Friday, April 26, 2019

Dr Kua pissing into wind, Dr M blowing with all his might


From FMT:

The PH GE14 manifesto and BN Education Blueprint by Kua Kia Soong


Education Minister Maszlee Malik has announced that the Bumiputera quota for matriculation programmes will remain at 90% while increasing the intake from 25,000 to 40,000. Non-Malay admission will only receive an increase from 2,500 to 4,000 places despite the hype about constructing a “New Malaysia” after the majority of non-Malay voters contributed to PH’s victory at the 2018 general election.

The perpetuation of this deeply flawed and racially discriminatory policy is cause for a sense of betrayal amongst democratic Malaysians who had been led to expect more inclusivity and meritocracy from the “new” Pakatan Harapan government.

The Pakatan Harapan manifesto promised to reform the education system to make national schools “the school of choice”. The manifesto included commitments to return residential schools to their original focus on low-income students and indigenous peoples without focussing on racial quotas.

The Education Blueprint formulated by the previous BN administration promised:

“By 2025, the Ministry aspires to increase access to and enrolment in higher education. If Malaysia were to successfully improve tertiary enrolment rates from 36% currently to 53% (and higher education enrolment from 48% to 70%), this will bring Malaysia on par with the highest enrolment levels in Asean today. This growth scenario will require an additional 1.1 million places by 2025, mainly through growth in technical and vocational education and training (TVET), private HLIs (higher learning institutions) and online learning.”

Note that through all that grandiose phraseology scripted by international consultants McKinsey, there is no mention that the decades-old racial discriminatory policies regarding enrolment in public institutions such as the matriculation programmes would continue.

Racially discriminatory quota system

The reality is that even within the national education system non-Bumiputeras suffer discrimination such as in access to scholarships, special schools and tertiary institutions. For decades we have witnessed the annual spectacle of non-Bumiputeras with straight As being rejected for entry into the courses of their choice at public sector universities. At the same time, there is extensive provision for Bumiputera education.

There are at least 42 fully residential elite Maktab Rendah Sains Mara (MRSM) (Mara junior Science College) with 12,440 places also in the fully residential schools. These schools have been almost exclusively reserved for Malay-Muslim students with perhaps a few token non-Bumiputeras who excel in sport to add glory to the schools. Non-Bumiputeras are largely excluded from other elite schools such as the Royal Military College, Aminuddin Baki Institution, matriculation courses and the Malay College Kuala Kangsar despite the fact that these institutions are all funded by Malaysian taxpayers.

There are two streams for entry into the public universities. One is through the matriculation 12-month programme and the other is through the 18-month and much more stringent STPM programme. The matriculation programme is mainly reserved for Malays although the government began offering 10% places for non-Bumiputera students in 2003.

University entrance criteria is not transparent and appears to be based on arbitrary factors. The same lack of transparency applies to the eligibility criteria involved in the selection process for the choice of courses, award of scholarships and loans for study. Preference for admission into public universities is reserved for Bumiputeras. One university with a student population of 170,000 in 2011, namely, UiTM, is open ‘for Bumiputeras only’ while the other 19 public universities have an overwhelming Malay majority in their enrolment. And it cannot be overstated that all of this is funded by ALL Malaysian taxpayers.

There is also discrimination in the allocation of students to competitive courses. Only a handful of seats in medical faculties of the public sector universities are made available to non-Malays. For example, out of the 62,000 diploma places and 60,000 degree places at 27 polytechnics in Malaysia in 2010, only a small number of places were allocated for non-Malay students regardless of their qualifications.

Such blatant racially discriminatory policies are the real reason the BN and PH governments have been reluctant to ratify the International Convention on the Eradication of Racial Discrimination (ICERD). Malaysia is one of the few countries in the world that practices such blatant racial discrimination.

The quota system was not part of the Independence Agreement

The Malay-based parties and their legal advisers arduously try to avoid this inconvenient truth: The quota system that has been practised in the country since 1971 was never part of the 1957 Independence Agreement! It was through the terror unleashed by the May 13 Incident that the country was presented with a fait accompli by the new Umno ruling class who proceeded to amend Article 153 with a new clause (8A):

“…where in any university, college and other educational institution providing education after Malaysian Certificate of Education or its equivalent, the number of places offered by the authority responsible for the management of the university, college or such educational institution to candidates for any course or study is less than the number of candidates qualified for such places, it shall be lawful for the Yang di-Pertuan Agong by virtue of this Article to give such directions to the authority as may be required to ensure the reservation of such proportion of such places for Malays and natives of any of the States of Sabah and Sarawak as the yang di-Pertuan Agong may deem reasonable; and the authority shall duly comply with the directions.”

This is the “quota system” we have lived with for the last 40 years or so and which has created so much acrimony for that length of time. Strictly speaking, if we were to go by Umno’s “social contract” at Independence in 1957, that “social contract” certainly does not include Clause 8A of Article 153 since this clause was introduced 14 years later.


the most anti-UEC Education Minister that was/is 

And if we scrutinise this Clause 8A more closely, we will see that it is definitely not a carte blanche for the blatant racial discrimination as is the case of enrolment at institutions such as UiTM. The 100% Bumiputera enrolment policy at UiTM and the 90% Bumiputera enrolment in matriculation courses make a mockery of the quota system itself and the justification of any affirmative action.

Compared with the affirmative action policies of other countries, for example the United States, we find some glaring inconsistencies in this country:

1. The beneficiary group in Malaysia happens to be the politically dominant and majority Malay group while the most obvious beneficiary group in any affirmative action ought to be one whose people have been historically discriminated against such as the Orang Asli;

2. Any preferential treatment for any group should be followed by specific goals, quotas and sunset clauses rather than the “Never Ending Policy” of the NEP in Malaysia;

3. Affirmative action policies are fundamentally not “special rights” as they are portrayed in Malaysia but rather, policy adjustments to rectify social inequality with sunset clauses once the objectives have been reached;

4.The definition of “the Malays” being an under-represented group is imprecise and flawed when any Muslim who is not ethnically Malay can claim to be a beneficiary;

5.Affirmative action should be extended to all discriminated groups, for example, women and other marginalised groups.

The Way forward

This gross racial discrimination in the Malaysian education system is one of the biggest obstacles to national progress and development. If the education minister and the new PH administration cannot see this, we will continue to flounder as a nation with this never-ending flawed education system.


he wanted to be also the Education Minister 

Education is the crucial institution for developing an inclusive society that is just and tolerant, and that respects diversity, equal opportunity and participation of all peoples. Our national education philosophy calls for developing the potential of all in a holistic and integrated manner, so as to produce individuals who are intellectually, spiritually, emotionally and physically balanced and harmonious. This will never materialise while racially discriminatory policies abound. The government’s call for promoting integration by doing away with vernacular schools rings hollow while there is apartheid in institutions such as UiTM.

It is time for the new education minister to turn his attention to equitable education access for all citizens to our national institutions, to think of ways to develop quality institutions, national integration and academic freedom. To start with, he should review and reform our policy of student intakes at all levels of colleges and universities, including the matriculation programme, with the aim of striking a balance between fair representation of ethnic groups, special assistance for the B40 regardless of ethnicity while maintaining academic excellence of all our institutions.

With such an inclusive vision and policy, PH could facilitate the growth of an education system that proudly welcomes its richly diverse peoples equitably, empowers all poor out of poverty and taps into the talent of ALL its citizens for the good of all:

“Ensuring that each individual has an equal opportunity for educational progress remains a challenge worldwide. Sustainable development emphasises inclusion and equity as laying the foundations for quality education. International human rights treaties prohibit any exclusion from, or limitation to, educational opportunities on the basis of socially-ascribed or perceived differences, such as by sex, ethnic/social origin, language, religion, nationality, economic condition, ability. Reaching excluded and marginalised groups and providing them with quality education requires the development and implementation of inclusive policies and programmes”.

– The UNESCO Convention against Discrimination in Education, 1960


Kua Kia Soong is the adviser to Suaram


18 comments:

  1. Toonsie "the most anti-UEC Education Minister that was/is"? What evidence is there to support this wild statement?

    He was Education Minister for 4 years (1974-1978). Same as Jibby (1995-1999). Did Jibby support the recognition of UEC? Nope. Neither did Hishamuddin after that (2004 - 2008) etc etc. None of the Education Ministers supported UEC. Not even Anwar.

    Toonsie is NOT the most anti-UEC. They are all the same.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Dr Kua also went back into history to inform us that Mahathir was the man who first threatened the Chinese schools on the UEC and warned them not start this private line of educational accreditation.

      Dr Kia said via FMT:

      At independence in 1957, there were 86 Chinese secondary schools in Malaya.

      It was only after the 1961 Education Act that many of these schools were forced to become English-medium (yes, not Malay-medium) at the time. Only 14 Chinese secondary schools remained as “independent” schools.

      It was after the “Independent Schools’ Revival Movement” in the 1970s that the number of MICSS climbed to 60 schools.

      In 1975, when the MICSS decided to hold its first Unified Examination, the Chinese education leaders were summoned to Parliament by then Education Minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad and were told in no uncertain terms to cancel the examination “or else…!”

      The Chinese education leaders carried on regardless of the consequences and the UEC has been held every year since. To date, there has never been a leak in any UEC examinations and the curriculum and marking of exam scripts are carried out every year with professional precision.

      Delete
    2. FOR MORE SEE MY POST https://ktemoc.blogspot.com/2016/04/governments-anti-uec-policy-began-with.html

      Delete
    3. Any of the subsequent 15 UMNO Education Ministers since 1978 (ie for 40 years) could have corrected the “most anti-UEC Education Minister” who made threats against the MICSS and refused to recognise the diploma, but they didn’t. Why? Because they all agree with Toonsie’s decision. FIFTEEN OF THEM, all same same.

      Delete
    4. Bull of the bulls!

      Obviously u r that bull trying hard to shit on the bulls of the likes of ego-bruised Kua Kia Soong.

      The Education Blueprint formulated by the ALL the previous BN administrations were/are always based on The Razak Report written in the 1956 & the Rahman Talib Report of 1961.

      These two reports laid the foundation for ALL the subsequent affirmative actions favouring the melayu, with the natives adding on to wallflower the bumiputra quantitative claim.

      There were/are many other subsequent superficial educational deviations introduced to placate the Nons (especially the cinapeks). They worked either one-off, especially during election time, or just as a set of wordings never intended to worth the paper it printed on.

      F*cks like u & kua SHOULD scream yr lung out on these TWO discriminative detritus report RATHER than blaming all the educational ills on mamak's participation in stir-frying them during his heydays in power.

      Thus, this relevant question of "Any of the subsequent 15 UMNO Education Ministers since 1978 (ie for 40 years) could have corrected the “most anti-UEC Education Minister” who made threats against the MICSS and refused to recognise the diploma, but they didn’t."

      Yr sifu is trying hard to infuriated the melayu through manufactured fitnahs against DAP while u r working hard to inflame the cinabengs' hatred of mama by keep telling one-sided grandmother storses to remind the cinabengs about the past misdeeds of mamak!

      Tough luck. Some of these idealistic cinapengs MIGHT be easily conned by yr articles. But many r not convinced. Neither r the elder cinapeks who KNOW!

      This latest hp6 solution of increasing the enrolment (40k) while retaining the 90/10 % distribution IS just the twisted bull of expanding-the-pie-while-retaining-the-same-share economic theory.

      Only desperados of know-nothing CAN gamingly using this argument w/o looking at the whole setup as a closed system?

      Hence, that confidently incompetent manmanlai in using it to defense the latest matriculation bull!

      Delete
    5. mamak presonally threatened him and other vernacular scholars

      Delete
    6. i hv no commenton kt stance, but kua article sound factual n reasonable. it we want to go back to the 2 reports, its tunku problem.

      Delete
    7. Do tell which bn umno ministers had not threaten ANY vernacular scholars?

      Delete
  2. a useless dap chinese deputy education minister, no diff with mca. bila mahu quit ph?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. 42 seats vs mca less than 20 seats still demand 60 years. betui useless.

      Delete
    2. Still can't get over yr gutted pet cat?

      60yrs to achieve 42 seats & still been surrounded by the likes of ketuanan freaks, zombies & blur-sotongs masquerading as partners!

      & yet u still expect miracles to happen within less than a year in office when 90% of the gov Dept's r been manned by nincompoops behaving like lil' napoleons to hijack any agendas that r been labelled as detrimental to their alifbata & gaji buta kind of nasi periuk!

      How much has that doggie MCA achieved over the same 60yrs in the bn gov machineries, while enriching their own fat cats (related to yrs?)?

      This mfer setup has 60yrs to overcome ANY obstacles & yet has insignificant results to show.

      Yet, it is yr BEST comparisonal fart to trying to nail DAP!

      MCA is useless bcoz it's been prop upped by mfers like u. When there is crumbs, just keep quiet. When the crumbs run out, this rabid dog is trying to bite for a show!

      Pure pathetic to the nth!

      Delete
  3. DAP is more useless than the uselesst

    ReplyDelete
  4. https://www.malaysiakini.com/letters/71108
    "Wake up, Najib, our education system is a failure"

    https://www.malaysiakini.com/letters/71584
    "How English-medium schools vanished overnight"

    Then Education Minister Razak 1956 via the Razak Report was the architect of the dismantling of the English School system as well as the (intended at the time) submergence of Vernacular Education.

    The big picture is it was and is UMNO race-nationalistic ideology , subscribed by Every UMNO leader for over 60 years.

    Its lacking in objectivity for a writer to simply hang it on just a particular person to satisfy a personal agenda especially as a vendetta.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. based on empirical experience by Dr Kua, unlike your dedak-driven BS and some letters to MKINI by whoever

      Delete
    2. Definitely more credible people than Ah Mok

      Delete
  5. Don’t be so harsh. Guanee has his plate full, paying back 30B in tax refunds which Jibby for some reason did not return, absorbed 10B in sick TH assets so Muslim pilgrims can receive halal dividends (TH had been cooking their books for many years), pumped in 6B to Felda rescuing settlers who were duped into investing in FGV etc etc. Anthony Loke is cleaning up the Transport Ministry which was loaded with corruption (eg AES) and inefficiency (eg SPAD), Gobind breathing new life into Communications and Multimedia (cheaper faster internet, RTM, Bernama), Yeo Bee Yin cleaning up our rivers and closing all those illegal plastic “recyclers”....you must give credit where credit is due.

    Bersatu ministers like Maszlee, Rina, flying car Redzuan, Saddiq, well that’s a different matter...

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. lge only know collect tax, mara akautan bolih buat. anthony son or daughter still need bao to pass driving test. gobind want to shut u up for talking too much, yeo objective is to marry billionaire n she succeed. betui a useless bunch that no diff with mca.

      Delete