaysian logic seems to be like this: If enough doctors are produced, the market will be saturated with doctors, and thus, doctors will have nowhere to go but to stay in government service.

Well, the people may be clapping hands and rejoicing that, with more doctors than are needed, medical costs will come down.

Unfortunately, things do not function like this in medical education. Experience in some countries tells us that some doctors in private practice, when faced with too few patients, will charge higher and do more investigations, some of which may not be needed. So instead of medical cost going down, it will go up.

In any advanced nation, the setting up of a medical school requires a lot of planning and is not done on an ad hoc basis. Planning must include where to source for experienced and qualified teachers; where to build new or source for existing teaching hospitals, which are big enough for the placement of these medical students to do training.

Planning such as facilities, equipment, classrooms, curriculum. In the west, it takes many years of training for a medical school to be set up; whereas in Malaysia, we see more than 10 in the last five years.

In Malaysia, due to the sudden “exponential” increase in medical schools, we have medical schools pinching staff from each other, even the mediocre ones. With that number of qualified teachers only, it is unavoidable that many teachers may not have the experience and qualification to be medical lecturers.

The early birds (medical schools) are more fortunate. Their students are placed in bigger hospitals like the General Hospitals of Kuala Lumpur or Penang. Now, some of the medical schools just opened have to send their students to smaller district hospitals to do their training. The smaller hospitals are often manned by more junior doctors who are not qualified to be medical teachers, and these hospitals have only very basic facilities and equipment.

This is just the beginning of the problems. For a doctor, graduating from a medical school is the beginning of a life long journey, and the basic medical degree is more like a license to start to really learn how to manage and treat patients.

The most important year after a doctor graduates is the houseman-ship. If a doctor does not have proper houseman training, then he would face a lot of problems later on. He or she may know all the medical knowledge in the world (just for argument’s sake, since knowledge of medicine is so vast that no one can know everything), but without the proper houseman training, he or she will not get the hand-on experience so crucial and important to doctors.

A doctor without proper houseman training is not unlike a person who has only ever raced in arcade games, suddenly being asked to race in a real life race. He would not have the hands on experience to do well. A doctor without  proper houseman training would be like a person given a license to kill, and a disaster waiting to happen.

Now, with 4,000 doctors being produced in a year, where do we find so many houseman positions for these young doctors?

Even now, with some of the medical schools just starting and not yet producing doctors, and the number of doctors being produced is much less than the 4,000, the wards in some of the bigger hospitals are filled with so many housemen that, in some wards, there are not enough patients for these housemen to learn management skills.

About a year back, I was told, in HKL some of the units have more than 20 housemen. Recently one doctor told me that in some units, it may have even more than that. I was aghast. Since with that many housemen in a single unit, and so few senior officers to guide them and so few patients for them to learn from, how are they going to learn the skill of doctoring?

When there is not enough training for these housemen, what do you think our policy planners do? In the typical Malaysian style, they increase the length of houseman-ship from a year to 2, hoping that the longer time will help to give better exposure to these doctors.

Compared to Australia, New Zealand, and United Kingdom,  houseman-ship is still one year  only. By increasing the length of the houseman-ship, it is a tacit admission that our one-year houseman training is not as good as the above mentioned countries.

A poorly trained houseman will become a mediocre medical officer, and since now most of the specialists are trained internally, it will be a matter of time before future specialists may not be as well trained as presently.

Many parents do not know about the actual situation and still encourage their children to take up medicine. They are not told of the actual situation. The day will come when there are simply so many doctors that none are adequately trained. There will come a day when a doctor graduating from a medical school cannot even be placed in a houseman position.

And that day is actually very near.

* The views expressed here are the personal opinion of the columnist.

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A nice way of putting it.

I have written about the failure of our education system in my earlier posts. Please click on my “education” category.

Our ‘rempitised’ education system

Monday, 15 March 2010 

 
 

My definition: Rempitism (noun; also concept and ideology borrow from the neo-Malay word rempit) – a Malaysian phenomenon in which youth uses the public road system to break the speed limit with customised motorbikes in illegal, past-midnight drag-races that rob the restful sleep of peaceful citizens; a phenomena akin to a capitalist economy of a struggling showcasing Third Word nation such a Malaysia that hypermodernises beyond the ability of its people to cope with its sensationalised designs of ‘economic miracles’.

A REPUBLIC OF VIRTUE

Azly Rahman

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Both phenomena rest upon idiotic pride and arrogance that endanger a peaceful, ethical and sustainable future. Both present clear and present danger on the equally dangerous highway of globalisation. See also rempitise (adjective) and Mat Rempit (special noun).

A ‘rempitised’ economic and education system ‘rams’ human beings into different ‘pits’ (hence the term ‘rempit’) of the conveyer belt of the capitalist production system; creating what looks like a natural progression of meritocracy in education and social evolution. The foundation of this system is neo-colonialism, structural violence and the alienation of labour.

(Note: Like participants in the global rat race, Mat Rempit always want to finish first in the deadly race and be the first to do a wheelie for the world to see.)

Is our public education system failing? Is it producing more and more Mat Rempit, Anak Abu (anak-anak angkatan bawah usia), bohsia (bawah usia or the under-aged girls), bohjan (jantan bawah usia or under-aged males), gangsta rappers, hip-hoppers and youth alienated and put at-risk by our education system?

Are we creating class systems in education the way we have created varying types of classrooms that correspond to different classes in society? Why are we seeing the tuition industry becoming a billion-ringgit business, helping our children memorising more and more but understanding less and less of what they learn?

Do we have people in the education ministry well versed enough in analysing the phenomenon of our rempitised economy (speeding it up illegally) and how this is directly related to how we are ‘schooling’ our society?

Do we now have an entire system of higher education inheriting the children of our rempitised economy and contributing to the low quality of graduates – who cannot think critically and are always subjected to the whims and fancies of a totalitarian regime only interested in tightening the stranglehold on our universities?

British and American scholars like Paul Willis, Henry Levin, Peter McLaren and Martin Carnoy who studied the phenomena of schooling in capitalist societies observed the nature of the learning process in countries in which the rapid and unreflective industrialisation and post-industrialisation process have created one-dimensional citizens out of youth.

Schooling teaches these children to become good and obedient workers in a economic system that reduce the larger population into labour, while enriching the upper class into people and property-owners in a rempitised economy.

What’s lacking in teachers

Is our education ministry training teachers well in urban education and in the schooling of our at-risk youth? Do we actually know the root cause of rempitism and gangsterism in schools, and are we able to design better learning systems for those who are already marginalised and left behind by our rempitised economy?

I have a sense that the cases of gangsterism and bullying of teachers will continue to increase. More private schools will be built and Malaysians will lose confidence in their public schools. More private schools mean more divisions in society. The rich will produce better schools and the poor will be left behind in this rempitised system we have all created in the name of the New Economic Policy.

Teachers do not have the necessary concepts and skills to deal not only with the Millennial children (high-tech, high gadgetry, low attention span, low school-tolerance) but also the rempitised children who have low skills of reading, writing and computing.

Children left behind will be those who become Mat and Minah Rempit. They will be destructive to the classroom process and will translate their social anger into counter-productive and destructive activities. These are the ones who will be made criminals as a result of an uncaring education system that criminalises the human mind by placing unmotivated, uncreative and unprepared teachers to develop the untapped geniuses in our classrooms.

Should we rename the Mat and Minah Rempit as Mat Cemerlang (Excellent/Glorious Ones) as suggested by an Umno leader? Should we build a racing circuit for them to continue drag racing?

I do not think we should. I think those who propose such names and measures of glorification need radical counseling and education on the meaning of education. I think it shows a clear lack of understanding of the root of the problem. Wrong diagnosis of social ill.

Rehabilitation programme

I think we should beef up the highway police force and stop illegal drag racing, round up the Mat Rempit and send them for six-month rehabilitation in rempit camps near Perlis, guarded by graduates of the National Service. We should build a somewhat safe motor-cross clearings/zones and let them drag-race happily in these areas until they are exhausted.

In between these sessions we ought to give them a good and safe motorcycle education so that they will understand what it means to ride safely and not endanger the life of others. We can have the Biro Tata Negara write the module so that good indoctrination programmes will be used more on these rempitised and rempitising youth instead of those who do not need to be indoctrinated into any form of totalitarianism.

Peace-loving, rest-needing, night-sleeping citizens affected by the activities of rempitism will appreciate this radical programme of reconfiguring the mind of the rempitised youth.

How to de-rempitise our schools

In the meantime, how do we deal with the leadership of the public education system? We need to start by selecting only those who are well-versed in the entire spectrum of education.

We have ministers, educational experts, specialists and educational representatives who either have minimal classroom experience or none at all – let alone have much-needed knowledge in the history, theory, post-structurality and possibilities of education.

We place them in this ministry based on political considerations. They mess things up and show their inability to understand where our youth are heading, or how to design an education system good enough to reflect the dream we have – a dream of a just, equitable, environmentally sustainable, intellectual and ethical society.

We are more concerned with having our students and teachers pledge blind loyalty to the signs and symbols of power; one-dimensional thinking; and politically correct behaviour instead of developing, celebrating and further grooming good teachers who can radicalise the minds of the youth of tomorrow.

We force our university students to ceremoniously recite the Pledge of Loyalty, and round on those who protest against corruption and social injustice.

We do this against the backdrop of our speeded-up, hypermodernised economy – one we rempitised in the name of the New Economic Policy.

The question for us now is: how do we de-rempitise our society?

OUR USUAL REMINDE

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Sex Education

I took the following info from the Malaysian Insider, from the column written by James Chin. It is rather interesting to note the findings of the survey mentioned below.
Despite all these misinformation, we still have teachers who decline to teach sex education simply because they are not trained to do so.
BTW, looking at the quality of the teachers nowadays, I am not surprised at all. If the teachers can’t teach, please outsource the subject! 
 
As a doctor, I have seen teenagers as young as 14 years old being involved in promiscuity, male and female included. The youngest HIV case I have seen is 16 years old school girl. But the shocking truth is that none of them do it “protected”. you know what I mean. I have spoken to some of them and they don’t seem to realise the consequences. I have had a patient who did not even know that she can get pregnant by having sex!! Talk about quality of our education!
 
Our government is fond of sweeping everything under the carpet. To my knowledge, they have been talking about this sex education issues over the last 10-15 years and yet we hear the same answer all the time. We have to face the fact that it is an unavoidable situation in any developing or developed country, whether we like it or not. Our youngsters are exposed to various external influences and most of their parents are working nowadays (ourselves included). Gone are the days when most of our mothers were housewives who closely monitor us everyday.
 
No amount of canning “illicit” sex offenders etc etc is going to change this. Our “father” Hishamudin who proudly declared the successfull canning of 3 girls secretly( i still believe that this story was made up!), suddenly got caught when a 3 year old girl was tortured and killed by a boyfriend of her mother. The mother has been staying with her boyfriend for 6 years and has an illegitimate child!! So , are you going to cane the mother????  you saw the silence from him! Sharizat to the rescue? This is what I call God-given big “tahi” slap!
 
Malaysian teachers say ‘no’ to sex education

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysian teachers are saying “no” to teaching sex education in schools. They lack professional training in teaching the subject, National Union of Teaching Profession (NUTP) secretary-general Lok Yim Pheng said Tuesday.

She said while the union fully supported the Government’s move to provide sex education in schools, “sadly, the teachers lack formal training in the complexity and sensitivity of the subject and are not confident to teach it.”

Lok said the teachers were afraid they might be sued by the parents “if they were to make mistakes in imparting the knowledge of sex to the pupils.”

Malaysia is a multiracial, religious and cultural nation with each ethnic group having its own notion on the subject, which makes teaching more challenging, she noted.

So no sex education please, we are Malaysians!

The end result, read this:

Oriental Daily reported that a youth had asked a salesgirl for help to buy condoms at a convenience shop.

The 17-year-old had gone to the counter and told the salesgirl he wanted to buy condoms at the shop in Kajang on Friday night.

When the salesgirl asked him the size, he dropped his pants and told her that was the size he wanted.

When the salesgirl screamed, the youth ran away. He was detained after the salesgirl lodged a police report.

Or this:

Tangled in web of sex myths

KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysian women demonstrated the depth of their ignorance by emerging the most ill-informed in a recent survey on sex-related issues conducted across Southeast Asia.

A majority of women in Malaysia believe, among other things, that sexual intercourse during menstruation cannot lead to pregnancy, wearing brassieres can cause breast cancer and that they can enlarge their breasts by touching them.

Some are confident that riding a bicycle will cause them to lose their virginity and that bleeding after sexual intercourse confirmed a woman’s virginity.

The Kotex BodyLife IQ survey was carried out among 1,800 women aged between 16 and 24 in Malaysia and other Southeast Asian countries. In Malaysia, the women surveyed were from a cross-section of all races.

In Malaysia, the survey results show:

– Only three per cent of women can answer all questions about their bodies;

– 60 per cent believe they can enlarge their breasts by touching them;

– 57 per cent do not know where their hymen is;

– 56 per cent believe having sex during menstruation cannot lead to pregnancy;

– 55 per cent believe that wearing brassieres can cause breast cancer;

– 41 per cent believe bleeding after sex confirmed a woman’s virginity;

– 24 per cent believe women can lose their virginity by riding a bicycle; and,

– 21 per cent think eating a lot will hasten their menstruation.

Since many young people cannot get proper information on sex, where do you think they turn to?

Read this:

75 pct Malaysians learn bedroom sex secrets from Internet

Kuala Lumpur, October 13 (ANI): As many as 75 per cent of Malaysians have Internet to thank for providing them information on sex, a new poll suggests. According to the Durex Sexual Wellbeing Survey, men were ahead when compared to women in using the World Wide Web to surf about bedroom passion.

Other sources included magazines with as many as seventy-three per cent of the respondents relying on them, reports The Star Online.

Sixty-five per cent turned to books, 56 per cent to friends and peers, and 43 per cent to their partners.

Sex education at school made up for only 36 per cent. (ANI)

Is it any wonder that all the Ah Beng selling DVDs has a ready market for porn DVDs?  Is it any wonder that the number of teenage pregnancies are on the rise? A lot of social and political issues in this country are caused by religious Fascists who are trying to impose their worldview on the majority.

If we don’t stand up to these people, your children will inherit a Malaysia ruled by the Bolehland Taliban.

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