PETALING JAYA (16 May 2014):
Malaysian students are below par when compared with their
contemporaries in other countries, acknowledged Education Minister II Idris Jusoh.
Although literacy rates were rising in Malaysia, it was vital to
assess and compare the Malaysian education system against international
standards, he said.
“Out of 74 countries, Malaysia ranked in the bottom third in the
Programme for International Student Assessment (Pisa) 2009. This is below the
international and OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development)
average,” he indicated during the 18th Malaysian Education Summit yesterday.
“Primary and secondary school education standards need to
improve to bridge the gap between urban and rural areas. Though Malaysia has
achieved commendable results in terms of providing access, we have to now
ensure that access comes together with quality education of international
standards.”
Meanwhile, at the higher education level, he said that the
challenge was producing knowledgeable, competent and globally competitive human
capital.
“Employers in Malaysia face a major problem when it comes to
having fresh graduates fill out vacancies,” he said, citing poor command of
English as one of the reasons.
The solution to this is the Malaysia
Education Blueprint (MEB) 2012-2025, which was launched last September, as
well as the soon-to-be-released National
Education Blueprint for Higher Education 2015-2025 (Higher Education Blueprint).
Idris said the MEB offered a vision of the education system and
students’ aspirations that Malaysia both needed and deserved and outlined 11
strategic and operation shifts that would be required to achieve that vision.
“The need for the Education Blueprint is justified in the
context of raising international standards; the government aspiration of better
preparing Malaysian children for the needs of the 21st century; and increased
public and parental expectations of education policy,” he said.
“We have had international experts from the World Bank, UNESCO,
and OECD to work with our national partners to evaluate the performance of our
national education system in the development process of the Education
Blueprint. Overall, more than 55,000 stakeholders were consulted in its
formulation.”
“The Higher Education Blueprint will also be introduced in order
to ensure consistency with the primary and secondary education system, and
allow for seamless progression in terms of educational offerings, opportunities
and advancement,” he added.
The Higher Education Blueprint will address challenges such as
empowering university governance, democratising access to higher education and
improving graduate employability.
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