I certainly find it hard to believe that a DPM is not aware that there is no need to pass the English paper to get an SPM qualification.
So what is the hullabaloo this time around on English?
Has the DPM actually suggested that English be made a compulsory paper to pass in order to get the SPM qualification? No, not definitively anyway.
A raging debate is now on in the papers and in the coffee-shops, pitting one side against the other; with many ignoramuses within the ranks, unthinking but passionate about Bahasa Malaysia and mother tongue eminence over the need for good English to excel in a globalised world.
To say the standard of English has fallen, is almost 40 years too late. The low level of English, be it in spoken or written form,is almost non-salvageable.
It's no point barking at the hills if you are not a great dog in the first place. Politics was in the driver's seat for the last 50 years and we have actually allowed English to slide at the expense of putting Bahasa Malaysia on a high pedestal for nationalistic pride and political expedience.
And now when the ghouls of political ineptness have come home to roost, fingers are pointed at everyone except at the known culprits on their "high horses".
Mahathir, our ex-PM, tried to turn back the tide when he knew we were going down the drain in English. He managed, by policy, to bring back English as the medium of teaching for Science and Mathematics. Alas, he has few friends and the opponents to his policy are getting more vociferous with each passing day. They want to be laid back with just knowing Communication English, which is good enough for them to be tourists in English speaking lands.
The Thais and Indonesians who could hardly speak English in bygone days speak excellent English these days. At international fora, Malaysians could hardly articulate. At overseas trade fairs, Malaysian companies could hardly market in comprehensible English.Even websites of government agencies are laughing stocks!
The policy makers must take cognizance of this. Students must know English grammar. How it is taught is a matter of strategy. Let's grapple with the Why and the What before dealing with the How.
Some of the inadequacies of English are given below:
" 'The current simplified syllabus has resulted in students not knowing the difference between words like ‘pain’ and ‘painful’, The Star daily reported.
“They don’t understand why they are wrong when they say ‘it is very pain’. Imagine, in an English paper, students are given marks for just using key words,” said one teacher. (Alamak, what kind of cikgu is this!)"
The rationale for studying English is crystal clear. As the DPM puts it:
“English is a language of the world and business. It is an international means of communication.”
The feedback he got? 500 callers rejected his suggestion to make English a compulsory paper to pass in the SPM.
So, as usual for Malaysia Boleh, this idea will be relegated on the back-burner and soon will be archived for the next Education Minister to dust it off for consideration. By then,is will already be too late and it can do little good if he gets the support.
Judging from the government’s experience with the controversial policy of using English to teach maths and science, more commonly known by its Malay acronym PPSMI, the negative response actually came as no surprise.
PPSMI has been a political hot potato for the ruling BN government since it was introduced in 2003, supposedly to improve English standards.
It was pushed through despite great resistance from parents, students and even teachers, and that unhappiness has 'volcanoed" in recent months.
Most Malaysians recognise that proficiency in English is important if the country wants to stay competitive. But the rural folk lament that there is no level playing field. Unlike the urbanites, they suffer from a lack of access to good English teachers and materials.
They also argued that they do not need to use English in everyday life, and that it would be unfair to penalise students in the rural areas by forcing them to pass the subject. A strange reason, as if the rural area is insulated from globalisation and the IT revolution! "Tak masuk akal,"your Malay friend will tell you.
Meanwhiule, Malaysian Chinese Association's controversial deputy president Datuk Chua Soi Lek said Malaysia cannot put off this issue any longer.
“Progress waits for no man. We can spend our time arguing while the world progresses,” he wrote on his blog. “We have to make a start somewhere.”
Do we have political will?
Will Dato' Najib cut off the naysayers at the gap,severe the Gordion Knot of opposition and take the plunge to sink and swim with the status quo of using English in teaching Science and Mathematics? Will he decide to make English a compulsory passing subject for the SPM?
The jury is out on this one.
June 12, 2009
After your own heart
What makes a girl drop dead attractive?
Facial beauty? Physical shape? The way she carries herself? Fine dress-sense
Chatty? What?
Or are these all in our mind?
Tell me why do you think Fazura is beautiful.
A pictures tells a million words. Look at these pictures that captures the many moods of Fazura.
Facial beauty? Physical shape? The way she carries herself? Fine dress-sense
Chatty? What?
Or are these all in our mind?
Tell me why do you think Fazura is beautiful.
A pictures tells a million words. Look at these pictures that captures the many moods of Fazura.
Labels:
Beauties
Wash Your Fruits!
Always wash your fruits with salt before eating them?
Great advice to be practised at home.
Look at the following photos and see what I mean.
Great advice to be practised at home.
Look at the following photos and see what I mean.
Labels:
Perspectives
Diamond Girl-Jojo Struys
My second posting of Jojo.
After reading more from the blogs and the WWW,I did not know that this was Jojo revisited. A diamond girl, she has shown a kaleidoscope of talents few have been able to demonstrate. A rare brain and beauty person,this.
Yes, it dawned clearly upon me that she took over Lina Teoh's crassed lawyer persona on the original Kopitiam series. Perhaps at that time she was just beginning to cut her teeth into the role as another obnoxious lawyer in that series. I did hear about her co-star role in the Chicken Rice War.
I believe she made her mark in Pillow Talk though I watched very few of them then.
Yes, I did see her on some mag covers and in advertisements but I did not really know her name.
Better known as the famed affable and charismatic host on the talk shows Pillow Talk and Girl's Club, Jojo is standing tall today.
Having extensively modeled throughout South-East Asia and currently the regional spokesperson for Eversoft skincare,she is a frequently sought celeb to MC live events.
Jojo is also the energy overflowing outdoor person.Believe me, she is an accomplished international level rhythm tap dancer.Yes, you should see her doing that mean tap dance on the video. And yoga too! What energy level!
Jojo was host to the most recently television coverage for the Tour de Langkawi, which has been broadcasted via ESPN.
Great show, Jojo!
Labels:
Beauties
Carmen is Soo Good!
Let me dedicate this page to Carmen Soo, another 31-year old Business graduate just like Jojo who has claimed Malaysian stardom as she adorns mag covers, acted in movies and created vibs from time to time.
I wonder what Carmen is up to these days?
I wonder what Carmen is up to these days?
Labels:
Beauties
Just not my bowl of Bah Kut Teh
Yes,as I have mentioned in the last post, we went to the famous Pao Xiang Bah Kut Teh shop in Taman Berkerly,Klang.
My sister-in-law, Barbara led the way and did the orders. Pity the pork cartilage was sold out by 10 am. So we could not savour that to give our comments.
On the rest of the fare we ordered, I guess it was just not my bowl of bah kut teh. The soup was so different and thick and certainly lacks the true flavour of the bah kut teh I have got used to in PJ, to take Heng Kee Bah Kut Teh in PJ old town as the benchmark.
Apparently, the 'big pig bone' bah kut teh was cooked with strings attached to it to reduce the fat on it. Yes, that may be true but the taste was just not oomph enough for me!
I may come back some day to taste the pork cartilage but the rest of the offerings would not really excite me at all.
Labels:
Food
Flapping in the Wind
So much for Malaysian quality control.
My wife was driving back from Setia Alam after a good bah kut teh breakfast cum lunch.
There before our eyes was this blue Proton Saga. What was interesting was it had a big flap about its bumper. As we reached closer to it for scrutiny, we found it was the skin of the bumper or the bumper itself flapping like a bird about to take wing!
I believe the anchor holding the bumper to the car body got broken or what and this has caused the bumper to get loose and to flap like a big blue bird!
How to buy Proton cars if their quality control is that BAD.............?
My wife was driving back from Setia Alam after a good bah kut teh breakfast cum lunch.
There before our eyes was this blue Proton Saga. What was interesting was it had a big flap about its bumper. As we reached closer to it for scrutiny, we found it was the skin of the bumper or the bumper itself flapping like a bird about to take wing!
I believe the anchor holding the bumper to the car body got broken or what and this has caused the bumper to get loose and to flap like a big blue bird!
How to buy Proton cars if their quality control is that BAD.............?
Labels:
Perspectives
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