Sunday, October 30, 2011

No English option: Policy has been decided and should be respected



KUALA LUMPUR: The government yesterday put a lid on calls to allow some schools to teach Science and Mathematics in English, with Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin saying that “the policy has been decided and should be respected”.

The deputy prime minister, who is also education minister, pointed out that having a dual-language system would be “chaotic”. Muhyiddin said it would also make it difficult for the ministry in terms of planning and getting enough quality teachers.
“If we give the option to parents, this will cause kucar-kacir (chaos) in the education system.

“It is hard for the Education Ministry to plan — how to do it? One school wants it in English, another in Malay. Then there is a question of teachers, how do we provide? “Some of our English teachers are not so efficient, so if some schools opt to teach the two subjects in English but do not have enough English teachers, then the aspirations of parents will not be realised,” he said after opening the Language and Malay Literature Congress at Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka here.

Muhyiddin was responding to calls from some parents, students and pressure groups such as Parents Action Group for Education (Page)for schools to be given the freedom to choose the medium of instruction for Science and Mathematics following the ministry’s earlier decision to reverse the PPSMI(teaching Science and Mathematics in English)policy.

The reversal was made following studies, which concluded that English proficiency did not improve with the introduction of PPSMI.

Studies also pointed out that pupils were still struggling to communicate in English six years after the policy’s introduction.

PPSMI, mooted by former prime minister Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad, was implemented in 2003.

With the abolishment of PPSMI, Year One pupils at national schools, from this year onwards, studied Science and Mathematics in Bahasa Malaysia.

Muhyiddin said as a father, he understood the concerns of parents over the matter, but stressed that the ministry had considered all options before making its decision.

He said the ministry had adopted a “soft landing” approach to ease pupils back to learning Science and Mathematics in Bahasa Malaysia. He further dispelled worries that the abolishment of PPSMI would result in the English language being sidelined, pointing out that the ministry had come up with the Upholding the Malay Language and Strengthening the Command of English (MBMMBI) policy.

The ministry has also introduced a few initiatives to strengthen the use of English. This includes changing the English language curriculum by increasing the number of periods for English classes from 240 minutes to 300 minutes a week.

From next year, the ministry will bring in Fulbright scholars from the United States to help improve English proficiency among schoolchildren in urban and rural areas.

It will also bring in native Englishspeaking teachers as master teachers who would be placed at schools nationwide.

Additionally, the ministry will train some 10,000 teachers at teachers’ training institutes to help with the teaching of English.

“I believe the steps we have taken this year will bear fruit in the next few years. We can’t expect immediate results, we can only see the effect in the next few years. I hope parents can accept this,” said Muhyiddin.

2011/10/30
By Eileen Ng
news@nst.com.my

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