The
Havoc Education Reform Inflicts: Education
Blueprint 2013-2025 (Part 5) M. Bakri Musa
Last
of Five Parts: Hard To Be Part of the
Solution When You Are Part of the Problem
[In the first three essays I critiqued the Blueprint’s recommendations: specifically its failure to recognize the diversity
within our school system and thus the need to have targeted programs; the
challenge of recruiting quality teachers; and the link between efficiency,
efficacy, and quality. Part Four
discussed the report’s deficiencies.
This last essay focuses on the very process of reform, or how to do a
better job of it.]
The greatest weakness of this reform effort is its
exclusive dependence on in-house or MOE staff, the very personnel responsible
for the current rot with our schools.
These individuals have been part of the problem for far too long; they
cannot now be expected suddenly and magically to be part of the solution. That would take an exceptional ability to be
flexible, innovative, and have the willingness or at least capacity to
learn. Those are the very traits not valued
in or associated with our civil service.
The
Blueprint’s local consultants
included Air Asia’s Tony Fernandez, Khazanah’s Azman Mokthar, and Sunway’s
Jeffrey Cheah, presumably representing the three major communities. These individuals are terribly busy. Unless they took time off from their
considerable corporate responsibilities, they could not possibly do justice to
this important national assignment.
The
international consultants were equally impressive. Again here I wonder how much time they actually
spent talking to teachers, students and headmasters. Another significant flaw is this: With the possible exception of the Canadian,
the others are from systems not burdened with the Malaysian dilemma of low
educational achievements identifiable with specific ethnic or geographical
groups. In Ontario, Canada, only the
Toronto School System which is separate from the provincial has significant
experience with the “Malaysian” problem. The Canadian is with the provincial system.
Many
of those impressive consultants were conspicuously absent during the many
public sessions leading one to conclude that they were more window dressing.
As
for the public meetings, there were few formal or well thought-out
presentations. Far too often those
meetings quickly degenerated into “bitch” sessions, or to put it into local
lingo, cakap kosong kopi-o (coffee
shop empty talk), with a few vociferous and frustrated individuals hogging the
discussions. Worse, there were no
records of those hearings for preview, except for those amateurish low-quality
recordings posted on Youtube. Consequently,
opportunities for learning from those sessions were minimal.
The
reform has its own website (myedureview.com) and uses the social media
(Facebook and Twitter) extensively.
Those dialogues in cyberspace were no better; the comments were un-moderated
and simply the spouting of anger and frustrations. As for the few serious ones, the panel never
engaged their contributors. The cyber
forums, like the public hearings, gave few insights; the signal-to-noise ratio
was low. There was no shortage of
passion and strong views, reflecting the angst Malaysians have of their school
system.
A
Superior Approach
There is a better approach. To begin with, dispense with the current or
past personnel of MOE; they are or have been part of the problem. Consider that the most consequential reform
in medical education, The Flexner Report of 1910 was produced not by a doctor
or even an educator but an insurance salesman!
It still is the foundation of modern American medical education. In
Malaysia, the Razak Report of 1956 transformed Malaysian education, yet its
author was no educator or teacher.
The
only qualification I seek in those undertaking reform would be a respectable
education (meaning, they have earned rather than bought their degrees), a
proven record of success in any endeavor, and the necessary commitment,
especially time, intellect, and energy.
Meaning, these individuals would have to take a sabbatical from their
regular duties. I would have no more
than five members, with one designated as leader.
Then
I would give them a generous budget to hire the best independent professional
staff, from clerks to answer the phones efficiently to IT personnel to design
and maintain an effective website, to scholars, statisticians and data
analysts. The budget should also provide
for travel to visit exemplary school systems elsewhere. I would also have those panelists spend most
of their time talking to students, parents and teachers rather than ministry
officials.
The
panel should also have sufficient resources to hire consultants from countries
with demonstrably superior school systems.
I would choose two in particular – Finland and America. Both have sufficient experiences in dealing
with children of marginalized communities; Finland with its new immigrants,
America its minorities. Yes, American
public schools do not enjoy favorable reputation but there are islands of
excellence for us to emulate.
I
would avoid consultants from Korea and other East Asian countries for at least
two reasons. One, they are ethnically
and culturally homogenous; they have no experience dealing with diverse groups;
the Malaysian dilemma is alien to them.
For another, while the Koreans regularly excel in international
comparisons, they do not think highly of their own cram-school-plagued
system. Those who can, avoid it.
I
would also look beyond the advanced countries to, for example Mexico for its Progressa Program, and Rwanda with its
ambitious and highly successful One-Laptop-Per-Child (OLPC) scheme. If poor Rwanda could have such an imaginative
initiative, Malaysia could do even more.
Rwanda demonstrates that an enlightened government approach could
actually bring down prices. Rwanda’s
computers cost under RM500 per unit! It
could do that because the program is under the management of competent and
honest foreign experts, not local inertia-laden bureaucrats and corrupt politicians
on the take. Rwandan leaders are self
confident and fully aware that they lack local expertise; they are not hesitant
in calling in foreigners and do not worry about being “neo-colonized” or
whatever.
Rwanda
offers many other useful lessons. Foremost
is that children from even the most physically and socially challenged
environments could leapfrog the technological gap. That is pertinent for our children in Ulu
Kelantan and Interior Sarawak. For
another, reform in the classrooms spills into the wider community, spurring
further reforms and developments there.
Those Rwandan children dragged along their parents and grandparents into
the digital age. Those elders are now
open to the wider world; consequently they demand more of their leaders, like their
villages having electricity so they could use their computers longer. They view those machines as agents of
liberation and emancipation; now they can find out the price of the commodities
they sell and the goods they buy directly from the market instead of being
captive to the middlemen.
The
only time I would call for ministry’s input is to have the staff enumerate the
problems and challenges faced under the current system. This would also show whether they are indeed
aware of those problems and whether their assessments match those of parents.
I
would arrange the public participation component differently and also encourage
input from all, individuals as well as groups.
The initial submissions however, would have to be in writing. That would force presenters to think through
their ideas. For groups I would
stipulate that their report be accompanied by an attestation that it had been
endorsed by their executive committees or general membership.
All
submissions would be in Malay or English, with a translation in the other
language. For those exceeding 300 words
there would have to be an accompanying executive summary not more than 200
words, again in both languages. All
these submissions would be posted on the panel’s website, with readers free to
post their comments. Those comments as
well as the original submissions would have to be edited (again by the panel’s
professional staff) for clarity, brevity and accuracy, as well as to avoid embarrassing
grammatical and spelling errors. That
would lend some gravitas to the website as well as provide useful learning
opportunities for those who surf it. The
website as well as other media outlets must reflect the professionalism and
excellence of the reform effort.
One
does not get this impression now on reading the Blueprint or perusing the reform’s website.
The
panel would then select from those submissions the few that are worthy for
further exploration in an open public hearing.
The purpose of those structured open hearings is to give the panel opportunities
to elucidate greater details from the submitters, and for them to expand on
their ideas. Those hearings are not
meant to hear from new or on-the-spur commentators. Such a scheme would effectively cut out the
grandstanders. Again, those proceedings,
their transcripts as well as the video and audio recordings, would be posted on
the website.
Only
after all the public hearings have been completed would the panel gather to
write their final recommendations, with freedom for each member to produce his
or her own separate or dissenting comment.
That is the only way to be credible.
The
current process produces nothing more than a sanitized press release of MOE,
embellished with the imprimaturs of those impressive corporate and
international consultants.
Measures
of Success
There are only four reliable indicators of success
with education reform, and all are readily measured. The simplest is to stand at the Johor
causeway on any school morning and count the number of school children going
south. Trend those numbers. If five years hence that number were to
dwindle, then you know that Malaysian parents have confidence in their
schools. To be really sophisticated you
could factor in the birth rates and other variables. However, those would not add much.
Similarly,
you could take the train on a Sunday afternoon and count the number of
youngsters in Johor heading south for the week to stay with extended families
or boarding houses in Singapore to attend schools there.
Those
chauvinistically inclined might be tempted to conclude that regardless how good
our schools are, those predominantly Chinese students would still go
south. If that is so, then I have two
other trends to monitor. One, visit the
top universities abroad and survey the Malaysians there. How many (or what percentage) come from our
national schools? In the 1980s I could
count many; today, hardly any. That
decline correlated with the deterioration of our national schools.
Another
would be to trend the number of Malaysians enrolled in local international
schools. Now that quotas for local
enrollment have been lifted, that number would be inversely related to the
level of confidence the elite has of our schools.
These
statistics are easily collected and trended; you do not need fancy “labs” for
that. PEMANDU should assign a junior
staff member to collect them.
Reform
must be approached thoughtfully, both with the process and the people selected
to lead it. The full consequence of the
changes we put today would not be felt till decades or even generations
later. We are only now realizing and
paying the price for the follies of the 1970s.
As
a youngster my father would admonish me whenever I did something sloppily. Not only had I wasted my effort, he reminded
me, now somebody else would have to undo what I had done before he could do it
the right way. Triple the work and
effort, essentially.
These
reform efforts consume considerable human, financial and other resources. They distract everyone, from politicians and
ministry bureaucrats to parents, teachers, and most of all the students.
We
have to do it right, beginning by having the right people.
The writer is the author of, among others, An Education System Worthy of Malaysia.
2 Comments:
Thank you for your thought provoking article. I hope more of us would stop "cakap kosong kopi-o" and be really concerned with not wasting our most precious children's minds.
as salam...im shuhaimi abu bakar (anak boka liban kodai kg tongah)...far jr...but still remember you perform concert at sekolah kg tengah ulu before you left oversea...i just started follow your writting...great...sey suku tanah datar...my mum still alive now 82 staying with me...last year i was in LA
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