Preliminary Malaysia Education Blueprint 2013-2025 (English)
Preliminary Malaysia Education Blueprint 2013-2025 (English)
Preliminary Malaysia Education Blueprint 2013-2025 (English)
CHAPTER 1
CONTExT AND
INNOVA
6
Education is a major contributor to the development of our social and economic capital. It inspires creativity and fosters innovation; provides our youth with the necessary skills to be able to compete in the modern labour market; and is a key driver of growth in the economy. And as this Government puts in place measures under the New Economic Model, Economic Transformation Plan and Government Transformation Plan to place Malaysia firmly on the path to development, we must ensure that our education system continues to progress in tandem. By doing so, our country will continue to keep pace in an increasingly competitive global economy.
ATION
Our education system has been the bedrock of our development. It has provided this generation and those before it with the skills and knowledge that have driven the countrys growth and, with it, our prosperity. At the centre of this are the thousands of dedicated teachers, principals, administrators, and officers and staff at the Ministry of Education, both past and present, whose contribution can never be overstated. In the 55 years since our independence, they have overseen a dramatic improvement to the quality and provision of education. And through their efforts we have, for example, achieved near-universal access at the primary and lower secondary levels, while global organisations such as UNESCO and World Bank have recognised and lauded Malaysias progress in education. But in order to meet our high aspirations amidst an increasingly competitive global environment, we cannot stand still. Our country requires a transformation of its entire education system, lifting achievement for all students. Make no mistake; this will require an entirely new perspective, so that students develop skills needed for the 21st century. Rather than simply adding staff and facilities, there is now a need to understand and improve the dynamics of the teaching and learning process. To this end, the Government has developed the Education Blueprint. It provides a comprehensive plan for a rapid and sustainable transformation of our education system through to 2025. And by building on the range of initiatives introduced as National Key Result Areas, it sets out the fundamental changes that we require. From how we approach student learning, the way we recruit, train and reward our teachers and principals right through to how the Ministry of Education itself operates, it lays out a process for that change. And in doing so, it lays out clear improvements on the factors that really matter, along every step of this journey.
These targets are ambitious, but entirely achievable. They include: ensuring universal enrolment from pre-school to upper secondary education in 10 years; halving the achievement gaps between the rich and poor, urban and rural, and between the states that form Malaysia in 10 years; rising from the bottom-third to the top-third of countries in international assessments like PISA and TIMSS in 15 years; and building an education system that gives children an appreciation for our unique identity as Malaysians. And this will be achieved with due prudence and care for the resources allocated; every ringgit spent must be directed towards improving student outcomes. I would also like to take this opportunity to express my appreciation to the Ministry of Education and all those who contributed towards the development of this Education Blueprint. I realize that transforming the education system will not be easy and that we are likely to encounter a number of challenges along the way. But despite this, rest assured that not only are the Government and Ministry of Education committed to delivering on these goals, I am also personally committed. And hand in hand with the rakyat, I have every confidence that we will persevere and deliver. From individual parents to members of the local community to the private sector, we all have a role to play and a personal stake in improving our education system. A role that will help sow the seeds of our childrens success. A role that we should all be proud to play. So God willing, let us take this exciting, challenging and most importantly this necessary journey together, as one nation.
QUALITY
8
This Government is committed to transforming Malaysias education system over the next oneand-a-half decades. Our goal, and the purpose of the education system, is to equip our students holistically to allow them to succeed in the 21st century, with all of the opportunities and challenges that this new era presents. In order to compete with the best in the world, our education system must develop young Malaysians who are knowledgeable, think critically and creatively, have leadership skills and are able to communicate with the rest of the world. Just as importantly, our students must be imbued with values, ethics and a sense of nationhood, enabling them to make the right choices for themselves, their families and the country with a view towards enduring and overcoming lifes inevitable challenges.
TY
Delivering the shifts in achievement we seek will require building on the progress already realised across the system; spreading it more widely, particularly to those groups for whom the system is currently not performing; and supporting all students to achieve. The Ministry of Education will focus its resources on those levers that actually make a difference to what matters most: student outcomes. Our strategy is to focus on teaching and learning quality, access to reliable and meaningful information, transparent accountabilities and appropriate learning environments and infrastructure. The Ministry will ensure that all children entering school have already participated in early childhood education, regardless of socio-economic status. We will increase the number and diversity of preschools to make them broadly accessible, while raising the quality of early childhood education services across the board.
We will also further develop opportunities for religious, sports, arts, and other educational pathways. The inclusiveness of the system will also be improved, with additional opportunities and resources for gifted, special needs, indigenous and other minority groups, and other groups with specific needs. In order to deliver on these fundamental transformations, the Ministry of Education will play a key role in leading the education sector and working with education providers and stakeholders to lift student achievement. I applaud all of our Ministry personnel for their dedicated service, their hard work and their continuous efforts to improve the education and care of our students. Over the course of the Blueprint, we will update you regularly on this transformation journey. We will establish an Education Delivery Unit (EDU) within the ministry that will support this programme. We will also share progress through annual reports which will highlight successes and gaps, with remedial action plans for continuous improvements where needed. On behalf of the Ministry of Education, we commit to the vision of this Blueprint and to supporting its implementation to the best of our ability. For the sake of Malaysias children, we can do better, and we will do better.
Quality teaching is the most effective lever available to transform primary and secondary education and deliver improved outcomes for students. The Ministry will improve the quality of teaching in our schools, building on existing good practice, and rewarding highquality teaching with better career pathways that support teachers in the classroom. It will also revise the curriculum to embed and develop 21st Century Skills such as critical and creative thinking, as well as encourage holistic, well-rounded personal growth. Excellent professional leadership has the second-biggest effect on improving learning outcomes and so we are investing in strengthening school leadership from selection through to induction and in-role mentoring and support. The Ministry will also provide targeted, differentiated support to every school, tailored to individual school needs. For instance, while the Ministry will support improved school infrastructure to support student learning across the education system, Sabah and Sarawak will be prioritised for infrastructure upgrades. This will ensure that every school receives the level and type of support it needs. Schools that are already high-performing will also earn greater decision rights autonomy to support continuous improvements. Working with partners wherever necessary, we are focused on increasing opportunities for young Malaysians of all abilities, talents and interests. For instance, the vocational education pathway is being strengthened and expanded to provide students with the practical skills required to succeed in trades and other specialised occupations.
STUDEN OUTC
The Ministry of Education Malaysia remains committed to fulfilling the potential of students in the Malaysian education system. Inter alia, emphasis will be given to provide better access and quality education to every student, and eventually contribute towards bringing meaningful differences in the lives of Malaysians. The Malaysia Education Blueprint (2013-2025) provides the long term policy direction to make these improvements. It establishes a clear sequence of priorities to ensure that the return on investments is optimised in terms of the results that matter most student outcomes.
10
NT TCOMES
A key priority for this transformation is to ensure better alignment between policy formulation and implementation along the entire education value chain. Another priority is to improve resource productivity by strengthening the link between desired outcomes and the effective allocation of resources as well as efficient implementation and evaluation of relevant programmes and projects. Leadership, guidance and support from the Ministry, state education departments, district education offices as well as schools, will be critical to achieve these aspirations. Fulfilling these crucial roles will require a fundamental transformation in the Ministrys organisational structure and operations, which needs to evolve into a more responsive, transparent and outcomes-focused organisation. The capacities and capabilities of personnel at the state and district levels will be enhanced. Greater autonomy and balanced accountability will also be provided to enable flexibility in delivering solutions tailored to the unique needs of students. This will also require constructive networking with key stakeholders across Government agencies, parents, community groups and the private sector. I would like to express my sincere appreciation to the dedicated and hardworking Ministry personnel across Malaysia, many of whom perform their indispensable service of educating the nations children in varying conditions. Although many challenges still lie ahead, I am confident that by working together we can deliver our shared goal: a quality education system that equips all Malaysians with the knowledge, skills and values to be successful citizens in the 21st century.
11
INCLUSIV
Education is key for personal development and it provides a myriad of life opportunities. It also underpins the development of a highly skilled, innovative workforce as a critical enabling factor for social, cultural, and economic growth. The commitment and efforts we put into education are some of the most fundamental investments we can make towards securing the future wellbeing of Malaysians. Towards achieving this, various initiatives were undertaken to identify challenges and gaps related to the education system and find ways to address them. From these findings, the Ministry has come up with a Blueprint outlining strategies and initiatives for the enhancement of the National Education System.
12
IVENESS
The Blueprint is the result of a multitude of analyses, interviews, surveys, and research conducted with the support of national and international education experts, officials, teachers, principals, and parents all across Malaysia. In addition, through the National Dialogue conducted earlier this year, almost 12,000 members of the public and various stakeholder groups were consulted for their ideas and feedback. In this Blueprint, we have set ourselves ambitious, yet achievable and feasible tasks to build a strong and efficient education system by 2025 that features universal access all the way through to secondary education, that will produce students who perform in the top third of international student assessments, to provide equal and quality educational opportunities for all students regardless of background or socioeconomic status and to instill a sense of common Malaysian identity amongst all students. These changes will necessitate the implementation of strategic support systems to engage students in the learning process. Our schools will be able to provide quality teaching, guidance, and support for our students. Placements of strong, school-based leaders will help to ensure schools comply with the high performance standards as prescribed by the Ministry of Education Malaysia. Furthermore, I am confident that with the cooperation from all internal and external stakeholders the implementation of this Blueprint will provide a sustainable and rapid transformation of Malaysias Education System.
Tan Sri Abd. Ghafar bin Mahmud
13
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
CHAPTER 1
CURRENT PERFORMANCE
CHAPTER 4
STUDENT LEARNING
CHAPTER 5
MINISTRY TRANSFORMATION
CHAPTER 7
SYSTEM STRUCTURE
CHAPTER 8
ExECUTIvE SUMMARy
E-1
CHAPTER 3
ACCESS TO EDUCATION 3-1
CHAPTER 1
BACKgROUND TO THE BlUEPRINT OBJECTIvES Of THE BlUEPRINT THE BlUEPRINT DEvElOPMENT APPROACH OvERvIEW Of THE BlUEPRINT 1-2 1-4 1-4 1-7
Near-universal access has been achieved at the primary and lower secondary levels
QUAlITy Of EDUCATION
3-5
Student performance in national examinations is improving Malaysias performance in TIMSS Malaysias performance in PISA 2009+ TIMSS and PISA highlight that there are Good and Great schools in Malaysia worthy of study and replication National examinations and international assessments suggest variance in standards Student completion rates for one cohort Public perception of the quality of education outcomes is mixed Available data suggest that holistic development of students is occurring
CHAPTER 2
SySTEM ASPIRATIONS 2-1
Access to Success Quality of a High International Standard Equity for All Students Fostering Unity among Students Delivering with Greater Efficiency
EQUITy IN EDUCATION
3-17
2-5
STUDENT ASPIRATIONS
Achievement gaps exist between and within states across Malaysia Achievement gap between rural and urban schools is narrowing over time Achievement gaps between National and National-type schools are narrowing over time The Lost Boys issue: the gender gap is widening Socio-economic status continues to have large impact on student performance Gap in student performance persists between private and public schools
Knowledge Thinking Skills Leadership Skills Bilingual Proficiency Ethics and Spirituality National Identity
3-21
Range of schooling options creating ethnically homogeneous environments Teacher diversity in schools JNJK school inspections indicate a good level of unity
MAxIMISINg EffICIENCy
3-24
Malaysias basic education expenditure is relatively high compared to peers on three different metrics MHigher spending has translated to better student outcomes in term of access, but not necessarily in term of quality
CHAPTER 4
CURRICUlUM AND ASSESSMENT 4-1
CHAPTER 5
TEACHERS 5-2
The written curriculum The taught curriculum The examined curriculum The Roadmap: Developing and applying 21st Century curriculum and assessment Wave 1 (2013 to 2015): Improving the current curriculum and preparing for structural change Waves 2 (2016 to 2020) and 3 (2021 to 2025): Rolling out new and revised curriculum and assessments
lANgUAgE
4-7
Assessing language proficiency in Malaysia The Roadmap: Creating language proficiency at scale Wave 1 (2013 to 2015): Strengthening the current system Wave 2 (2016 to 2020): Introducing structural change Wave 3 (2021 to 2025): Scaling up structural change
Demographics of the teaching force Quality of teaching Selection Pre-service training and ongoing professional development Placement Working conditions Remuneration and performance management The Roadmap: Transforming the teaching profession into a profession of choice Wave 1 (2013 to 2015): Improving standards and support systems Wave 2 (2016 to 2020): Enhancing career pathways and progression Wave 3 (2021 to 2025): Creating a peer-led culture of professional excellence
SCHOOl lEADERS
5-12
4-12
Under-enrolled schools Indigenous and other minority groups Education for gifted children Special needs education
Selection of principals Demographics of school leadership Training and professional development Current working conditions Career progression and performance management The Roadmap: Ensuring high-performing school leaders in every school Wave 1 (2013 to 2015): Improving selection standards and support systems Wave 2 (2016 to 2020): Elevating the profession and moving towards distributed leadership Wave 3 (2021 to 2025): Creating a peer-led culture of professional excellence
4-18
The Roadmap: Accelarating school improvement through states and districts Wave 1 (2013 to 2015): Transforming state and district leadership Wave 2 (2016 to 2020): Increasing operational flexibility for JPNs, PPDs and schools Wave 3 (2021to 2025): Scaling up decision rights
1-5
CHAPTER 6
THE DElIvERy SySTEM 6-1
CHAPTER 7
PHASES AND DURATION Of EDUCATION 7-1
Assessment of the current position The Roadmap: Closing the implementation gap Wave 1 (2013 to 2015): Redefining roles and strengthening JPNs and PPDs Wave 2 (2016 to 2020): Implementing wide-scale reorganisation of the Ministry Wave 3 (2021 to 2025): Reinforcing organisational strengths
6-10
Phases of education Preschool education The Roadmap: Matching high-performing education systems Wave 1 (2013 to 2015): Expanding preschools rapidly, increasing enrolment in other phases of education Wave 2 (2016 to 2020): Consolidating benefits Wave 3 (2021 to 2025): Ensuring universal access
RESOURCE PRODUCTIvITy
EDUCATION PATHWAyS
7-7
The Roadmap: Maximising student outcomes for every Ringgit Wave 1 (2013 to 2015): Quick wins in rationalisation Wave 2 (2016 to 2020): Effecting system-wide efficiency Wave 3 (2021 to 2025): Maintaining best practices
SCHOOl INfRASTRUCTURE
6-14
Education pathways and career options The Roadmap: Creating multiple education pathways Wave 1 (2013 to 2015): Strengthening vocational education Wave 2 (2016 to 2020): Scaling up initiatives Wave 3 (2021 to 2025): Ensuring education pathways for all
The Roadmap: Adopting a common standard for school infrastructure, adapted to local needs Wave 1 (2013 to 2015): Ensuring a good standard of basic infrastructure for all schools Wave 2 (2015 to 2020): Equipping schools to support enhanced curriculum and pedagogical delivery Wave 3 (2021 to 2025): Defining infrastructure needs for the future
7-15
6-20
Current system structure to be maintained Ethnic homogeneity in the education system Civics elements in education Vision Schools RIMUP: integration through co-curricular activity The Roadmap: Improving interaction and integration across all schooling options Wave 1 (2013 to 2015): Establishing foundations Wave 2 (2016 to 2020):Scaling interventions to foster unity Wave 3 (2021 to 2025): Reviewing schooling options and system structure
The Roadmap: Leveraging ICT for learning Wave 1 (2013 to 2015): Enhancing the foundation Wave 2 (2015 to 2020): Introducing ICT innovations Wave 3 (2021 to 2025): Maintaining innovative, system-wide usage
7-18
Current levels of parental and community engagement in education The Roadmap: Moving towards a learning system Wave 1 (2013 to 2015): Supporting engagement with parents and private sector Wave 2 (2016 to 2020): Deepening engagement Wave 3 (2021 to 2025): Encouraging greater private-sector innovations
1-6
CHAPTER 8
SEQUENCINg THE TRANSfORMATION 8-3
glOSSARy
g-1
Wave 1 (2013 to 2015): Turn around system by supporting teachers and focusing on core skills Wave 2 (2016 to 2020): Accelerate system improvement Wave 3 (2021 to 2025): Move towards excellence with increased operational flexibility 8-9
A-1
DElIvERINg DIffERENTly
Strengthening leadership commitment and capabilities in the Ministry Establishing a small, high-powered delivery unit to drive Blueprint delivery Intensifying internal and external performance management Engaging Ministry officials and other stakeholders
METHODOlOgy
A-5
APPENDIx III:
A-13
APPENDIx Iv:
8-11
A-20
APPENDIx v:
A-22
APPENDIx vI:
A-34
APPENDIx vII:
A-37
executive
E-1
executive summary
In October 2011, the Ministry of Education launched a comprehensive review of the education system in Malaysia in order to develop a new National Education Blueprint. This decision was made in the context of rising international education standards, the Governments aspiration of better preparing Malaysias children for the needs of the 21st century, and increased public and parental expectations of education policy. Over the course of 11 months, the Ministry drew on many sources of input, from education experts at UNESCO, World Bank, OECD, and six local universities, to principals, teachers, parents, and students from every state in Malaysia. The result is a preliminary Blueprint that evaluates the performance of Malaysias education system against historical starting points and international benchmarks. The Blueprint also offers a vision of the education system and students that Malaysia both needs and deserves, and suggests 11 strategic and operational shifts that would be required to achieve that vision. The Ministry hopes that this effort will inform the national discussion on how to fundamentally transform Malaysias education system, and will seek feedback from across the community on this preliminary effort before finalising the Blueprint in December 2012.
Education plays a central role in any countrys pursuit of economic growth and national development. There is no better predictor of a nations future than what is currently happening in its classrooms. In todays global economy, a nations success depends fundamentally on the knowledge, skills and competencies of its people. It is no surprise that nations with higher education levels tend to enjoy greater economic prosperity. Education is also fundamental to nation building and unity. It provides individuals with the opportunity to improve their lives, become successful members of the community and active contributors to national development. Through interacting with individuals from a range of socio-economic, religious and ethnic backgrounds and learning to understand, accept and embrace differences a shared set of experiences and aspirations for Malaysias future can be built. It is through these shared experiences and aspirations that a common national identity and unity is fostered. In recent years, the Malaysian education system has come under increased public scrutiny and debate, as parents expectations rise and employers voice their concern regarding the systems ability to adequately prepare young Malaysians for the challenges of the 21st century. Given the nature of the education system, it will take several years for fundamental changes to be felt. This makes the need for ambitious actions now both important and urgent.
E-2
1.
Understanding the current performance and challenges of the Malaysian education system, with a focus on improving access to education, raising standards (quality), closing achievement gaps (equity), promoting unity amongst students, and maximising system efficiency; Establishing a clear vision and aspirations for individual students and the education system as a whole over the next 13 years; and
The approach to this Blueprint was ground-breaking in many ways. Multiple perspectives were gathered from various experts and international agencies to evaluate and assess the performance of Malaysias education system. This includes the World Bank, the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO), the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), and six local universities. The Ministry also worked with other government agencies to ensure alignment with other public policies related to education. For example, the Ministry has worked closely with the Performance Management and Delivery Unity (PEMANDU) to develop the Government Transformation Programme (GTP) 2.0 initiatives on education so they reflect the priority reforms in the Blueprint from 2013 to 2015.
2. 3.
Furthermore, the Ministry engaged with the rakyat on a scale never seen before. Over the course of a year, over 50,000 Ministry officials, teachers, principals, parents, students, and members of the public across Malaysia, were engaged via interviews, focus groups, surveys, National Dialogue townhalls, and roundtable discussions. The Ministry Outlining a comprehensive transformation programme also appointed a 12-member Malaysian panel of experts, and a for the system, including key changes to the Ministry 4-member international panel of experts to provide independent input which will allow it to meet new demands and rising into the review findings. expectations, and to ignite and support overall civil service transformation.
E-3
EXHIBIT 1
Basic education expenditure1 as a percentage of total government expenditure for Malaysia and peers2 Percent (2008)
EXHIBIT 2
Highest educational attainment of population aged 15 and above (1950-2010) Percent of population
18 16 14 12 12
Tertiary
Secondary
Primary
No Schooling
6
11 11 9 7
OECD average 8.7%
2 10
2 13
19
10
13
24
15
33
31 39 39 51 56 59 61
35
38
41
43
41
38 33 39 26 22
12 2000
Thailand3 Malaysia3
Mexico
Chile
Hong Kong3
Korea
Singapore3 Indonesia3
Japan
60
56
50
44
37
32
28 1980
18
10 2005
1 Includes operating expenditure and capital/development expenditure for basic education (primary and secondary) 2 Peers based on the following categorisation: Asian Tigers (Hong Kong, Singapore, S. Korea, Japan); SEA neighbours (Indonesia, Thailand Singapore), and comparable GDP per capita (Mexico and Chile) 3 Data for 2010 Note: Data from 2008 or 2010 depending on latest available data SOURCE: Ministry of Education Malaysia; OECD Education at a Glance 2011; Singstat; Ministry of Finance Thailand; Ministry of Finance Indonesia; Education Bureau of Hong Kong.
21 1985
15
9 2010
15 1990
13 1995
1950
1955
1960
1965
1970
1975
E-4
Education in Malaysia is an ongoing effort towards further developing the potential of individuals in a holistic and integrated manner, so as to produce individuals who are intellectually, spiritually, emotionally, and physically balanced and harmonious, based on a firm belief in and devotion to God. Such an effort is designed to produce Malaysian citizens who are knowledgeable and competent, who possess high moral standards, and who are responsible and capable of achieving high levels of personal well-being as well as being able to contribute to the harmony and betterment of the family, the society, and the nation at large.
E-5
EXHIBIT 3
1 Reading Rank 1 2 3 4 5 18 19 42 43 53 Country Shanghai-China Korea Finland Hong Kong Singapore United Kingdom OECD Average Germany Mean score 556 539 536 533 526 494 497 459 449 421
2 Mathematics Rank 1 2 3 4 5 20 21 41 42 52 Country Shanghai-China Singapore Hong Kong Korea Taiwan Austria OECD Average Slovak Republic Croatia International Average Israel Mean score 600 562 555 546 543 496 497 460 447 419
3 Science Rank 1 2 3 4 5 20 21 40 41 51 Country Shanghai-China Finland Hong Kong Singapore Japan Ireland OECD Average Czech Republic Mean score 575 554 549 542 539 508 500 470 461 425
Thailand
55
62
MALAYSIA
Indonesia
414
402
57
68
MALAYSIA
Indonesia
404
371
52
66
MALAYSIA
Indonesia
422
383
Note: Countries are ranked in descending order of the percentage of top performers (Level 5 or 6) SOURCE: PISA 2009+
E-6
The system also has examples of schools, districts, and states that are improving at an unprecedented pace. For example, five years ago, Johor was one of the bottom five states in its performance on the Year 6 Primary School Education Test or Ujian Penilaian Sekolah Rendah (UPSR) national examination. The state launched a comprehensive school improvement programme and was able to turn its performance around in just five years. Johor is now in the top third of all states in terms of student performance. Similarly, there are remote schools, like SK Ulu Lubai in Sarawak and SK Bakalalan in Sabah, both of which support low-income communities, that have swept Commonwealth Good Practice Awards for their impressive turnaround efforts. This suggests that there are opportunities to learn from these examples, and scale up good practices to the rest of the system.
EXHIBIT 4
4th ASEAN School Games, Indonesia May 2012 Oct 2011 Jul 2011 English Speaking Union International Public Speaking Competition, London ASEAN Primary School Sports Olympiad, Indonesia 52nd International Mathematical Olympiad, Netherlands 42nd International Physics Olympiad, Thailand Dec 2010 Nov 2009 International Competitions and Assessments for Schools (ICAS)1 World Robot Olympiad (WRO), South Korea
Team of 36 clinched second place overall, winning a total of 6 gold, 2 silver, and 3 bronze medals. Stellar performance by a Form 4 student who clinched the first gold medal for Malaysia. Another four students attained commendable results. A Malaysian student attained a gold medal and special prize awarded by the European Physics Society. 68 Malaysian students achieved a total of 94 gold medals and were commended as being of world-class standard. Malaysia was the overall champion, a second win in two consecutive years.
1 Australian-based independent diagnostic assessments conducted annually SOURCE: Educational Policy, Planning and Research Division, Sports Division
E-7
Finally, the largest equity gaps remain socio-economic in origin. This has been observed using three proxies: parents highest level of educational attainment, states average household income, and the percentage of students receiving basic financial assistance under the Poor Students Trust Fund, or Kumpulan Wang Amanah Pelajar Miskin (KWAPM). For all three proxies, the evidence consistently demonstrates that students from poor families are less likely to perform as well as students from middle-income or high-income homes. As Exhibit 5 illustrates, only 7% of Band 1 and 2 schools have student populations where more than a third receive KWAPM, as compared to 69% of under-performing Band 6 and 7 schools.
100% = 2,296
3,858
42
31
56 75 17
Schools with <1/3 students receiving KWAPM Schools with 1/3-2/3 students receiving KWAPM Schools with >2/3 students receiving KWAPM
25 18
52
7
Good schools, Band 1&2
19
Average schools, Band 3,4,5 Poor schools, Band 6&7
1 Only primary schools were included, with the exception of 1,060 schools in Sabah and 418 schools in other states due to incomplete data SOURCE: Finance Division; National Key Result Area; EMIS database
E-8
Great, and Excellent) represents the equivalent of one year of schooling. Data as of 2010 indicates that Malaysias performance lags behind other countries that have similar or lower levels of expenditure per student, such as Thailand, Chile, and Armenia. This suggests that the system may not be allocating funds towards the factors that have the highest impact on student outcomes, such as the training and continuous upskilling of teachers. High-performing systems like Singapore, South Korea, and Shanghai, however, do spend more per student than Malaysia. The education system is also about to embark on a major transformation effort. Consequently, Malaysias expenditure levels should be maintained but the efficiency and effectiveness of how funds are allocated and spent should be reviewed.
EXHIBIT 6
country performance in international assessments relative to public per student spend per student
Universal scale score1 2009 (max, median, min)
580 560 540 520 500 480 460 440 420 400 380 360 340 320 0 01,000 1,000 2,000 2,000 3,000 3000 4,000 4,000 5,000 5,000 6,000 6,000 7,000 7,000 8,000 8,000 9,000 9,000 10,000 10,000+
Kyrgyzstan Slovak Republic Chinese Taipei Shanghai
578
Singapore Korea, Rep. Australia Estonia Czech Republic
544
Hong Kong
547 531
Japan Germany France Spain Ontario Canada Slovenia Italy
489
Armenia
478
Turkey Thailand Mauritius Moldova Kazakhstan Colombia Tunisia Panama
Lithuania Russia
486
464
Belg.Flanders Netherlands Switzerland Norway Denmark USA Sweden Austria Belg. CFB Luxembourg
531
Great
Good
483 Fair
Syria Uruguay Algeria Philippines W. Cape El Savador Jordan Azerbaijan Ghana Indonesia Georgia Morocco
455
441
Malta
458
458
422
Kuwait
Botswana
412
397
402 Poor
370
327
E-9
Efficiency: The Malaysian education system has always been well-funded, yet improvements in student outcomes have not always matched the resources channelled into the system. While the Government will maintain current levels of investment, the aspiration is to further maximise student outcomes within the current budget levels. In order to properly address the needs of all Malaysians, and to prepare the nation to perform at an international level, it is important to first envision what a highly-successful education system must accomplish, EXHIBIT 7 particularly in the Malaysian context. What kinds of students are best-prepared to meet the challenges of a 21st century economy? What Five system aspirations for the Malaysian education system kind of education prepares them for this rapidly globalising world? These aspirations comprise two aspects: firstly, those for the education system as a whole, and secondly, those for individual students. This 100% enrolment across all levels vision, and these aspirations, will set the stage for the transformation from pre-school to upper secondary by 2020 of the Malaysian education system.
system aspirations
There are five outcomes that this Blueprint aspires to for the Malaysian education system as a whole: access, quality, equity, unity, and efficiency (Exhibit 7). These outcomes are in line with the aspirations articulated by participants during the National Dialogue, and are comparable to outcomes set by other high-performing education systems. Action across all five areas is important, and no initiative in one area should detract from or undermine progress in another. Access: Every child in Malaysia deserves equal access to an education that will enable that child to achieve his or her potential. The Ministry thus aspires to ensure universal access and full enrolment of all children from preschool through to upper secondary school level (Form 5) by 2020. Quality: All children will have the opportunity to attain an excellent education that is uniquely Malaysian and comparable to the best international systems. The aspiration is for Malaysia to be in the top third of countries in terms of performance in international assessments, as measured by outcomes in TIMSS and PISA, within 15 years. (TIMSS and PISA currently test for literacy, Mathematics, and Science only. Additional assessments that address other dimensions of quality that are relevant to the Malaysian context may be included as they are developed and become accepted international standards). Equity: Top-performing school systems deliver the best possible education for every child, regardless of geography, gender, or socioeconomic background. The Ministry aspires to halve the current urban-rural, socio-economic, and gender achievement gaps by 2020. Unity: As students spend over a quarter of their time in school from the ages of 7 t0 17, schools are in a key position to foster unity. Through interacting with individuals from a range of socioeconomic, religious, and ethnic backgroundsand learning to understand, accept and embrace differencesa shared set of experiences and aspirations for Malaysias future can be built. The Ministry aspires to create a system where students have opportunities to build these shared experiences and aspirations that form the foundation for unity.
Top third of countries in international assessments such as PISA and TIMSS in 15 years 50% reduction in achievement gaps (urban-rural, socioeconomic and gender) by 2020 An education system that gives children shared values and experiences by embracing diversity
Efficiency
student aspirations
Beyond these system-wide outcomes, stakeholders were also very clear on what quality should be at the individual level. In a nutshell, educators, parents, students, and other members of the public were united in a vision of education as a vehicle for the holistic development of childrenintellectually, spiritually, emotionally, and physically. This is the same vision that has underscored all education improvement efforts since the National Education Philosophy for Malaysia was written in 1988. Looking ahead, the Blueprint will continue to use the National Education Philosophys vision of a balanced education as its foundation for individual student aspirations. It has also drawn on learnings from other high-performing systems to develop a refined articulation of the specific skills and attributes that students would need to thrive in tomorrows economy and globalised world (Exhibit 8): Knowledge: At the most basic level, every child will be fully literate and numerate. Beyond this, it is important that students master core subjects such as Mathematics and Science, and are informed with a rounded general knowledge of Malaysia, Asia, and the worldtheir histories, people, and geography. Students will also be encouraged to develop their knowledge and skills in other areas such as the arts, music, and sports.
E-10
Thinking skills: Every child will learn how to continue acquiring knowledge throughout their lives (instilling a love for inquiry and lifelong learning), to be able to connect different pieces of knowledge, and, most importantly in a knowledge-based economy, to create new knowledge. Every child will master a range of important cognitive skills, including problem-solving, reasoning,
conflicts peacefully, to employ sound judgement and principles during critical moments, and to have the courage to do what is right. The education system also seeks to nurture caring individuals who gainfully contribute to the betterment of the community and nation. National identity: An unshakeable sense of national identity, tied to the principles of the Rukunegara, is necessary for Malaysias success and future. Every child will proudly identify as Malaysian, irrespective of ethnicity, religion or socio-economic status. Achieving this patriotism requires that every child understands the countrys history, and share common aspirations for the future. Establishing a true national identity also requires a strong sense of inclusiveness. This can be achieved through not only learning to understand and accept diversity, but to embrace it.
EXHIBIT 8
Six key attributes needed by every student to be globally competitive Every student will have
eadership skills
B ilingual proficiency E
thics and spirituality
National identity
aligned with the National Education Philosophy
creative thinking, and innovation. This is an area where the system has historically fallen short, with students being less able than they should be in applying knowledge and thinking critically outside familiar academic contexts. Leadership skills: In our increasingly inter-connected world, being able to lead and work effectively with others is critical. The education system will help every student reach his or her full potential by creating formal and informal opportunities for students to work in teams, and to take on leadership roles. In the context of the education system, leadership encompasses four dimensions: entrepreneurship, resilience, emotional intelligence, and strong communication skills.
The Ministry has identified 11 shifts that will need to occur to deliver the step change in outcomes envisioned by all Malaysians. Each shift will address at least one of the five system outcomes of access, quality, equity, unity, and efficiency, with quality as the common underlying focus across all shifts due to the fact that this is the dimension which requires the most urgent attention. Some of these shifts represent a change in strategy and direction. Others represent operational changes in the way Bilingual Proficiency: Every child will be, at minimum, operationally proficient in Bahasa Malaysia as the national language the Ministry and schools have historically implemented existing policies. Regardless of whether it is a strategic or operational shift, they all and language of unity, and in English as the international language of communication. This means that upon leaving school, the student represent a move away from current practices. should be able to work in both a Bahasa Malaysia and English language environment. The Ministry will also encourage all students Collectively, these shifts address every stakeholder and the main concerns of the public. The Ministry hopes that this inclusiveness to learn an additional language. will provide the basis for a common focus that can be embraced by all Malaysians. The following section summarises each of these shifts and Ethics and Spirituality: The education system will inculcate provides examples of game-changing initiatives that will be launched. strong ethics and spirituality in every child to prepare them to rise to the challenges they will inevitably face in adult life, to resolve
E-11
or themes, and formative assessments. The new curriculum will also support an accelerated learning pathway for high-performing students to complete SPM in four rather than five years, and UPSR in five rather than six years. Additionally, clear learning standards will be laid out so that students and parents understand the progress expected within each year of schooling. Revamp national examinations and school-based assessments to gradually increase percentage of questions that test higher-order thinking. By 2016, higher-order thinking questions will make up 80% of questions for UPSR, 80% of the Form 3 central assessment, 75% of the questions for SPM core subjects and 50% of the questions for SPM elective subjects. This change in examination design means that teachers will focus less on predicting what topics and questions will come out and drilling for content recall. Instead, students will be trained to think critically and to apply their knowledge in different settings. Similarly, school-based assessments will also shift their focus to testing for higher-order thinking skills. Raise quality of all preschools and encourage universal enrolment by 2020. Every child aged 5+ will be enrolled in a registered preschool, be it public or private. Low-income families that would otherwise not be able to afford preschool will receive need-based financial support from the Ministry. All preschools will follow a set of national quality standards, including a provision that every preschool teacher has a minimum diploma qualification. These schools will also be inspected regularly by the Ministry or the Early Childhood Care and Education Council of Malaysia to ensure that they meet minimum standards. Move from 6 to 11 years of compulsory schooling, starting at age 6+, supported by targeted retention programmes and job-ready vocational training. By 2020, every student will leave formal schooling with a minimum SPM or equivalent vocational qualification. This means that compulsory schooling will increase from 6 to 11 years, and that approximately 5%, 10%, and 20% more students will be enrolled at the primary, lower, and upper secondary levels respectively (based on 2011 enrolment numbers for public and private schools). Students who are at risk of dropping out will be supported through a variety of retention initiatives, from remedial coaching to parent and student counselling. Students will also be able to choose from a variety of education pathways based on their specific interests and potential. This includes expanded vocational streams that offer industry-recognised qualifications and hands-on practicum opportunities, through close partnerships with the private sector. Increase investment in physical and teaching resources for students with specific needs. Students from indigenous and other minority groups, as well as students with physical or learning disabilities, will receive more support in order to level the playing field. By 2025, these students will all go to schools with the facilities and equipment needed to create a conducive and supportive learning environment. They will be taught by teachers who have received additional training to help them understand their students specific contexts and challenges, and the teaching strategies required to address them. These students will also be supported by an expanded network of counsellors, therapists, and teaching assistants, as required.
E-12
shift 2: ensure every child is proficient in bahasa malaysia and english language
why it is needed: malaysias multicultural society makes it a natural environment for producing students who are proficient in more than one language. the current system produces commendably strong bahasa malaysia learning outcomes. there is widespread operational proficiency in bahasa malaysia among students, with 75% students achieving a minimum credit in the 2010 spm examination. bahasa malaysia also consistently shows the strongest pass rates out of the core subjects in the upsr, lower secondary evaluation or Penilaian Menengah Rendah (pmr), and spm examinations. Operational proficiency in english is, however, much lower. Only 28% of students achieved a minimum credit in the 2011 spm english paper against cambridge 1119 standards. poor english proficiency among fresh graduates has, since 2006, also been consistently ranked as one of the top five issues facing malaysian employers. as the ethnic groups move through different primary schools, there are differences in outcomes by ethnicity. bumiputera students perform very strongly on bahasa malaysia proficiency with 84% achieving a minimum credit at spm, in contrast to 63% of chinese students, and 57% of indian students. for english, only 23% bumiputera, 42% chinese, and 35% tamil students score at a level equivalent to a cambridge 1119 credit or above (all results based on the 2010 spm examination). what success will look like: boosting all students proficiency in bahasa malaysia and english language will be the most immediate priority. after three years of schooling, every child will achieve 100% basic literacy in bahasa malaysia and english language. by the end of form five, 90% of students will score a minimum of a credit in spm bahasa malaysia, and 70% in spm english (against cambridge 1119 standards). further, the provision of other language subjects at all primary and secondary schools will be strengthened so that every child can have the opportunity to learn an additional language by 2025.
Introduce a standard Bahasa Malaysia curriculum at the primary level, with intensive remedial support for struggling students. Every primary school student, regardless of whether they are in a National or National-type school, will use a standard Bahasa Malaysia curriculum starting from the Year 4 cohort in 2014. At National-type schools, students who are struggling to cope with this change will receive remedial after-school Bahasa Malaysia classes from Years 4 to 6 (after the completion of the Literacy and Numeracy Screening (LINUS) 2.0 programme). The objective is to intervene early and often to allow for the removal of the Remove or Peralihan class from 2017 onwards.
Expand the LINUS programme to include English literacy. Every student in Years 1 to 3 will be screened twice a year to determine if they are progressing in Bahasa Malaysia and English literacy at an expected pace. Students who fall behind will be given remedial coaching until they are able to return to the mainstream curriculum. Teachers working with such students will also receive dedicated coaching from district level teacher coaches. Upskill English teachers and expand opportunities for greater exposure to the language. Every student will be taught English by a teacher who is proficient according to international standards. This will be achieved by having all 70,000 English teachers pass the Cambridge Placement Test (CPT) within two years. Teachers who have yet to meet this standard will receive intensive upskilling. Beyond that, students will have greater exposure to the language, for example via an expanded, compulsory English Literature module at the secondary level. International research indicates that more exposure time than the current 15-20% is required for students to achieve operational proficiency. Encourage every child to learn an additional language by 2025. Currently, many students already learn additional languages apart from Bahasa Malaysia and English language, which equip them well for entering the workforce in a globalising world. The aspiration is therefore for every child to have the opportunity to learn an additional language from primary through to secondary school. During the early years, the Ministry will focus on building up its cadre of Chinese, Tamil, and Arabic language teachers to ensure that the supply of teachers matches student demand. As the system builds up capacity and capability, the Ministry will also expand the provision of other important languages such as Spanish, French, and Japanese.
E-13
and underlying philosophies of Islam and other main religions in Malaysia. Similarly, for non-Muslim students, Moral Education will include an understanding of the core values of all main religions in Malaysia. The Ministry will also look into having Moral and Islamic Education students share certain classes together when common universal values are taught. Develop students holistically by reinforcing the requirement for every student to participate in 1 Sport, 1 Club, and 1 Uniformed Body. Co-curricular involvement provides students with opportunities to develop their individual talents and interests outside of a formal classroom setting. Such activities also provide excellent leadership opportunities for students. Every child will therefore still be expected to participate in at least 1 sport, 1 club, and 1 uniformed body. The Ministry will also look into making participation a requirement for graduation and scholarships for further education. To improve the quality of activities offered at each school, the Ministry will provide targeted training to teachers who act as advisors for these different activities, and partner with more community organisations and the private sector in the delivery of these programmes.
what success will look like: every student leaves school as a global citizen imbued with core, universal values and a strong malaysian identity. the values they have learnt are applied in their day to day lives, leading to more civic behaviour such as an increase in volunteerism; a willingness to embrace peoples of other nationalities, religions and ethnicities; and a reduction in corruption and crime. every student also leaves school prepared to act as a leader, whether in their own lives and families, or as part Enhance and scale up RIMUP from 2016 to facilitate interaction across school types. The Ministry currently runs of the broader community and nation.
Strengthen Islamic Education, Moral Education and civics elements by 2017. The new KSSM will require that every primary and secondary school student participate in community service. For secondary school students, this community service element will be a pre-requisite for graduation. Islamic Education curriculum for Muslim students will include a greater focus on understanding the core values
a cross-school activity programme, RIMUP, to foster greater interaction across students from different school types. In the future, the frequency and intensity of the programme will be increased and targeted at schools with more homogeneous student populations, such as National-type and religious schools. The Ministry will also expand this programme to include private schools.
E-14
peers including teacher coaches, senior teachers, and principals to disseminate best practices. The training will allow teachers to continuously build their skill levels against each of the competencies expected of a teacher. The Teacher Education Division or Bahagian Pendidikan Guru (BPG) will be responsible for providing this CPD. Focus teachers on their core function of teaching from 2013. Teachers will enjoy a reduced administrative burden, so that they can focus the majority of their time on their core function of teaching. This will be achieved by streamlining and simplifying existing data collection and management processes. Some administrative functions will also be moved to a centralised service centre or to a dedicated administrative teacher at the school level. Implement competency and performance-based career progression by 2016. Teachers will be assessed annually by their principals, with input potentially being provided by peers. This assessment will be done using a new evaluation instrument that focuses on teachers ability to deliver effective instruction in and out of the classroom. This new tool is more reflective of the fact that a teachers primary role is helping students learn. Highperforming teachers will enjoy faster career progression. The very best teachers may even be promoted from DG41 to DG54 in a faster time period than the current average promotion time of 25 years. Teachers who are struggling to meet the minimum quality will receive extra coaching support to help them get back on track. Teachers who consistently underperform even with the extra support will be redeployed to other school-based functions such as administration, discipline management or co-curricular management. Over time, the Ministry will gradually reduce the total cohort size of teachers through improvements in teacher time utilisation and productivity.
Enhance pathways for teachers into leadership, master teaching and subject specialist roles by 2016. Teachers Raise the entry bar for teachers from 2013 to be amongst will also be able to pursue attractive pathways based on their top 30% of graduates: In the future, only the best candidates will be recruited as teachers. This means that the Ministry will rigorously performance, potential and interests. For example, they may wish enforce entry standards to ensure that 100% of every teacher training to pursue a leadership role at the school, district, state, or federal level. They may choose to become subject specialists focused on intake meet the minimum academic requirement. The Ministry developing curriculum, assessment, and training programmes for will also work with the Ministry of Higher Education (MOHE) to the broader system. They may work as master teachers in schools. ensure that the same standards are put in place in the Public Higher Regardless of the pathway chosen, the commitment to investing in Education Institutes or Institut Pengajian Tinggi Awam (IPTAs) their development and in building an environment of professional teacher training programmes. Additionally, the Ministry will work with Teacher Education Institutes or Institut Pendidikan Guru (IPGs) accountability will be maintained across their careers. There will also and MOHE to ensure that the quality of the curriculum and lecturers be comparable opportunities for promotion across these pathways. are upgraded to deliver the kind of teachers desired. The Ministry Develop a peer-led culture of professional excellence will also introduce more stringent graduation requirements so that and certification process by 2025. The Ministry will focus on only the best trainees can graduate and be guaranteed placement in ensuring that all teachers fully utilise the flexibilities accorded to Malaysian schools. them over professional issues related to curriculum timetabling and lesson organisation, pedagogical approaches and school-based Upgrade the quality of continuous professional assessment. The Ministry will also facilitate teacher-driven CPD development (CPD) from 2013. Teachers will receive greater support to help them achieve their full potential. When they enter the activities to enable teachers to mentor one another, develop and disseminate best practices and hold each other accountable for profession, teachers will develop an individualised CPD programme meeting professional standards. As an extension of the competencywith their supervisors. This CPD programme will include common based progression system, the Ministry may also consider setting training requirements expected of all teachers, as well as electives up a certification scheme linked to the mastery of the teacher that teachers can pursue based on their own developmental needs. competencies described above. As with all measures, the Ministry will It will mostly be run at school, as school-based training has proven work collaboratively with teacher representatives to achieve these to be the most effective form of CPD. It will use a network of aims.
E-15
SHIFTS
Benchmark the learning of languages, Mathematics and Science to international standards Launch new Secondary (KSSM) and revised Primary Curriculum (KSSR) in 2017 Revamp examinations and assessments to increase focus on testing higher-order thinking skills by 2016 Raise quality of preschools and push to 100% enrolment by 2020 Move from 6 to 11 years of compulsory schooling, starting at age 6+; supported by retention initiatives and job-ready vocational training Increase investment in physical and teaching resources for students with specific needs
Introduce a common Bahasa Malaysia curriculum at the primary level, with earlier intensive remedial support for students that struggle to allow for removal of peralihan class Expand the LINUS programme to include English language literacy Upskill English language teachers and expand opportunities for greater exposure to English language Encourage every child to learn an additional language by 2025
Strengthen civics elements by making community service a pre-requisite to graduation by 2017 Enhance Islamic and Moral Education with greater focus on core values and underlying philosophies of major religions by 2017 Develop students holistically by reinforcing requirement to participate in 1 Sport, 1 Club and 1 Uniformed Body Enhance and expand RIMUP from 2016 to facilitate interaction across school types, ethnicities and socioeconomic groups
Raise entry bar for teachers from 2013 to be amongst top 30% of graduates Upgrade the quality and personalisation of CPD from 2013 with greater emphasis on schoolbased training Focus teachers on their core function of teaching from 2013 by reducing administration burdens Implement competency and performance-based career progression by 2016 Enhance pathways for teachers into leadership, master teaching and subject specialist roles by 2016 Peer-led culture of excellence and certification process by 2025
Competency-based selection criteria and enhanced succession planning processes for principals from 2013 New Principal Career Package rolled-out in waves from 2013, with greater support (for example via coaches, on-boarding programmes), greater operational flexibility for school improvement, curriculum and cocurricular planning, and sharper accountability for improving student outcomes
SHIFT
E-16
Accelerate school improvement through systematic, districtled programmes in all states by 2014 Allow greater schoolbased management and autonomy, including greater operational flexibility over budget allocation and curriculum implementation, starting with the best performing and most improved schools Ensure 100% of schools meet basic infrastructure requirements by 2015, starting with Sabah and Sarawak
Provide internet access and virtual learning environment via 1BestariNet for all 10,000 schools by 2013 Augment online best practices content starting with a video library of best teachers delivering lessons in critical subjects in 2013 Maximise use of ICT for distance and selfpaced learning to expand capacity and allow for more customised learning
Empower JPNs and PPDs through greater decision making power over budget and personnel while also holding them accountable for common KPIs from 2013 Deploy almost 2,500 more personnel from Head Office and JPNs to PPDs to better support schools by 2014 Strengthen leadership capabilities in pivotal 150-200 leadership roles from 2013 Strengthen key central functions and rationalise structure of Ministry from 2016
Equip every parent to support their child's learning via a parent engagement toolkit and online access to their child's in-school progress (SAPS system) Invite every PIBG to provide input on contextualisation of curriculum and teacher quality from 2016 Expand Trust School model to 500 schools by 2025 by including alumni groups and NGOs as potential sponsors
Link every programme to clear student outcomes and annually rationalise programmes that have low impact; align to governments overall shift towards outcome-based budgeting Capture efficiency opportunities, with funding reallocated to the most critical areas such as teacher training and upskilling
Publish an annual public report on progress against Blueprint targets and initiatives, starting for the year 2013 Conduct comprehensive stocktakes in 2015, 2020 and 2025 to ensure Blueprint remains relevant by incorporating stakeholder feedback and accounting for an ever evolving external environment
9 10 11
E-17
that can be called upon as soon as an opening is available. Once these mechanisms have been set up, the Ministry will expand their planning focus to include assistant principals, as well as subject and department heads. Roll out a New Principal Career Package in waves from 2013 with greater support and sharper accountability for improving student outcomes. As with teachers, principals will receive greater support to help them achieve their full potential and will therefore be held more accountable for the delivery of higher student outcomes. Soon-to-be appointed principals will benefit from a new on-boarding programme where they spend one month under the mentorship of the principal who will be leaving. They will also enjoy a set period of coaching and mentoring from an experienced principal or district School Improvement Partner (SiPartner+) once they have formally started their new role as principal. These individualised opportunities for CPD will not stop in their first year, but remain a resource that principals can draw on for constant professional renewal. IAB will also ensure that comparable CPD opportunities are available to assistant principals, subject heads, and department heads. Principals will have the flexibility to serve at a primary or secondary school through a new, common civil service track. They will be assessed annually on a new evaluation instrument that focuses on their leadership abilities and improvement of student outcomes. As with teachers, highperforming principals will enjoy faster career progression opportunities. Incentives will also be revised to encourage high-performing principals to take up positions in rural and/or underperforming schools. Principals who struggle to meet the minimum standard will receive extra coaching support and principals who consistently underperform despite this concerted support will be redeployed back to a teaching position in another school. All school leaders (principals, assistant principals, department heads and subject heads) will be prepared to fully utilise the decision-making flexibilities accorded to them. This includes instructional leadership matters such as school improvement planning and curriculum and cocurricular planning, as well as administrative leadership matters such as allocation of school funds. As with teachers, the aspiration is to create a peer-led culture of professional excellence wherein school leaders mentor and train one another, develop and disseminate best practices and hold their peers accountable for meeting professional standards.
E-18
shift 6: empower jpns, ppds, and schools to customise solutions based on need
why it is needed: both national and international data suggest that malaysian schools are spread across a wide performance spectrum. for example, in the 2009+ pisa, 7% of participating schools were graded as good, 13% as fair, and 80% as poor. historically, many programmes have been designed according to a one-size-fits-all model. international evidence suggests that different sets of interventions are required in order to best serve schools at different performance levels. what success will look like: every school, regardless of location, size, or type, will provide its students with a good, holistic education. this not only means that there will be no underperforming (bands 6 or 7) schools in the country by 2020, but also that more schools will be recognised as high performing or cluster schools based on their performance. the amount of financial and operational support provided to each school will depend on its specific needs. state, district and school leaders will also have greater decision making power over day-to-day operations to tailor interventions based on the schools context and enable greater schoolbased management.
Accelerate school improvement through systematic, districtled programmes rolled-out across all states by 2014. Building off the success of the GTP 1.0 School Improvement Programme, every District Education Office or Pejabat Pelajaran Daerah (PPD) will be empowered to tailor the support provided to schools on dimensions from student attendance through to principal and teacher deployment. Resources can then be directed to where they are most needed. This includes employing full-time teacher and principal coaches to support principals and teachers in lower-performing schools (Bands 5, 6, and 7). At the same time, the Ministry will ensure that all schools and districts remain aligned to the Ministrys strategic priorities through
the roll out of a common set of Key Performance Indications (KPIs). This programme will be piloted in Kedah and Sabah from January 2013, with implementation in all districts by January 2014. Allow greater school-based management and autonomy for schools that meet a minimum performance criteria. In the future, all schools will be responsible for operational decision making in terms of budget allocation and curriculum implementation. For example, principals will have full authority over how they spend the student per capita grant and on how they design the school timetable. However, this process will occur in waves, starting with High Performing and Cluster Schools (in recognition of their academic and non-academic achievements), and Trust Schools (in recognition of their innovative public-private partnership delivery model). Over time, more and more schools will be granted these decision rights based on their performance. This increased emphasis on school-based management will also be accompanied by sharper accountability on the part of school principals. Ensure 100% of schools meet basic infrastructure requirements by 2015, starting with Sabah and Sarawak. Every school in Malaysia, regardless of location, size, or type, will meet a set of minimum infrastructure requirements to create a safe, hygienic, and conducive environment for learning. This includes access to clean, treated water; at least 12-hours of electricity per day, along with sufficient toilets, classrooms, tables, and chairs for the student and teacher population. This process will start with the upgrading of all schools to fulfil basic infrastructure standards by 2015, starting with the two statesSabah and Sarawakthat currently face the greatest infrastructure challenges. Once all schools have met basic infrastructure standards, the Ministry will proceed to invest in another wave of upgrades to meet baseline requirements for delivering the curriculum effectively such as Science laboratories and Living Skills workshops.
E-19
Augment online content to share best practices starting with a video library in 2013 of Guru Cemerlang delivering lessons in Science, Mathematics, Bahasa Malaysia, and English language. Teachers will be able to access even more exemplary teaching resources online. This will begin with a video library in 2013 of the top Guru Cemerlang delivering daily lessons in important subjects of Science, Mathematics, Bahasa Malaysia, and English language. Other subjects will be added to the video library over time. This resource can be used by teachers for inspiration, or even by students as a revision tool. Maximise use of ICT for distance and self-paced learning to expand access to high-quality teaching regardless of location or student skill level. In the future, students will enjoy greater personalisation of their educational experience. They will be able to pursue subjects that are not offered at their own school and learn directly under the best teachers in the country through distance learning programmes. They will also be able to learn at their own pace, with teachers acting as facilitators rather than direct content providers. Pilot programmes for these innovations will be rolled out from 2016, with successful programmes scaled up nationwide.
E-20
Empower JPNs and PPDs through greater decision-making power over budget and personnel from 2013, and greater accountability for improving student outcomes. The Ministry will streamline roles and responsibilities across federal, state, and district levels and move towards a more decentralised system of operations. JPNs and PPDs will increasingly be able to make key operational decisions in budgeting, such as maintenance allocations for schools, and in personnel, such as the appointment of principals. Due to this increased operational flexibility, JPNs and PPDs will be held accountable against a common set of KPIs that align with the system targets of access, quality, equity, unity, and efficiency. To support district and state officers in delivering on these new responsibilities, the Ministry will invest more in their continuous professional development. Deploy almost 2,500 more personnel from the Ministry and JPNs to PPDs in order to better support schools by 2014. Schools will receive more hands-on support through the deployment of almost 2,500 teacher and principal coaches across all PPDs in Malaysia. Regardless of function, all PPD officers will also be expected to shift their focus from work at the PPD to hands-on engagement with schools. This is to ensure that they fully understand the contexts in which each school operates. The goal is for PPDs to function as the first line of support for schools and their single point of contact with the rest of the Ministry. Strengthen leadership capabilities in 150-200 pivotal leadership positions from 2013. The Ministry has identified 150-200 pivotal leadership positions at the federal, state, and district levels that particularly impact the activities of the 10,000 schools in the system. These positions include the heads of 138 PPDs and 16 JPNs and several key central functions such as teacher education. The Ministry has started reviewing competency profiles and developing succession plans to ensure that these roles are staffed with highlyskilled individuals capable of transforming the departments and schools under them. As with teachers and principals, the intent is to promote officers to these critical roles based on their performance and competency, and not by tenure. Strengthen key central functions and rationalise structure from 2016. The Ministry recognises that some functions will be particularly critical to the rollout of the Blueprint. These include policy research and planning, teacher education, curriculum development, school inspections, and examination and assessment. The Ministry will review each of the relevant divisions responsible for these functions to determine what steps are required to strengthen their capabilities. This could include setting up the divisions as centres of excellence to increase their independence, and/or targeted hiring of external specialists. Following the refinement of federal, state, and district roles, the Ministry will also rationalise and realign the entire organisational structure of the Ministry to reflect the changes in responsibilities and functions.
E-21
on how the school can make the national curriculum more relevant to the needs of the local community, and to provide feedback on the quality of teaching and learning experienced by their children. PIBGs and school leaders will then work together to define solutions for the identified issues. In some cases, this may mean securing parental support to take on roles as supplementary coaches and teachers for school activities. Expand Trust School model to 500 schools by 2025 by including alumni groups and non-governmental organisations, (NGOs) as potential sponsors. A greater diversity of private and social sector entities will have the opportunity to get involved in the school improvement process. This will be done through the expansion of the Trust Schools programme which enables a private sponsor to partner with school leadership to manage a school. Initial results from a pilot started in 2010 have been promising, and the Ministry intends to not only expand the number of schools, but also the type of schools that are involved. The Ministry sees particular promise in expanding the programme to include schools that cater to more disadvantaged communities such as indigenous and minority groups, students with special needs, and rural schools.
E-22
E-23
Students
Students will make significant gains in their development irrespective of their background. Students will study in conducive learning environments, and will feel stretched and nurtured by their school experience. When they leave school, students will have worldclass knowledge and skills, strong moral values, and will be capable of competing with their peers in other countries.
Students will learn in an environment where the fundamental belief is that all students can learn and all students can succeed. Teachers will have high expectations of students regardless of their background or prior achievement, and will provide them with the necessary support to meet those expectations; Students will have a richer school experience, both academic and nonacademic, so that they can excel in life. There will be more project and group-based work to develop students higher-order thinking skills and ability to work both independently and collaboratively in groups. There will be more community-based projects and cross-school activities to foster interaction with individuals from all walks of life. There will be more opportunities for students to learn at their own pace and to pursue their interests in academic, vocational or technical streams; and Students will have greater say in shaping their learning experience. Teachers will work with them and their parents to set their own learning targets. Teachers will also encourage them to be advocates for themselves so that teachers understand what learning styles work best for each of them. In return, students will be asked to try their best at all times and to work collaboratively with their teachers to reduce disruptive classroom behaviour. All students will have the collective responsibility to help make their school safe and conducive to learning.
Teachers
Teachers will develop the world-class capabilities needed to facilitate desired student outcomes and gain more enjoyment and fulfillment from their jobs. With the new teacher career package, they will enjoy more fulfilling professional development, improved career pathways, and fair and transparent evaluation processes that are directly linked to relevant competencies and performance.
For the transformation of the Malaysian education system to be effective and sustainable, each participant must understand the critical role they each play and the benefits that they will enjoy. It is envisaged that the programme defined in this Blueprint will lead to a collective set of desirable benefits, rights, and responsibilities for each group.
Teachers will have the support they need to succeed. They will have access to more school-based professional development opportunities. They will participate in constructive feedback discussions and dialogue that focus not on blame and punishment, but on learning and development so that areas for improvement can become areas of strength; Teachers will enjoy better working conditions, performance-based rewards and enhanced pathways. They will work in schools with adequate facilities and appropriate working conditions. They will have a reduced administrative burden so that they can focus their energy on their core activities of teaching and learning. They will enjoy exciting performance-based rewards including faster career progression and can develop their interests along distinct pathways: teaching, leadership, and subject specialism; and Teachers will be immersed in a culture of collaboration and professional excellence. They will collaborate with one another to tackle issues and share best practices. They will have greater pedagogical flexibility in the classroom in their quest to ensure that every student learns. In return, teachers will be asked to stay open to learning and to new ways of working, to involve parents and students in the learning process, and to model the mindsets, values and behaviours expected of students.
E-24
School leaders
School leaders will become excellent instructional leaders, and act as agents for change. They will enjoy closer support and enhanced services from federal, state, and district education officers. They will gain access to world-class leadership training, as well as best practices from their peers in Malaysia.
School leaders will have the support and resources they need to guide their schools effectively. They will receive better preparatory, induction, and ongoing training to help them develop their leadership skills. They will see improved responsiveness from PPDs on issues they face, from deployment of principal coaches to the provision of additional resources if the school is in greater need; School leaders will enjoy better working conditions and performance-based rewards. Principals, assistant principals as well as subject and department heads will work in schools with adequate facilities and have a reduced administrative burden so that they can focus their energy on instructional leadership. They will enjoy exciting performance-based rewards including faster career progression and extra credit for successful deployment in under-performing rural schools; and School leaders will be empowered through greater school-based management. They will have operational flexibility commensurate with their schools performance on matters such as curriculum timetabling and budget allocation. They will enter into a professional partnership with their PPDs, with input into their schools annual performance targets, and will enjoy greater transparency with regard to decisions affecting their school. In return, school leaders will be asked to perform to the high expectations set and agreed to for their school. They will need to stay open to new ways of working, to involve the community in school improvement, and to serve as coaches and trainers to build capabilities in their staff as well as for other schools.
Ministry officials
Ministry officials will develop as change leaders, with the skills and attributes needed to support schools. They will become better managers, coaches, and supporters of school excellence. They will benefit from greater meritocracy, greater empowerment with accountability, and will move away from hierarchy and control.
Ministry officials will receive targeted support, training, and resources needed to fulfill their new roles and responsibilities. They will have new roles focused on supporting schools, and have access to more professional development opportunities. They will participate in constructive feedback discussions that focus not on blame and punishment, but on learning and development; Ministry officials will work in a collaborative and transparent environment. Silos between divisions will be broken down, and roles and responsibilities will be streamlined to eliminate duplication of functions and activities. Information will be shared efficiently to allow for evidencebased decisions. There will be greater clarity about how decisions are made; and Ministry officials will receive greater operational flexibility and accountability. The system will move towards decentralisation with more decision rights being awarded to state and district offices. Officials will have more say in identifying areas of improvement for their states, districts, and schools, and in tailoring solutions to specific contexts. In return, Ministry officials will be asked to stay open to feedback from schools and from the community. They will champion the changes the system is about to undergo. They will need to be highly responsive in providing schools with the support and resources they need, as well as to keep all internal and external stakeholders wellinformed.
Parents
Parents will see tangible and sustained improvements in the educational experiences of their children. There will be increased transparency around a schools performance and priorities, and parents will be constantly kept in the loop as to how their child is doing at school, both in terms of achievements and areas for development. Parents will feel like true partners with schools in facilitating their childs learning.
Parents will have a better understanding of how their children are developing, and how they can help them improve. They will have regular contact with their childrens teachers, not just when there is a problem. They will have full visibility and access to their childrens performance on national examinations and school-based assessments. They will get guidance, from parenting tips to adult education classes, on how to best support their childrens learning and development; and Parents will have more opportunities to provide input into their schools improvement strategies. They have the right to be fully informed about the schools mission, current performance, and annual improvement programme. They will be able to, via their PIBG, provide input on matters such as teacher and curriculum quality. They will feel welcomed and valued for their commitment to their children and to the school. In return, parents will be asked to support their children in meeting their learning potential (for example, ensuring that they complete their homework and attend school on time), and to model commitment, engagement, and openness for their children. Parents will need to communicate input and concerns to schools in a constructive manner and actively participate in activities at school.
E-25
EXHIBIT 9
Key outcomes
Malaysias performance on TIMSS and PISA in top third of systems Maintain or improve enrolment Maintain or improve urban-rural gap, 50% reduction in the socioeconomic and gender gaps
E-26
The Malaysian education system will need to undergo a complete transformation if it is to meet the ambitious aspirations set out in this The envisaged reform is broad and complex. Consequently, many Blueprint. This is a task of great complexity in both breadth and depth, initiatives have been developed as part of the reform. While each particularly given that most education system reforms around the individual initiative is important and meaningful, it is critical to world have fallen short of their aspirations. Of the 55 school systems streamline and sequence them so that the system is not overtaxed that took part in PISA 2000, only 12 have managed to demonstrate and execution fatigue is avoided. improvements in student outcomes over timethe rest either stagnated, or fell behind. This track record is not dissimilar to that of Common to all successful transformations in the private and public corporations undergoing major transformationsonly one third is sectors is the prioritisation of some areas of improvement, sometimes successful. at the expense of others. This prioritisation is driven both by the systems starting point as well as international evidence on the factors The Ministry has carefully reviewed international and national that make the most difference in improving student outcomes. Given evidence to identify what the Ministry would need to do differently the need to build the systems capacity and capability successively, to deliver significant, sustainable, and widespread results. Based on the Ministry has sequenced the transformation to occur in three this research, the Ministry and the Government are committed to the waves (Exhibit 9). following actions: Wave 1 (2013-2015): Turn around system by supporting teachers and focusing on core skills. The Ministrys focus during this phase will be on delivering a rapid turnaround programme. During this period, the focus will be on raising teaching quality by upskilling the existing pool of teachers, raising school leadership quality by improving how the education system appoints and trains principals, and improving student literacy (in both Bahasa Malaysia and English language) and numeracy through intensive remedial programmes. The Ministry will also strengthen and empower state and district offices to improve the quality of frontline support provided to all schools. By the end of Wave 1, the Ministry will ensure that all teachers, principals, and schools have achieved a minimum quality standard. Wave 2 (2016-2020): Accelerate system improvement. During the second wave, the Ministry will roll out structural changes aimed at accelerating the pace of change (Planning for all these initiatives will likely need to begin during Wave 1). These include moving all 410,000 teachers and 10,000 principals onto a new career package, restructuring the federal, state, and district offices to align with the revised roles laid out in Wave 1, and introducing a new secondary and revised primary curriculum that addresses concerns regarding the knowledge, skills, and values needed to thrive in todays global economy. Wave 3 (2021-2025): Move towards excellence with increased operational flexibility. By the start of the third wave, all schools, teachers, and principals should be performing well above the minimum standard. As such, the Ministry will focus on increasing operational flexibility to cultivate a peer-led culture of professional excellence. The Ministry will also move most, if not all schools, onto a school-based management model, and scale up successful models of instructional innovation. The goal is to create a self-sustaining system that is capable of innovating and taking achievements to greater heights. Sustaining leadership commitment and focus at the top: Top Government and Ministry leadership, including the Prime Minister and the Minister of Education, are committed to regularly reviewing progress, providing guidance, and resolving issues with regard to the Blueprint. The Ministry leadership is also committed to identifying, cultivating and developing the leadership capabilities of the next generation of system leaders to ensure continuity and consistency of the transformation efforts. Establishing a small, high-powered delivery unit to drive Blueprint delivery: The Ministry will build on existing delivery capabilities to install an Education Delivery Unit (EDU) tasked with driving Blueprint delivery. Specifically, the EDU will monitor progress, problem solve implementation issues with the responsible officers, and manage communication with stakeholders with regard to the transformation. The EDU will draw from both the public and private sector to secure the best talent available. Intensifying internal and external performance management: Successful school reforms go beyond programme design to dramatically improve the effectiveness and efficiency of the Ministry of Education itself. As such, the Ministry will establish a performance management system that sets high expectations of individuals through clear KPIs. This system will invest in capability building to help individuals achieve their targets, reward strong performance, and address poor performance without creating a culture of blame. The Ministry will also publish performance results annually so that the public can track progress on the Blueprint Engaging Ministry officials and other stakeholders: The Blueprint development process was unprecedented in its attempt to engage and secure the input of the rakyat and the systems biggest constituents: parents, students, teachers, principals and Ministry officials. As the Blueprint initiatives are rolled out, the Ministry will continue to solicit feedback from these parties and will regularly communicate progress to ensure that the entire education system is engaged in the transformation process.
E-27
groups. The Ministry welcomes the rakyats input, and therefore encourages all interested parties to attend these sessions or to submit feedback by letter or online. The Malaysian Review Panel and the International Review Panel will also formally review the Blueprint and submit a final round of feedback. By mid-December 2012, the Ministry will have consolidated all feedback, incorporated it, and submitted the Final Blueprint to the Cabinet. Malaysian education stands at a crossroads, and the Ministry, taking the voices of the rakyat to heart, has chosen the more difficult, but ultimately more rewarding path. However, the Malaysian education system can only fulfil its ambitious aspirations through the continued support and commitment of all stakeholders. This Blueprint is a chance to carve out a brighter, bolder future for all Malaysian childrenan ambitious mandate, but an inspiring one. It is the responsibility of every single Malaysian to work towards making these aspirations a reality, and it is only through all stakeholders working together that all Malaysian children will get the future they truly deserve.
EXHIBIT 10
Early results within the coming 12 months early results within the coming 12 months
All 70,000 English teachers assessed against internationally recognised CPT 5,000 of these teachers upskilled
LINUS 2.0 (including English literacy) rolled out to all primary schools
Dec 2012
461 full-time SISC+ and SiPartners+ introduced in Kedah and Sabah to provide teachers and principals in Band 5, 6 and 7 schools with tailored, on-the-ground training Parent engagement toolkit rolled out to all 10,000 schools to equip parents to better support childrens learning
Dec 2013
All 10,000 national primary and secondary schools to receive 4G coverage through 1BestariNet rollout All 1,608 schools requiring critical repairs fixed
E-28
CHAPTER 1
context and
1-1
1-2
Image by esharkj, Flickr CC 2.0 Report (1979), through to the development of a National Education Philosophy (1988) and revised Education Act (1996). Nonetheless, throughout all these changes, achieving access, quality, and equity in terms of student outcomes, unity amongst all students, and by extension system efficiency and effectiveness to deliver these, have remained constant anchors for the system. Further information on major education reports and policies can be found in Appendix I.
In 1957, Malaysia inherited a fragmented education system; while a select few were educated at elite institutions, over half of the population had never received formal schooling. Unsurprisingly, adult literacy rates hovered at a rather low 52%. The challenge for the young nation was clear: the Government needed to ensure access to education By some measures, Malaysia has clearly succeeded over the past 50 years. The adult literacy rate in 2010 for the population aged 15 for all children. years and above was 92%. There is near-universal primary and lower It was during this period that the Razak Report (1956) and the secondary enrolment, and upper secondary enrolment rates are a Rahman Talib Report (1960) on education were developed in quick respectable 80%. Around two-thirds of students go on to some form of succession. These reports established an ambitious vision for what the post-secondary education or training, from pre-university foundation new nations education system would look like. The principles laid out or matriculation programmes to vocational institutions. formed the basis for Malaysias first Education Act of 1961. The Cabinet The education system has also consistently produced students and Report (1979) (now popularly known as the Cabinet Committee schools that are comparable to the best internationally. This is Report), was another major milestone that emphasised building a evidenced not only by the number of students that have successfully Malaysian society ready for the future. It envisioned a truly holistic view of education, aiming to develop students intellectually, spiritually, gained entry into top-tier universities abroad, but also by the number of awards that Malaysian schools and students have won at the emotionally, and physically. international level. Exhibit 1-1 provides a number of recent success In the more than five decades since independence, the education stories that span both academic and non-academic pursuits. system has passed through many major milestones, from the Most recently, the Ministry, in partnership with other agencies under introduction of new curricula such as the Primary School Integrated the GTP, has made significant progress in expanding preschool Curriculum or Kurikulum Bersepadu Sekolah Rendah (KBSR) and the Secondary School Integrated Curriculum or Kurikulum Bersepadu enrolment from 67% in 2009 to 77% over the short span of two years. Sekolah Menengah (KBSM) that were developed following the Cabinet The percentage of Year 1 students who are literate has risen from 87%
1-3
EXHIBIT 1-1
4th ASEAN School Games, Indonesia May 2012 Oct 2011 Jul 2011 English Speaking Union International Public Speaking Competition, London ASEAN Primary School Sports Olympiad, Indonesia 52nd International Mathematical Olympiad, Netherlands 42nd International Physics Olympiad, Thailand Dec 2010 Nov 2009 International Competitions and Assessments for Schools (ICAS)1 World Robot Olympiad (WRO), South Korea
Team of 36 clinched second place overall, winning a total of 6 gold, 2 silver, and 3 bronze medals. Stellar performance by a Form 4 student who clinched the first gold medal for Malaysia. Another four students attained commendable results. A Malaysian student attained a gold medal and special prize awarded by the European Physics Society. 68 Malaysian students achieved a total of 94 gold medals and were commended as being of world-class standard. Malaysia was the overall champion, a second win in two consecutive years.
1 Australian-based independent diagnostic assessments conducted annually SOURCE: Educational Policy, Planning and Research Division, Sports Division
1-4
in 2010 to 95% by the end of Year 2 in 2011. Further, the percentage of Year 1 students who are numerate also rose from 87% in 2010 to 97% by the end of Year 2 in 2011. These gains offer a clear demonstration that significant and rapid results in education are possible. To achieve the desired outcomes of access, quality, and equity, the Government has consistently directed significant resources towards developing the education system. As early as 1980, Malaysias expenditure on primary and secondary education as a percentage of GDP was the highest in East Asia. In 2011, Malaysias expenditure, at 3.8% of GDP was higher than the OECD average of 3.4%. It is this commitment to investing in excellent education that has laid the foundation for the education systemsand the nationsmany successes. Despite these important achievements and high level of commitment, the changing and increasingly competitive national and international landscape requires a rethink of where Malaysia stands today, and where the nation needs to move forward. Further, there are indicators that the system neecds to be more competitive in todays changing world. Out of 74 countries participating in PISA 2009+, Malaysia performed in the bottom third for Reading, Mathematics, and Science. This was the first time Malaysia took part in the PISA assessment, and the average Malaysian student performance in all three areas was well below both the international and OECD averages. This statistic is worrying because PISA is an assessment of students higher-order thinking skills and ability to solve problems in a real-world setting vital skills in the 21st century. The Government recognises that the Malaysian education system must continue evolving to keep up with the nations increasing aspirations, as well as to keep up with peer countries. Todays globalised world and economy requires its participants to be critical, creative, and innovative thinkers. To keep up with ever-evolving demands, the rest of the world is constantly improving their approaches to education, and Malaysia must as well. During the National Dialogue to engage and consult with the rakyat on the education system, 98% of more than 3,000 people surveyed felt that the time was either right for a review, or that a review was even overdue.
for the system, including key changes to the Ministry which will allow it to meet new demands and rising expectations, and to ignite and support overall civil service transformation.
system compare against other This Blueprint is the outcome of countries? Is what we consider in-depth analyses, interviews, focus groups, surveys and research good actually good enough? conducted with the support of Malaysian and international YAB Tan Sri Muhyiddin Yassin (2011) experts, Ministry officials, teachers, principals, and parents all across Malaysia. In addition, through the National Dialogue conducted between April and July of 2012, almost 12,000 members of the public and different stakeholder groups were engaged for their input and suggestions (Exhibit 1-2). The Blueprint includes action plans and priority interventions for the transformation of the overall education system.
Phase 1 was a comprehensive review and diagnostic of the education system. This phase started with a detailed evaluation of the performance of the Malaysian education system, focusing on student outcomes, assessing the root causes and key drivers for this level of performance, and recognising existing examples of excellence in the education system as models for emulation and replication.
1.
Understanding the current performance and challenges of the Malaysian school system, with a focus on improving access to education, raising standards (quality), closing achievement gaps (equity), and promoting unity amongst students and maximising system efficiency; system and individual students over the next 13 years through to 2025; and
Student Outcomes: In order to establish the current level of performance by the education system, the Blueprint focused on the five dimensions of access, quality, equity, unity, and efficiency, which have been consistent objectives of previous national education policies, starting with the Razak Report (1956), continuing with the Education Acts of 1961 and 1996, to the more recent Education Development Master Plan 2006-2010. These analyses are based on both national data and international benchmarks available on Malaysian student outcomes; Key Drivers: The Blueprint aims to understand the root causes of Malaysian student outcomes, evaluating key drivers and causes of student performance such as teacher quality, school leadership, and parental and community involvement. The Blueprint also covers standards in curriculum and assessment, with a focus on comparing Malaysia against international benchmarks. Finally, the
1-5
EXHIBIT 1-2
12 Malaysian Review Panel members 4 International Review Panel members 6 Public universities 9 Education Labs
FOCUS GROUPS, WORKSHOPS, SURVEYS NATIONAL DIALOGUE TOWNHALLS, ROUNDTABLES, FOCUS GROUPS, SURVEYS
TIMSS
World Bank
PISA
Blueprint evaluates important implementation elements such as the organisation and delivery capacity of the Ministry itself across federal, state, and district levels, as well as how to ensure resources allocated towards developing basic infrastructure in the education system are used efficiently and effectively; and Examples of Excellence: Over the course of developing the Blueprint, numerous instances of schools and districts across the nation that have achieved outstanding results and shown dramatic improvements were identified. These examples show that excellence does exist across the system, and that there are many opportunities
to learn from within. The Blueprint therefore does not just pinpoint issues and gaps, but also seeks to identify, highlight, and understand these good practices and successes that exist within the education system today for replication and emulation. All of these efforts were conducted with a focus on ensuring the rigour and breadth of the Blueprints approach, while validating the results against international standards. The Blueprint incorporated primary analyses on national and international data, as well as more than 150 detailed studies conducted by the Ministry and international educational organisations over the past 10 years.
1-6
Fieldwork at both urban and rural schools was conducted to understand actual issues on the ground. This included island schools in Semporna, Orang Asli schools in Selangor, schools with a majority of students from indigenous and other minority groups in Keningau, fully residential schools in Terengganu, religious pondok schools in Kedah, as well as vocational schools, schools with Special Education Integration Programmes (SEIP), and independent Chinese schools in Johor. These were chosen as a representative mix of student performance levels, student population sizes, sociocultural contexts, and geographical zones; and Face-to-face interviews, focus groups, and workshops were conducted across Malaysia with more than 200 principals, 200 teachers, 300 federal, state, and district officials from the Ministry, and 100 parents in attendance. A nationwide survey of nearly 570 principals, nearly 15,000 teachers, and over 22,000 students was also launched to provide additional quantitative data. This does not include approximately 14,000 interviewees and survey respondents in the fieldwork conducted by the public universities. The findings from these workstreams were then triangulated against several independent sources: Research conducted in 2011 by six public universities on the quality of curriculum and assessment, teaching and learning, teachers and principals, human resource management, governance and management, infrastructure development, policy planning and implementation, and school structure and type; A 2011-2012 review by UNESCO (The Malaysia Education Policy Review) on the quality of curriculum development and implementation (with a focus on Mathematics and Science), student assessment and examination, ICT in education, technical vocational education and training , teacher education, and planning and management; and A 2011 review by the World Bank (The Public Expenditure Review), on public education expenditure, including the effectiveness and efficiency of resource use. Critically, all findings from the different workstreams were reviewed by a Taskforce comprising the Ministrys senior leadership (further information on the Taskforce structure and members can be found in Appendix II). Phase 2 was focused on developing this preliminary Education Blueprint, by building upon the findings from Phase 1 to identify a set of priority areas and detailing a comprehensive transformation programme of policies and initiatives to be undertaken over the next 13 years, between 2013 and 2025. This phase incorporated input generated from the National Dialogue and the GTP2.0 education labs. National Dialogue: In April 2012, the Ministry launched a National Dialogue to gather the rakyats feedback and input on
education. This Dialogue signified a bold move towards engaging existing and future generations of parents, teachers and students. A panel headed by Tan Sri Dato Dr. Wan Mohd. Zahid Mohd. Noordin chaired 16 townhalls (held in Putrajaya, Perak, Kedah, Sabah (2 locations), Sarawak (2 locations), Labuan, Negeri Sembilan, Melaka, Selangor, Penang, Pahang, Kelantan, Terengganu, and Johor) attended by almost 12,000 members of the general public and 20 roundtable sessions with 325 participants. School visits were conducted to solicit feedback directly from primary and secondary school students. Members of the public also had the opportunity to submit ideas and feedback through the MyEduReview online portal, Facebook, and Twitter. Over 150 memoranda were submitted to the Ministry and a total of over 7,000 recommendations were received through these various channels. This unprecedented and intimate level of interaction with all concerned parties was vital in providing the Ministry with multiple, nuanced perspectives from members of many different demographics. Their concerns and many of the good ideas raised during these sessions (please refer to Appendix III for further details) have been reflected in the Blueprint; and GTP2.0 Education Labs: The planning for the next phase of the GTP was deliberately dovetailed with that of the Blueprint to ensure alignment in priorities and actions. To that end, the GTP2.0 initiatives which will run from 2013 to 2015 will form part of the first wave of the Blueprint reform which spans the entirety of the timeframe of 2013-2025. These initiatives will be delivered jointly with PEMANDU. To establish the initiatives, a series of education labs focusing on developing solutions in priority areas such as teachers, principals, school improvement, curriculum and assessment, and infrastructure were held over a period of two months. Approximately 90 members from the Ministry and related ministries (such as the Ministry of Finance, Ministry of Human Resources, Ministry of Higher Education and the Ministry of Women, Family, and Community Development) were involved on a full-time basis. Additionally, ideas were syndicated extensively with practicing teachers, principals, district and state officers, as well as with the teacher unions, principal associations and PIBGs. The Ministry reviewed all of the suggestions from the National Dialogue and Labs carefully, and integrated them into the Blueprint based on four criteria. Firstly, any action undertaken had to contribute to the system and student aspirations described above. This meant that initiatives that delivered one outcome at the expense of another, or that would lead to a different end-state were deprioritised. Secondly, the Ministry drew on international evidence to identify and prioritise the factors that make the most difference in system and student improvement. Thirdly, the proposals had to be relevant to the systems starting point and be within the Ministrys ability to deliver. Initiatives were thus sequenced to evolve in complexity as the capabilities and capacity of the Ministry officers, teachers, and principals were developed. Fourthly, the benefits of implementing the proposal had to outweigh the financial and operational downsides.
1-7
Phase 3 will focus on finalising the Blueprint. This will primarily involve wide-ranging consultation and engagement with teachers, parents, students and other stakeholders to gather feedback on the preliminary Blueprint. This feedback will be incorporated into the final version of the Blueprint. Extensive public consultation: Once this Blueprint is released, the Ministry will embark on a second round of intensive public consultations to gather feedback from different stakeholder groups to incorporate into the final Blueprint. The Ministry will hold several Open Days across Malaysia and repeat the roundtable sessions with selected stakeholder groups; and Submission of the Final Blueprint: By mid-December 2012, the Ministry will have consolidated all feedback, incorporated it, and submitted the Final Blueprint to the Cabinet. Throughout this process, the Ministrys efforts are informed by the independent input and suggestions of a Malaysian and an International Review Panel. Feedback was gathered from these members through a combination of face-to-face interactions (such as full day workshops, one-on-one interviews) and video-conference meetings. A full list of the panel members has been included in Appendix II.
Chapter 4 examines student learning in the Malaysian education Malaysian Review Panel: A total of 12 leading Malaysians system, looking at solutions to effect the changes necessary for the from a cross-section of professional backgrounds and the public stated aspirations to be achieved. Areas of focus are curriculum and and private sectors were assembled, under the leadership of Tan assessment, strengthening of language skills, school improvement Sri Dato Dzulkifli bin Abdul Razak, Vice-Chancellor of Albukhary interventions, special needs education, education for indigenous International University. The panel debated topical issues and other minority groups, and education for gifted students; (including many raised through the National Dialogue), reviewed an early draft of the document, and provided independent suggestions Chapter 5 explores the roles of teachers and school leaders as the on potential policy shifts and ideas for consideration by the frontline of the Malaysian education system, with a focus on how to Ministry. The panel will also review the preliminary Blueprint and improve the quality of and support provided to teachers and school submit a final round of feedback; and leaders; International Review Panel: Similarly, four leading global Chapter 6 looks at how the Ministry itself will develop in order to educationists were assembled as the International Review best implement the policies and initiatives laid out in this Blueprint, Panel. These educationists reviewed the diagnostic findings and including by transforming the Ministrys fundamental approach transformation initiatives, and provided their perspectives based on to human resources and finances to improve delivery capacity and Malaysias starting point and challenges. The panel members will resource productivity; also travel to Malaysia to conduct detailed workshops and site visits in Q4 2012 and will provide feedback before the finalisation of the Chapter 7 examines the structure of the system, and focuses on Blueprint at the end of 2012. the phases of education, creating more varied educational pathways to address a broader spectrum of student interests and abilities, The Blueprint also examined lessons from the most improved school developing preschools, and better engaging with parents, local systems worldwide which have demonstrated significant, widespread, communities and the private sector; and and sustained improvements in student outcomes over time. As part of the process, the Ministry examined international data, analyses, and Chapter 8 outlines the overall transformation programmes, benchmarking approaches from leading international sources such as including the sequencing of initiatives between 2013 and 2025 with PISA and TIMSS to provide a robust methodology for understanding the ultimate objective of improving student outcomes, raising the and comparing Malaysias school system standards and performance professional quality of teachers and school leaders, and revamping with that of other countries. Appendix II provides further details on the structures of the Ministry and the education system. This the methodology behind the development of the Blueprint. chapter also covers the delivery requirements needed to ensure that the Blueprint is a success.
1-8
The Ministry acknowledges how important education is in providing a foundation for nation building and sustainable economic growth in line with Malaysias goal of transforming into a high-income nation. The Ministry also recognises that the education system must undergo more extensive and systematic transformation if Malaysia is to produce individuals that are able to thrive and compete globally. The Blueprint therefore provides not just an examination of the current education system and its successes and shortcomings, but also a comprehensive plan to move forward towards a better, world-class education.
CHAPTER 2
vision and
2-1
SyStem ASpirAtionS
There are five outcomes that the Blueprint aspires to for the Malaysian education system: access, quality, equity, unity, and efficiency (Exhibit 2-1). These aspirations have emerged from the body of historical Education Reports, remaining as relevant today as when they were first conceived in the Malaysian context.
In 1956, the Razak Report envisioned a national education system that guaranteed access to a place in school for all children regardless of ethnicity or socio-economic background, and that provided all children with a learning environment that celebrated unity through an Malaysia is therefore at a critical juncture. The country requires a appreciation of our nations diversity. In 1979, the Cabinet Committee fundamental transformation of its basic education system in order Report reiterated Malaysias goals for its education system, with a to realise its ambitions. This transformation will be grounded by focus on educating students holistically, and preparing a nation for ambitious and clear objectives that reflect the countrys requirements the future to come. Most recently, the Education Development Master for talent, while considering Malaysias unique context and strengths. Plan (2006-2010) aimed to enhance the effectiveness of the system Importantly, these aspirations need to be shared by all stakeholders by improving access, quality, equity, and unity, and to deliver these not just by the Government, the Cabinet, and the Ministry, but also by outcomes as efficiently as possible so as to maximise the returns on parents, the community, employers, and the students themselves. For the resources invested. These five outcomes are also in line with the this Blueprint, the Ministry took innovative steps towards engaging aspirations articulated by participants during the National Dialogue. every corner of Malaysian society via a National Dialogue, showing a renewed commitment towards ensuring that perspectives of the rakyat Action across all five areas is important and no initiative in one area should detract from or undermine progress in another. would be heard. In fact, education-related aspirations was one of the most popular topics discussed during the National Dialogue, covering 15% of all comments. The aspirations for the transformation of the education system comprise two aspects: firstly, those for the education system as a whole, and secondly, those for individual students.
2-2
The purpose of education in Malaysia is to enable Malaysian society to have a command of the knowledge, skills, and values necessary in a world that is highly competitive and globalised, arising from the impact of rapid development in science, technology, and information.
Preamble to the Education Act (1996)
Access to Success
Every child in Malaysia, regardless of wealth, ethnicity or background, deserves equal access to a quality education that will enable the student to achieve his or her potential. Building upon the principle of Education for All, part of the Millennium Development Goals, the Malaysian education system aspires to ensure universal access and full enrolment of all children from preschool through to the upper secondary (Form Five) level, whether through the academic pathway or equivalent vocational and technical pathways. This commitment includes both proactively reaching out to those children currently not attending school, as well as ensuring that these students complete schooling to minimum acceptable standards, namely passing the six core subjects of Bahasa Malaysia, English language, Mathematics, Science, History and Islamic Education or Moral Education at the end of Form 5. Achieving universal enrolment would put Malaysia at par with other developed nations. It will also help increase the percentage of students entering some form of post-secondary education in academic institutions such as universities, colleges, polytechnics, vocational institutions, or in structured skills training programmes.
Education in Malaysia is an on going effort towards further developing the potential of individuals in a holistic and integrated manner, so as to produce individuals who are intellectually, spiritually, emotionally, and physically balanced and harmonious, based on a firm belief in and devotion to God. Such an effort is designed to produce Malaysian citizens who are knowledgeable and competent, who possess high moral standards and who are responsible and capable of achieving high levels of personal well-being as well as being able to contribute to the harmony and betterment of the family, the society, and the nation at large.
2-3
consistently demonstrated that it is possible to make substantial improvements in student outcomes in as little as six years. It is the Ministrys intention for Malaysia to join this select list of high performers. Indeed, if Malaysia is able to move from the bottom third to top third of countries on international assessments in 15 years, Malaysia will be one of the fastest-improving systems in the world.
Internationally, there are no definitive measures of unity. However, to enable better tracking of progress, the Ministry will launch an annual student survey to assess indicators of unity, including degree of general trust among different ethnic groups, extent of racial and religious tolerance, and social interaction between students of different ethnic groups.
2-4
EXHIBIT 2-1
100% enrolment across all levels from preschool to upper secondary by 2020 Top third of countries in international assessments such as PISA and TIMSS in 15 years 50% reduction in achievement gaps (urban-rural, socio-economic, gender) by 2020 An education system that gives children shared values and experiences by embracing diversity
2-5
EXHIBIT 2-2
Time spent by students while awake
Percent of hours, students aged 7-17
and values; and a strong sense of national identity. These elements also highlight the focus on enabling all students to contribute meaningfully to their families, to society, and to the nation.
Knowledge
School
27
73
At the most basic level, every student needs to be fully literate and numerate. This equips them with basic life skills, and enables them to function effectively in society so that they can create value for themselves, their community, and the nation. In addition, it is important that students master core subjects like Bahasa Malaysia, English language, Mathematics, Science, and History. To be well-rounded, students will be encouraged to be informed and knowledgeable in other areas such as the arts, music and sports. Beyond just acquiring this knowledge, it is important that every student has the ability to apply this knowledge in day-to-day situations.
thinking skills
Every student needs to possess a spirit of inquiry and learn how to continue acquiring knowledge throughout their lives, to be able to connect different pieces of knowledge, and, most important of all in a knowledge-based economy, to create new knowledge. Every student needs to master a range of important cognitive skills:
Malaysias consistently high level of expenditure on education relative Creative Thinking and Innovation: the ability to innovate, to to its federal budget is indicative of the Governments commitment to generate new possibilities, and to create new ideas or knowledge; education. These expenditure levels have resulted in almost universal access to primary and lower secondary education and relatively high upper secondary enrolments, but there remains room for improvement Problem-solving and reasoning: the ability to anticipate problems and approach issues critically, logically, inductively, on the other dimensions of quality, equity, and unity. Consequently, and deductively in order to find solutions, and ultimately make returns (in the form of student outcomes) must be maximised for every decisions; and ringgit spent. As the Ministry strives towards delivering the education system aspirations, execution will be done responsibly and will pay Learning Capacity: the ability to independently drive ones own heed to efficient and effective deployment of public resources so as to learning, coupled with the appreciation of the value of lifelong maximise student outcomes within the given budget. The Government learning. is also committed to maintaining the current level of investment in the system of approximately 16% of the annual federal budget. This is an area where the system has historically required more improvement, resulting in students being less able than they should be in applying knowledge and thinking critically outside of familiar academic contexts. Consequently, it is more important than ever for the The Malaysian education system aspires to ensure that every student in education system to help every student to acquire these thinking skills. every school in every state achieves their full potential. Each and every school leader, teacher, parent, and the community has an important Leadership skills role to play in ensuring that the young people in their charge are moving towards these aspirations. Being able to work effectively with and lead others is critical, especially
StUDent ASpirAtionS
The Blueprint will continue to use the National Education Philosophys vision of a balanced education as its foundation for individual student aspirations. This is in line with the feedback from the National Dialogue . It has also drawn on learnings from high-performing systems to develop a refined articulation of the specific attributes and competencies that students will need to succeed and thrive in an increasingly globalised world. Accordingly, the National Education Philosophys vision of a balanced education is reflected in six elements (Exhibit 2-3). The emphasis is not just on the importance of knowledge, but also on developing critical, creative, and innovative thinking skills; leadership skills; proficiency in Bahasa Malaysia and the English language; character
in our increasingly inter-connected world. In the National Dialogue, the importance of instilling leadership and the ability to work effectively in teams for every student was consistently raised. The education system seeks to help every student reach their full potential by taking on leadership roles, and by working in groups. In the context of the education system, leadership comprises four elements: Entrepreneurship: taking the initiative to create and develop ones own solutions, the willingness to invest ones own resources in doing so, and the drive to see these through to their realisation; Resilience: developing a mindset that is both constructive and able to withstand setbacks;
2-6
B ilingual proficiency E
thics and spirituality
National identity
aligned with the National Education Philosophy
2-7
Emotional intelligence: possessing the ability to understand and work effectively with others and to influence them positively; and Strong communication skills: possessing the ability to clearly express ones opinions and intentions in oral and written form. Schools will need to make use of the opportunities provided inside the classroom through project-based and group work, and outside of the classroom though sports, the arts, and co-curricular activities to build the character of their students.
Bilingual proficiency
Every student will be proficient in Bahasa Malaysia as the national language and in English as a second language and the international language of communication Every student will also ideally have the opportunity to learn an additional language. Malaysias unique diversity and multicultural heritage provides a competitive advantage to all. Therefore, over time, all students of all ethnicities and communities will be encouraged to learn at least three languages (Bahasa Malaysia, English language, and another language like Chinese language, Tamil, Arabic, Iban, Kadazan Dusun, etc.), allowing them to collaborate and communicate effectively with fellow Malaysians and Malaysias neighbours in todays rapidly globalising world.
national identity
An unshakeable sense of national identity, tied to the principles of the Rukunegara, is necessary for Malaysias future and to foster unity. Every student will identify themselves proudly as Malaysians, irrespective of ethnicity, beliefs, socio-economic status or geographical location. Achieving this patriotism requires a strong sense of inclusiveness, acquired through learning to understand and tolerate difference, to accept and respect others, as well as to live together and embrace the diversity within the Malaysian community. A common national identity also requires all students to understand Malaysias history, develop shared experiences in and out of school, and build shared aspirations for Malaysias future.
2-8
There are five outcomes that the Blueprint aspires for the Malaysian education system as a whole, access, quality, equity, unity, and efficiency. These outcomes are in line with the aspirations articulated by participants during the National Dialogue, and are comparable to outcomes achieved by high-performing education systems. Beyond these system-wide outcomes, the Blueprint will also continue to use the National Education Philosophys vision of a balanced education as its aspiration for individual students. A solid combination of knowledge, thinking skills, leadership skills, bilingual proficiency, ethics and spirituality, and national identity are critical in preparing students to succeed and thrive in an increasingly globalised world.
CHAPTER 3
current
3-1
3. current performance
The examination of the performance of the Malaysian education system begins with an analysis of how students have fared over time, and in comparison with other countries, along the system outcomes of access, quality, equity, unity, and efficiency. This chapter provides a clear and objective fact base, in order to establish a performance baseline for the Malaysian education system. It paints a picture of a nation with a great diversity of schools at different performance levels, some of which shine brightly as examples of excellence, deserving further study to understand successful practices.
The critical outcomes of access, quality, equity, unity, and efficiency in the Malaysian education system are the main focus areas for this Blueprint. These outcomes have been highlighted as priorities as far back as the Razak Report (1956) and have been consistently reinforced in subsequent reports and strategic plans, through to the most recent Education Development Master Plan (2006-2010). Only by critically examining and establishing where Malaysia currently stands in relation to achieving these five outcomes, can the Ministry and the nation begin to move towards building a more effective education system.
rates at the primary and secondary level have plateaued, remaining lower than that of high-performing education systems. This suggests that more effort needs to be made to enroll the hardest-to-reach population of children.
The education system has made tremendous progress since Malaysias independence in 1957, when very few children had access to education. At that time, more than half of the population had never had any formal schooling, only 6% of the people had received secondary level schooling, and only 1% had attained a post-secondary education. Today, access to education has been transformed beyond recognition. This has been acknowledged by the World Bank (2011) and the United Ensuring that all children in Malaysia have access to Nations Development Programme (UNDP) (2005), which attribute Malaysias success in achieving universal primary education to many the educational opportunities provided in the country factors including the Governments early investment in education has been a key objective of the education system since to ensure all children have access to it, the political will to have the independence. There are two elements in access: the first involves getting students into seats in schools, and the institutional and policy framework in place, and commitment by all second requires students to remain in school long enough stakeholders.
ACCESS TO EDUCATION
to achieve a minimum level of schooling. Malaysias education system should rightly celebrate its exceptional success in raising the levels of access to education in Malaysia. Since independence, the country has achieved near-universal primary and lower secondary enrolment, while participation in preschool and upper-secondary education has also reached relatively high levels. Although the country has come a long way in terms of getting students into schools, challenges remain. Enrolment
Near-universal access has been achieved at the primary and lower secondary levels
Malaysia has achieved near-universal enrolment at the primary level at 96% (all enrolment rates are for public schools and private schools registered with the Ministry). The attrition rate (the percentage of students who drop out of primary school) has been reduced in recent years from 3% in 1989, to around 0.2% in 2011. Enrolment rates at the lower secondary level have reached 91%.
3-2
EXHIBIT 3-1
As of 30 June 2011
RM 37 Bn1
16% of total 2011 federal budget
Preschool
Total enrolment2 Public system Enrolment No. of students No. of schools No. of teachers Student-teacher ratio Average class size
Primary
Secondary
77%
42% 0.43 Mn 15,6274 17,899 24.0 23.6
96%
94% 2.86 Mn 7,714 227,098 13.4 29.4
86%
83%3 2.22 Mn3 2,218 177,382 13.1 29.8
1 Includes operating and development expenditure; excludes the additional RM12 billion allocated to the Ministry of Higher Education and other agencies providing education-related services 2 Includes enrolment into private schools 3 Excludes enrolment in post-secondary education 4 Public preschools refer to preschools operated by the Ministry of Education, KEMAS, and the National Unity Department Note: The rest of this preliminary Blueprint will report approximate numbers for students (5.4 mn), schools (10,000), teachers (410,000), and principals (10,000) Source: Malaysia Educational Statistics (2011)
3-3
EXHIBIT 3-2
2012
1 Upper secondary schools include vocational and technical schools SOURCE: Malaysia Education Statistics (2011); Educational Policy, Planning and Research Division (historical publications)
The greatest improvement has undoubtedly been at the upper secondary level, where enrolment rates have almost doubled in recent decades, rising from 45% in the 1980s to 81% today (Exhibit 3-2). This means that 81% of every cohort now completes at least 11 years of schooling. Automatic progression of students was also instituted with the goal of addressing the inefficiency of repeating class years and to reduce dropout rates.
aged 4+ to 5+ are enrolled in some form of preschool education (either public or private) as of the end of 2011, a dramatic increase from 67% in 2009. Still, the government is pushing towards universal enrolment through the Education NKRA as part of the GTP launched in 2009. The significantly improved access to education for Malaysians is accompanied with a similar improvement in attainment over the past 30 years. Malaysia has delivered highly impressive improvements across many measures. At the most basic level, the youth literacy rate has risen from 88% in 1980 to near-universal literacy today of 99%, while the adult literacy rate has increased even more significantly, rising from less than 70% to over 92% today. The corollary of this is that the proportion of the adult population (aged 15 and above) with no schooling has declined from 60% in 1950 to less than 10% in 2010, while the proportion that has completed at least secondary education has risen from around 7% in 1950 to more than 75% in 2010 (Exhibit 3-3).
During the five-plus decades since independence, there has been a dramatic improvement in access to education.
In parallel, there has been rapid expansion of preschool education. Early childcare and associated development activities have been an explicit part of the governments agenda since 2000 when it signed on as a signatory to the UNESCO World Bank (2011) Education For All declaration. As a result, around 77% of children
3-4
EXHIBIT 3-3
10
2 13
19
10
24
13
15
33
31
35
38
39
39
41
51
43
56
41
59
61
38 33 39 26 13 1995
60
56
50
44
37
32
22 12 2000
28 1980
18 10 2005
21 1985
15 9 2010
15 1990
1950
1955
1960
1965
1970
1975
All of this improvement has been driven by the governments increased commitment to financially supporting the development and growth of all school communities. Since 1981, the Ministry has supported the development of schools around Malaysia at the rate of 1% each year, dramatically increasing student access to education. This means that there were 2,000 more schools in 2010 than there were in 1980. Similarly, the Ministry has put hundreds of millions of ringgit towards programmes specifically designed to help economically disadvantaged students. These programmes include initiatives to provide for students nutritional needs such as the Supplementary Food Programme or Rancangan Makanan Tambahan (RMT), and to reduce the financial burden of schooling on parents, for example through the KWAPM. The Ministry also has programmes for students with special needs and dedicated Orang Asli and Penan primary schools.
While access to basic education is strong, the 2011 UNESCO review on Malaysian education policy highlighted a concern that primary education enrolment has not continued to grow, in contrast with the most developed countries in the region such as South Korea and Japan which have participation rates of close to 100%. The UNESCO review also noted that upper secondary participation rates, while showing a big improvement from several decades past, remain lower than that of developed regional peers like Japan and South Korea, where enrolment consistently exceeds 90%. As the system has capacity to accommodate universal access, more effort needs to be made to enroll the 5-10% hardest-to-reach population of children.
3-5
QUAlITy Of EDUCATION
While national examination results indicate that student performance has been improving steadily, it is also imperative that Malaysia compares its education system against international benchmarks. This is to ensure that Malaysia is keeping pace with international educational development. Malaysias performance in TIMSS indicates that student performance has fallen from 1999 to 2007. The results of the 2009+ PISA also showed that Malaysia ranked in the bottom third of 74 participating countries, below the international and OECD average. The Ministry believes it is important to further evaluate the outcomes of these assessments to understand any shortfalls in standards.
The quality of an education system encompasses multiple dimensions. The assessment of quality in this chapter focuses largely on the intellectual dimension of academic student outcomes, with the benefit of available and measurable data. It is acknowledged that the numbers alone tell only one side of the story. There are other critical aspects vital to the quality of education such as a students spiritual, emotional, and physical development. Nonetheless, children who are unable to master core intellectual skills such as literacy and numeracy, as well as higher-order thinking, will be less likely to succeed in todays rapidly changing economy and globalised society.
Student performance in national examinations has consistently improved each year. However, in this day and age, internal comparisons are no longer enough to ensure competitiveness on the world stage. Over the past two decades, international assessments have emerged as a way of directly comparing the quality of educational outcomes across different countries and across systems. These assessments concentrate on Mathematics, Science, and Reading, and include an examination of the cognitive skills involved in their effective application. While they paint an incomplete picture of schooling outcomes, they offer insight into the real strengths and weaknesses of important areas of education, including the use of essential skills such as analytical reasoning, application, and capacity for continued learning. In this regard, they provide useful perspectives on Malaysias student performance relative to other systems. To gain an understanding of how Malaysias students fare, the results of the countrys participation in two major international assessments were examined: TIMSS and PISA.
EXHIBIT 3-4
Profile of peer countries
Number of schools (unit) Malaysia ASEAN peers Indonesia Thailand Singapore Asian Tigers
South Korea 10,000
Note: Education data for basic through pre-tertiary (2010 or latest year available) SOURCE: Ministry of Education; Department of Statistics; World Bank
3-6
EXHIBIT 3-5
Malaysian national examination results (2000-2011)
UPSR PMR SPM
national examinations
Assessment is an intrinsic part of the teaching and learning process. The Examination Syndicate or Lembaga Peperiksaan (LP) currently conducts three national examinations at the end of primary, lower secondary, and upper secondary education. UPSR: An examination designed as an internal national qualification to mark the completion of primary school. The subjects tested in UPSR include Bahasa Malaysia, English language, Mathematics, and Science for students in SKs. Students at National-type primary schools also sit for Mandarin, Chinese or Tamil language; PMR: Similar to the UPSR, the PMR is an internal national qualification taken by Form 3 students at the end of lower secondary school. Subjects tested include Bahasa Malaysia, English language, Mathematics, Science, Geography, History, Living Skills, Islamic Education, and Moral Education. A number of optional subjects are also available for examination, such as Mandarin, Tamil, and Arabic. The PMR will be replaced with a school-based assessment system in 2014; and SPM: The SPM is the national examination taken by all Form 5 students at the end of secondary school. It is deliberately benchmarked and internationally recognised as equivalent to the O-Levels. The examination involves a combination of compulsory subjects: Bahasa Malaysia, English language, Islamic Education (for Muslim students), Moral Studies (for non-Muslim students), History, Mathematics, and Science. There is also a wide number of elective subjects across the fields of Arts and Health, Information and Communication Technology, Languages and Literature, Technical and Vocational, Science and Mathematics, Social Sciences and Religion. In addition to the examinations set by LP, the Malaysian Examinations Council or Majlis Peperiksaan Malaysia (MPM), also under the Ministry, administers the Malaysian Higher School Certificate or Sijil Tinggi Persekolahan Malaysia (STPM) and Malaysian Religious Higher Certificate or Sijil Tinggi Agama Malaysia (STAM) for post-secondary education.
1 In UPSR, failing grades are D and E. In PMR, the failing grade is E. In SPM, the failing grade is G9. Note: Data for SPM 2003 is not available and is interpolated SOURCE: Examination Syndicate
The national examination results appear to show absolute improvement in grades over time in the core subjects of Bahasa Malaysia, English, Mathematics, and Science, though there are significant differences in performance in each subject (Exhibit 3-6). Students perform better in Bahasa Malaysia than in English language at all levels. For example, 9% of students failed Bahasa Malaysia in SPM 2011, as compared to 23% for English language. At the other end of the spectrum, 30% of students received an excellent grade in Bahasa Malaysia, as compared to 16% in English language. EXHIBIT 3-6
Comparison of performance in core subjects (2011)
Excellent Average Fail
45
24
37
18
26
26
30
18
19
19
30
32
16
64 44
55 50 68 68 62
60
75
74
61
49
61
11 Bahasa Malaysia
12
13 Mathematics
26
6 Bahasa Malaysia
8 Mathematics
21
6 Chemistry2
8 Science
9 Bahasa Malaysia
20 Mathematics
23 English language
English language
1 Weighted average of UPSR results by subject for SK, SJK(C) and SJK(T) 2 Chemistry is generally taken by science stream students while general science is generally taken by arts stream students SOURCE: Examination Syndicate
English language
Science
Science
3-7
16
21 22 27 34 38
MALAYSIA
Indonesia South Africa
519
10
26 27 34
MALAYSIA
508
New Zealand 491 International Average Lithuania Thailand 482 467 403 275
20
29 36
MALAYSIA
Thailand
474
441 397
Indonesia
1 Excluding 4 non-national (i.e. state-level) benchmarking participants and 1 participant that did not satisfy the guidelines 2 Excluding 7 non-national (i.e. state-level) benchmarking participants and 1 participant that did not satisfy the guidelines SOURCE: TIMSS 1999, 2003, and 2007
EXHIBIT 3-8
Malaysias performance in TIMSS 8th Grade Science against other countries over three cycles
1 TIMSS 1999 Rank 1 2 3 4 5 Country Chinese Taipei Singapore Hungary Japan Korea Score 569 568 552 550 549 2 TIMSS 2003 Rank 1 2 3 4 5 Country Singapore Chinese Taipei Korea Hong Kong Estonia Score 578 571 558 556 552 3 TIMSS 2007 Rank 1 2 3 4 5 14 Country Singapore Chinese Taipei Japan Korea England Score 567 561 554 553 542
Regional peers
451
South Africa
264
482
Qatar
307
20
492
497 25 26 36 451
MALAYSIA
510
15
19 23 24
22
Germany
MALAYSIA
21
472 420 244 22 35
MALAYSIA
Thailand
471
471 427
32 38
Indonesia
Indonesia
Indonesia
South Africa
1 Excluding 4 non-national (i.e. state-level) benchmarking participants and 1 participant that did not satisfy the guidelines 2 Excluding 7 non-national (i.e. state-level) benchmarking participants and 1 participant that did not satisfy the guidelines SOURCE: TIMSS 1999, 2003, and 2007
South Africa
482
Ghana
303
3-8
Malaysias performance in the 2003 cycle showed some improvement in achievement. The score for Mathematics fell slightly to 508, although the country remained above the international average and its ranking actually rose to 10th out of 45 countries. Its performance in Science improved by 18 points to 510, well above the international average and ranked 20th out of 45 countries. The 2007 results, however, saw a marked downturn with both Mathematics and Science scores falling below the international average. The Mathematics score fell 34 points to 474 (20th position out of 48 countries). The Science score fell to 471 (21st out of 48 countries). Up to 20% of students in Malaysia did not meet the minimum benchmarks in Mathematics and Science in 2007, a two- to fourfold increase since 2003 (Exhibit 3-9). These students were shown to understand basic Mathematics and Science concepts but generally struggled to apply this knowledge. EXHIBIT 3-9
Comparison of Malaysias internal performance on TIMSS (1999-2007)
TIMSS Mathematics scores, 1999-2007 Percent of students
Advanced1
EXHIBIT 3-10
Comparison of Malaysias 2007 TIMSS performance against other countries
% of students by performance level in TIMSS Mathematics
4 40 40 31 3 2 2 0
Advanced1 Intermediate Below minimum
48 79 63 80 73
32
77 61 80 82
77
75
75
65
58
57
63
34 52 18 Malaysia 25 Indonesia
2 South Korea
3 Singapore
6 Hong Kong
17 Romania
7 Singapore
3 South Korea
8 Hong Kong
20 Malaysia
20 Thailand
22
23 Romania
35
1 Advanced benchmark: able to organize information, make generalisations, solve non-routine problems and draw and justify conclusions from data Note: Countries arranged by proportion of students in advanced level in descending order SOURCE: TIMSS 2007 for 8th Grade
10
Delving into the TIMSS data provides further insights about the performance of the education system in terms of Mathematics and Science. TIMSS assesses student proficiency across three different types of cognitive skills: knowledge recall, the application of knowledge in solving problems, and the ability to reason in working through problems. Malaysian students did not perform well with regards to any of these three dimensions (Exhibit 3-11). EXHIBIT 3-11
Comparison of TIMSS 2007 student performance along the dimensions of knowledge, application and reasoning
Knowledge Applying Reasoning
Intermediate
83
87
80
Intermediate
82
77 91
Below Minimum2
7 1999
7 2003
18 2007
Below Minimum2
13 1999
5 2003
20 2007
1 Advanced: Students can organise information, make generalisations, solve non-routine problems and draw and justify conclusions from data 2 Below minimum: Students have little to no subject knowledge NOTE: The language used in 1999 and 2003 was Bahasa Malaysia. In 2007, it was in both English and Bahasa Malaysia SOURCE: TIMSS 1999, 2003, and 2007
300
Indonesia
500
600
600
400
Indonesia
Malaysia
A breakdown of student performance in the most recent TIMSS 2007 results in comparison to other systems shows that relatively few of Malaysias students are excelling. Only 2-3% of Malaysian students perform at the highest benchmark level, such as complex problemsolving; in comparison, more than 30% of students in Singapore scored at the advanced level in Mathematics and Science (Exhibit 3-10).
477 478 468 574 569 557 581 593 579 596 595 579 532 522 533 543 547 558 554 567 564
Malaysia
Hong Kong
Hong Kong
Singapore
South Korea
South Korea
Singapore
Indonesia
Thailand
Intl average
Intl average
3-9
13
56 74
40 65
57 74
Below minimum
Below minimum
Below minimum
1 Advanced includes proficiency level 5 and level 6; Intermediate includes proficiency level 2, 3, and 4; and Below minimum includes proficiency level 1 and below Note: Score is an average of sample of schools in Malaysia: 80% National secondary schools, 3% Religious schools, 4% technical and vocational schools, 3% full boarding schools, 3% MARA Junior Science Colleges, 7% private schools by students SOURCE: PISA 2009+
Below minimum proficiency as defined by PISA means: In Reading, students are unable to do one or more of the following: locate one or more pieces of information in a text, recognise the main idea in a text, make low-level inferences or comparisons between information in the text and everyday knowledge; In Mathematics, students are unable to employ basic algorithms, formulae, procedures, or conventions. They are not capable of direct reasoning and literal interpretations of the results, even though they can answer clearly defined questions involving familiar contexts; and
3-10
EXHIBIT 3-12
International Average
419
55
62
MALAYSIA
Indonesia
414
402
57
68
MALAYSIA
Indonesia
404
371
52
66
MALAYSIA
Indonesia
422
383
Note: Countries are ranked in descending order of the percentage of top performers (Level 5 or 6) SOURCE: PISA 2009+
In Science, students have very limited scientific knowledge that can only be applied to a few familiar situations. They can present scientific explanations that follow explicitly from the given evidence, but will struggle to draw conclusions or make interpretations from simple investigations. Just as with TIMSS in 2007, the PISA 2009+ results also show that very few Malaysian students are performing at an Advanced level (approximately 0.1% for Reading, Mathematics, and Science) compared to the OECD countries (where almost 8% perform at this level). Performing at an Advanced level in PISA means:
In Reading, students are able to make multiple inferences, comparisons, and contrasts that are both detailed and precise. They are also able to develop critical evaluations or hypotheses, drawing on specialised knowledge; In Mathematics, students are able to interpret more complex information, and negotiate a number of processing steps. They demonstrate insight in identifying a suitable solution strategy, and display other higher-order cognitive processes to explain or communicate results; and
3-11
In Science, students are able to identify, explain and apply TIMSS and PISA highlight that there are Good scientific knowledge in a variety of complex life situations. and Great schools in Malaysia worthy of study They consistently demonstrate advanced scientific thinking and reasoning. Students are able to use scientific knowledge and develop and replication arguments in support of recommendations and decisions that centre While Malaysias performance as a system on the international on personal, social, or global situations. assessments is not as strong as is desired, an analysis of the distribution of scores by school shows that there are schools worthy The contrast with other top-performing Asian countries is obvious: of study and replication (Exhibit 3-16). These are schools whose the percentage of students in Singapore, South Korea, and Hong Kong performance falls in the Good or Great performance band by performing at the Advanced level in reading is 120-150 times that of international standards. In the TIMSS 2007 assessment, for example, Malaysia (Exhibit 3-14). 11% of schools performed in the Great band, while another 30% were in Good. In the PISA 2009+ assessment, 7% of schools were in the EXHIBIT 3-14 Good band.
Comparison of Malaysias PISA 2009+ performance in Reading by skill level against other countries
Percentage of students at each performance levels1 in PISA 2009+ Reading
EXHIBIT 3-16
Malaysian school performance by performance bracket for TIMSS 2007 and PISA 2009+
Advanced
12.9
12.4
15.7
13.4
7.6
0.7
0.3
0.1
58.9
Intermediate
56.8
55.9
46.6
PISA 2009+ Participating schools by performance bracket Performance bracket Excellent Great Good Fair Poor
81.3
79.3
71.8
73.0
73.6
Number 0 17 45 64 24 150
40.4 Below minimum 5.8 Korea 8.3 Hong Kong 12.5 Singapore 13.6 Japan 18.8
42.9
44.0
53.4
1 Advanced includes proficiency level 5 and level 6; Intermediate includes proficiency level 2, 3, and 4; and Below minimum includes proficiency level 1 and below SOURCE: PISA 2009+
Exhibit 3-15 compares all the countries taking part in international assessments and how well their students performed. The vertical axis shows their level of achievement on the universal scale. Countries are classified based on the universal scale into broad performance bands of Poor, Fair, Good, Great, and Excellent. The difference between each performance band (approximately 40 universal scale points) is equivalent to one year of schooling. Thus, 15-year-olds in a Good system are performing as though they have had one extra year of schooling compared to 15-year-olds in a Fair system. The horizontal axis of the chart shows the public expenditure on education per student in US dollars (PPP adjusted) as of 2008. All the countries have been allocated to the bar that corresponds to their expenditure band. The number at the top of this bar is the maximum score achieved (by a particular country) for this level of expenditure, and the number at the bottom represents the minimum score. The chart highlights Malaysias public expenditure per student in 2008. Combining the two axes highlights the variation in performance between countries that have similar levels of expenditure in education.
The Ministry also has two types of Special Awards to recognise schools with outstanding performance: HPS and Cluster Schools (CS). There are 66 HPS around the country, with enhanced decision-making rights (and accountability) to sustain performance while enabling principals and teachers to continue to raise the bar (Exhibit 3-17). There are also 170 CS nationwide.
3-12
EXHIBIT 3-15
578 544
Singapore Korea, Rep. Australia Estonia Czech Republic
545 530
Ontario Canada Finland Belg.Flanders
531 Great
489
478
Turkey
486
Netherlands Switzerland Norway Denmark USA Sweden Austria Belg. CFB Luxembourg
Good
Russia
464
483 Fair
455
Chile
441 Iran
Malta
458
458
422
Kuwait
Botswana
412
397
402 Poor
370
327
3-13
EXHIBIT 3-17
since 2006 First rural school in Msia to achieve HPS status performer in UPSR Outstanding performance in co-curricular activities such as taekwondo and public speaking.
Consistently a top
SK Zainab (2), Kelantan
Consistently a top
SJK(C) Foon Yew (2), Johor
performer in UPSR Excellent track record in international academic competitions in Mathematics and Chinese 100% pass rate in SPM Outstanding performance in co-curricular activities such as orchestra and rugby.
Consistently achieved a
SMK for five consecutive years Aminuddin Excellent record in Baki, WP international sporting Kuala events, for example Lumpur swimming High Performing Schools is an initiative under the NKRA aimed at elevating the quality of schools to world-class standards. Schools awarded HPS status are granted greater operational flexibility to innovate and continue raising the bar. These schools will also support raising standards across the entire system by coaching other schools to improve performance.
SOURCE: Fully Residential and Excellent Schools Management Division
3-14
Comparison of results between the TIMSS 2007 (Form 2) and PMR 2008 (Form 3) examinations for the same set of schools tested shows that there appears to be a mismatch between the two in terms of the definition of excellence. In consequence, in PMR 2008, 30% of students received an Excellent (A) grade in Mathematics, as compared to just 2% in TIMSS 2007 achieving Advanced levels (Exhibit 3-18). One possible reason for this misalignment of standards is that the national and international assessments have different testing foci. PISA, for example, focuses on questions that test for higherorder thinking skills such as application and reasoning. Malaysias national assessments, on the other hand, have a heavier slant towards questions that test for content knowledge. EXHIBIT 3-18
Comparison of TIMSS 2007 results with PMR 2008
Advanced / A Below Minimum / E
Comparison of Cambridge English standards with the SPM English language paper also shows differences in the setting of standards. The SPM English paper (which is not necessarily intended to test native speakers of English) is benchmarked externally to Cambridges 1119 paper for native speakers of English, allowing students to obtain a grade under both examination scales. LP and the Cambridge International Examinations set different cut-off grades for SPM English papers. This difference is most stark at the border between pass and fail. Under the Cambridge grading scale, 50% of Form 5 students failed to achieve minimum standards. Under the Malaysian grading scale, approximately 20% of students were deemed to have failed (Exhibit 3-19).
EXHIBIT 3-19
Comparison of SPM 2011 English language grades with Cambridge English language grades
Percentage of students obtaining each letter grade by international and national assessment scales Percent of students
17
60
SPM Cambridge Assessments
80 58
77 72
40
20
18 TIMSS 2007
12 PMR 20081
20 TIMSS 2007
11 PMR 20081
A+
A1
AA2
B+
B3
B
B4
C+
C5
C
C6
D
D7
E
E8
G
G9
1 The distribution of grades illustrated is for schools that participated in TIMSS 2007 SOURCE: TIMSS 2007; Examination Syndicate
NOTE: SPM English language assessments are assessed once, but receive two grades per paper based on national and international cut-off points respectively SOURCE: Examination Syndicate
3-15
EXHIBIT 3-21
Results of 2011 Jobstreet survey on graduate employment
Top 5 reasons why fresh graduates were rejected after interview sessions Percent of respondents N = 571 human resource personnel Unrealistic salary demands Bad character, attitude and personality of the jobseeker Poor command of English language Lack of good communication skills Too choosy about the job or company they wish to work for
38 64 60 56 52
On the question about the level of quality among our fresh graduates today, 66% of the respondents rated them as average and 23% rated them as poor. Jobstreet 2011
65
Total size of student cohort
55
52
100
6 1 33 0.4 Year 1 2000 UPSR 2005 32 7 PMR 2008 28 8 SPM 2010 11
Switched school system1 Failed 1 or more core subjects2 Out of school system3 36% fail to meet min. standard
1 Refers to students who took the national assessment as a non-public school candidate. 2 Fail refers to failing at least 1 subject, including Bahasa Malaysia, English language, History, Moral Education or Islamic Education, Mathematics and Science (General Science for arts stream, either Physics, Chemistry or Biology for science stream students) 3 Includes drop-outs and students who transferred to private schools not using the national curriculum (for example, international schools)
SOURCE: Educational Policy, Planning and Research Division; Examination Syndicate
Public opinion polls: Broader public opinion appears to be mixed. A public opinion poll conducted by the Merdeka Centre in December 2004 on a sample of 850 Malaysians (aged 16 to 30) found that the majority of them (68% of Indians, 58% of Chinese, and 50% of Malays) felt that the education they received had prepared them inadequately for the challenges of living and working in todays society. In contrast, a 2011 public survey of 1,800 Malaysians indicated that overall, 55% of them believed that the Malaysian education system was comparable in standards to those of developed countries, and 35% believed that it was better. Though the limitations of such surveys need to be acknowledged, the Ministry believes that these concerns need to be heeded. The potential of children in Malaysia need to be met with the educational quality that will ensure that they can realise their dreams and ambitions once they leave school.
3-16
administration of students welfare, curricular and co-curricular activities, teaching and learning, and student outcomes. For the last dimension, the schools consider both academic and non-academic outcomes including co-curricular participation and the attitudes, behaviours, and moral values demonstrated by students at school. This dimension is graded on a 15 point scale, with 15 being the best rating possible. Overall, the results of this self-assessment are fairly positive: 76% of primary schools rated themselves at 10 points or higher on this dimension, as compared to 44% at the secondary level. Only 1% of primary and secondary schools reported a rating of less than 5 points.
3-17
EQUITy IN EDUCATION
As with most countries, there are significant variations in outcomes in Malaysia across states, districts, schools, socio-economic class, and gender. Some of these achievement gaps have narrowed over time, which is a major step forward towards ensuring that every school is a good school. Nonetheless, socio-economic class remains the largest driver of student outcomes in Malaysia. Although this is a common problem in many countries around the world, it is of the utmost importance that the education system seeks to combat the fact that a childs academic performance is often largely dependent on family income.
Since independence, equity has been a goal of the Malaysian education system. The World Bank Report (2011) acknowledges that Malaysia is relatively successful in pursuing its ambitions: For primary schools, we found a statistically significant relationship between public expenditure and district-level SES (soci0-economic status); the analysis suggests that public expenditure is progressive. Gaps in outcomes remain, however, and when these gaps are associated with non-academic factors they are always a source of concern, however small or large they might be. This section examines each of the present sources of inequity in turn: between and within states, between rural and urban schools, by students socio-economic background, school type and gender, and between public and private schools. The data gathered indicates that overall, gaps still remain in each of these categories, with the greatest gap being caused by differences in students socio-economic status.
EXHIBIT 3-22
Comparison of performance across states for UPSR and SPM 2011
Average percent GPS for 2011 UPSR SPM W.P. Putrajaya
81.3 72.8 71.3 70.8 70.8 70.5 70.3 70.0 69.8 69.5 67.8 66.5 65.3 63.5 60.8
-33%
58.0 44.8 45.3 46.4 45.4 44.4 48.0 46.0 46.4 46.2 42.2 41.3 39.3 48.6 40.1 38.8
-33%
Kelantan Terengganu N. Sembilan Melaka Johor W.P. Kuala Lumpur Pahang P. Pinang Selangor Perak Kedah Perlis W.P. Labuan Sarawak
54.3
Sabah
3-18
EXHIBIT 3-23
District level percent GPS scores by state (2011) 90 80 UPSR 70 60 50 0 60 55 50 SPM 45 40 35 0 State WP Putrajaya Sarawak 1 Negeri Sembilan WP Kuala Lumpur Terengganu WP Labuan Selangor Kelantan
Sabah 1
Pahang
Penang
Melaka
Kedah
Perak
Perlis
1 Individual districts in Sabah and Sarawak grouped into clusters of districts for the purpose of this analysis SOURCE: Examination Syndicate
Johor
3-19
EXHIBIT 3-24
Comparison of rural and urban school gap over time
2011 % gap 2011 % gap
EXHIBIT 3-25
Comparison of National and National-type UPSR scores from 2005 to 2011
SK SJKC
SJKT
2005 gap
2011 gap
70
50
Urban
70 68
8.0
-2.5 11.7
0.3 3.5
65
45
66 64 62 60 58 56 54 52 50 2005
06 07 08 09 10 2011
60
40
Rural
55
35
50 2005 06
07
08
09
10 2011
30 2004 05 06 07 08 09 10 2011
NOTE: Urban schools are taken to be schools classified as Bandaraya, Bandar and Bandar Kecil. Rural schools are schools classified as Luar Bandar. SOURCE: Examination Syndicate
1 Gaps are calculated as the difference in percentage points between SK scores less SJK(C) or SJK(T) scores SOURCE: Examination Syndicate
Achievement gap between rural and urban schools is narrowing over time
The Ministry and the general public have long focused attention on inequity in educational outcomes between students attending school in urban communities versus those in rural communities. States with a higher proportion of rural schools, like Sabah and Sarawak, on average, underperform states with fewer rural schools. However, Malaysia has made clear progress in this area: the gap between rural and urban schools has been gradually closing over time (Exhibit 3-24). In the UPSR examinations, the gap today between urban and rural students is almost 4 percentage points in favour of urban schools. At the SPM level, the gap appears to have widened to 8 percentage points. This widening gap could be driven by two factors. The first is that failure is cumulative. A child who fails at UPSR is unlikely to be able to succeed at SPM. Early intervention is thus critical. The second is that there was no actual widening. Instead, the 2006 UPSR cohort maintained their urban-rural gap of 8 percentage points through to SPM in 2011.
Achievement gaps between National and National-type schools are narrowing over time
Student outcomes by school type also warrant consideration. The story here is a positive one overall, as the gaps are consistently narrowing. At the primary level, SJK(T)s still lag behind both SJK(C)s and SKs by approximately 4 percentage points in 2011 (Exhibit 3-25). However, this gap has been almost halved during the past five years. The difference in performance between SK and SJK(C) is negligible at 0.3 percentage points in 2011.
3-20
EXHIBIT 3-26
Examination results, dropout rates and tertiary enrolment rates by gender
Achievement gap is large and growing Female and male percent GPS gap Higher dropout rate amongst male students Male to female student ratio 20111 Lower tertiary enrolment of male students Percent enrolment2 (2011) (n = 000) Male Female n = 1,146 n = 96 n = 1,050
EXHIBIT 3-27
Distribution of student population receiving KWAPM by school band in 2011
Distribution of student population receiving KWAPM1 Percent of schools (2011) 100% = 2,296 3,858 42
31 75 56 17 25 18
11
Schools with <1/3 students receiving KWAPM Schools with 1/32/3 students receiving KWAPM Schools with >2/3 students receiving KWAPM
44
10
54
43
56
46
57
52
8 2006 07
7
Std 1 Std 6 Form 5 Total Polytechnic and community college University2
08 09
10 2011
1 Includes vocational and technical schools 2 Includes IPTA and IPTS SOURCE: Examination Syndicate, Educational Policy, Planning and Research Division, Higher Education Statistics 2011
1 Only primary schools were included, with the exception of 1,060 schools in Sabah and 418 schools in other states due to incomplete data SOURCE: Finance Division; National Key Result Area; EMIS database
3-21
Indeed, it is likely that socio-economic factors, in terms of the composition of the student body, contribute to many of the other achievement gaps discussed previouslyespecially in terms of location and school type (but not gender). That being said, the impact of socio-economic status on student outcomes is less significant in Malaysia than in other systems around the world. For example, only 10% of the Malaysian variance between schools in the PISA 2009+ assessment can be explained by socio-economic factors, as compared to the OECD average of 55%, which indicates a far larger gap in most other countries. This is good news for Malaysia, as it shows that our education system is on its way to being truly equitable.
3-22
EXHIBIT 3-28
SECONDARY1
Special education
Chinese Independent
Religious
Intl
Natl curriculum
Special Ed.
88%
4%
3%
3%
<1%
<1%
<1%
<1%
PRIMARY
National [SK]
Special education
Religious
Intl
Natl curriculum
Special Ed.
74%
21%
3%
<1%
<1%
<1%
<1%
<1%
<1%
1 Post-secondary education phase is not included in this analysis 2 Includes specific school programmes such as full boarding schools (SBP), National religious secondary schools (SMKA), technical and vocational schools. SOURCE: Malaysia Education Statistics (2011)
3-23
National secondary schools (SMK) are taught in Bahasa Malaysia. SMKs comprise 88% of total secondary enrolments. A small but growing percentage of students also opt for alternative schools such as religious schools. Upon completion of lower secondary school (Form 3), students also have a choice to pursue alternate pathways at technical, vocational, sports, arts, and other schooling options. Private schools. A small but growing number of students enrol in private schools. These schools operate at both the primary and secondary level and include private schools that teach the national curriculum, international schools, religious schools, and Independent Chinese schools. Currently, private schools comprise 1% of total primary enrolments and 4% of total secondary enrolments.
EXHIBIT 3-29
Bumiputera Chinese
Indian Others
SK
SJK(T)
100
Malaysia
25
1 67
SABK SR
100
7 22 1
72
SMKA / SABK - SM
100
SOURCE: Malaysia Education Statistics (2011); Population Distribution and Demographic Characteristics 2010 (Statistics Department)
3-24
In general, there are signs of increasing ethnic stratification in schools. More Indian and Chinese students are enrolling in National-type schools today than 10 years ago (Exhibit 3-30). The proportion of Chinese students enrolled in SJK(C)s increased from 92% in 2000 to 96% in 2011. The shift for Indian students was even more dramatic, showing an increase from 47% to 56% enrolment in SJK(T)s. As such, 94% of students in SKs are now ethnically Bumiputera. This suggests that there is a risk of declining diversity and ethnic mixing across all school types, which in turn reduces the ability of schools to effectively foster unity through inter-ethnic interaction. EXHIBIT 3-30
Enrolment trends in National and National-type schools (2000-2011)
Percentage of ethnic Chinese primary student enrolment by school type Percent (2000 and 2011) Percentage of ethnic Indian primary student enrolment by school type Percent (2000 and 2011)
policies on mixed seating in the classroom, and the extent to which students themselves demonstrated unity, for example whether students were interacting across ethnicities inside and outside of the classroom setting; and whether student participation in co-curricular clubs was ethnicity-based. The JNJK inspectors found that, on average, student interactions indicated a good level of unity: there were high levels of interaction between ethnicities inside and outside of the classroom, and most co-curricular activities comprised a diverse student group. However, the inspectors reported that there was a need for schools with less diverse student populations to take more active measures to create opportunities for students to interact with those of different ethnicities, religion and cultures.
MAxIMISING EffICIENCy
The Ministry has consistently directed significant resources towards developing the education system. It is this commitment to providing an excellent education for all Malaysian students that has laid the foundation for the education systemsand the nationsmany successes. As early as 1980, Malaysias expenditure on primary and secondary education as a percentage of GDP was the highest in East Asia. In 2011, Malaysias expenditure, at 3.8% of GDP, is higher than the OECD average of 3.4% of GDP. There is reason to believe, however, that Malaysia may not be getting the highest rate of return on its investments. In order to ensure that Malaysia and the Malaysian education system will keep up with its peer countries in this rapidly globalising 21st century, the Ministry is committed once again to maximising its resources in order to provide Malaysias youth with the very best.
The resources and support that a system provides to schools play a critical role in how the schools perform, by enabling teachers and principals to focus on their core activities of delivering effective teaching and learning. Therefore, a systems ability to effectively allocate, use, and manage its funds is essential to its ability to support schools in achieving the desired levels of performance. This section explores two issues: (i) how Malaysias expenditure on education compares to that of other countries; and (ii) what the impact of this spending has been.
SK
100% = 615,651 8
545,253 4
100% = 189,773 SK
49
180,752
38
SJK(C)
92
96
SJK(C) SJK(T)
5 47
56
SJKT(T)
0 2000
0 2011
2000
2011
Malaysias basic education expenditure is relatively high compared to peers on three different measures
In 2011, Malaysias basic education expenditure was RM37 billion (in terms of money spent on operations and development). This amount represents 16% of the total 2012 federal budgetthe single largest share among ministries. In addition to this budget, another RM12 billion is JNJK school inspections indicate a allocated to MOHE and other ministries that provide education-related good level of unity services. Collectively, this expenditure demonstrates Malaysias very JNJK conducted an inspection of 20 schools in 2011, 55% of which serious financial commitment to improving the education of its children, were primary schools. The inspectors looked at two elements: the which should be celebrated.(Hereafter, all discussion on Malaysias extent to which schools fostered unity among students, such as through education expenditure refers to the operating and development
3-25
EXHIBIT 3-32 expenditure of the Ministry only.)Several measures can be used to compare the Ministrys expenditure on education with that of other Malaysias basic education expenditure as a % of government budget systems. The first twoexpenditure as a percentage of GDP and as a percentage of total government spendingare typically used to account Basic education expenditure as % of total government expenditure for Malaysia and peers for expenditure relative to other priorities in the country, and for the Percent (2008) differences in economic development levels between countries. The 18 third, expenditure per student (adjusted for purchasing power parity) 16 is used to compare absolute spending levels.
1 2
14
12
12
11
11
9 7
Thailand3 Malaysia3
Mexico
Chile
Hong Kong3
Korea
Singapore3 Indonesia3
Japan
1 Includes operating expenditure and capital/development expenditure for basic education (primary and secondary) 2 Peers based on the following categorisation: Asian Tigers (Hong Kong, Singapore, S. Korea, Japan); SEA neighbours (Indonesia, Thailand Singapore), and comparable GDP per capita (Mexico and Chile) 3 Data for 2010 Note: Data from 2008 or 2010 depending on latest available data
SOURCE: Ministry of Education Malaysia; OECD Education at a Glance 2011; Singstat; Ministry of Finance Thailand; Ministry of Finance Indonesia; Education Bureau of Hong Kong.
Malaysias spending per student is comparable with peer countries with similar GDP per capita
Finally, looking at expenditure on a per student basis reveals that Malaysias expenditure is also slightly higher compared to its peers with a similar GDP per capita. Converted to USD per capita for comparison, Malaysia spends approximately USD1,800 on every student per year, which is in line with countries such as Chile and Romania (Exhibit 3-33). EXHIBIT 3-33
Malaysias per student expenditure
3.81 3.41
1.80
Malaysia
ASEAN average
OECD average
Basic education expenditure1 per student USD per student per annum (2010)
1 Includes operating expenditure and capital/development expenditure SOURCE: World Bank EdStats 2011
1,808
Malaysias expenditure as a percentage of total government spending (16%) is almost double that of the OECD average
The expenditure on education as a percentage of total government spending is also relatively high, at 16% in 2011. In comparison with regional peers of Thailand, Indonesia, Singapore, Hong Kong, South Korea and Japan, as well as GDP per capita peers of Mexico and Chile, Malaysia is second only to Thailand. Malaysias expenditure is also almost double that of the OECD average of 8.7% of government spending (Exhibit 3-32).
Malaysia GDP per capita, PPPadjusted (2010) Chile Romania Turkey
435
Mexico
14,591
15,044
14,287
15,340
14,566
1 Includes operating expenditure and capital/development expenditure SOURCE: Ministry of Education Malaysia; OECD; World Bank; Ministry of Finance Turkey; EIU. Data from2010
3-26
costs of operations. While the cost of providing higher education by MOHE is not included here, it is worth noting that, combined, Malaysia has one of the highest education expenditures as a percentage of total public spending. In 2008, of 102 countries worldwide, Malaysia was ranked 16th in terms of government spending on education (Exhibit 3-34).
EXHIBIT 3-34
Comparison of Malaysias basic and tertiary education budget with other countries (2008)
Education expenditure for all levels1 as % of total government expenditure
Percent (2008)
Thailand ranked no. 7 Malaysia ranked 16th Mexico ranked no. 18 Hong Kong ranked no. 21
countries
Regional peers
102
OECD 12.9
1 Education expenditure for levels refers to spend on basic education through tertiary education levels for year 2008 as the latest available year SOURCE: World Bank 2008; OECD 2008; local Ministry websites
Vanuatu Tanzania UAE Morocco Kyrgyzstan Cte dIvoire Thailand Lesotho Ethiopia Costa Rica Tunisia Ghana Namibia Burundi Swaziland Malaysia Peru Mexico Rwanda Algeria Hong Kong Iran Moldova Vietnam Aruba Benin Saudi Arabia Guinea Nepal Senegal Uganda Singapore Tajikistan Belize New Zealand Cuba Mali Brazil Cyprus Cameroon Philippines Chile Cape Verde Switzerland Gambia South Africa Niger Norway Yemen Togo Korea Barbados Fiji Sierra Leone Colombia Denmark Latvia Estonia Argentina Macau Bangladesh Armenia United States Israel Madagascar Samoa Ireland Lithuania Iceland Sweden Indonesia Saint Lucia Belgium Australia Mauritius Finland Bulgaria Canada Laos Liberia Maldives Egypt Netherlands Poland Slovenia Central Africa Timor-Leste Bahrain Dominica Portugal Austria Spain United Kingdom Anguilla France Germany Hungary Slovakia Slovak Republic Czech Republic Japan Italy
3-27
Higher spending has translated to better student outcomes in terms of access, but not necessarily in terms of quality
In order to determine how to best utilise the Ministrys resources, it is important to examine the return on investment (ROI) in the current education system, particularly in relation to other countries. As a developing country, Malaysia has invested significant resources into building additional infrastructure, particularly in rural areas and the interior of Sabah and Sarawak, and increasing the size of the teaching force to enable the expansion of access to education. This spending has successfully translated to almost universal access to primary education, and significant improvement in access to secondary education. However, there remain large areas for improvement in moving forward, particularly with regard to quality. Higher levels of spending are not necessarily correlated with better outcomes (Exhibit 3-16). The United States of America, for example, spends more than USD10,000 per student, but
performs almost two bands lower than a system like Shanghai which only spends between USD4,000-5,000 per student. Malaysias performance lags behind other countries making similar or lower levels of expenditure. Education systems that are making lower investments per pupil, such as those of Thailand and Chile, are nonetheless achieving student outcomes that are either comparable to or better than Malaysias. This suggests that while a certain threshold of spending is required, it is more important that money is put towards the right factors in order to ensure success. Additionally, given the countrys wealth, Malaysias performance is lower than expected. International evidence indicates that there is a strong positive correlation between a countrys GDP per capita and PISA scores (Exhibit 3-35). However, Malaysia appears to be underperforming when compared against other countries with a similar GDP per capita.
EXHIBIT 3-35
550
Korea
525
500
Poland Hungary
Estonia
475
Slovenia
450
425
Indonesia
Thailand
Mexico Malaysia1
400
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 85 GDP per capita Equivalent Thousands USD converted using PPPs
1 GDP per capita PPP-adjusted (2005 constant prices) based on 2010 data SOURCE: PISA 2009+; Global Insight
3-28
As illustrated in this chapter, Malaysia has performed well on access with nearuniversal enrolment at the primary level and relatively high levels of participation at the secondary level. On quality, there appears to be a mismatch between results of national examinations and international assessments which could be due to differences in standards, or in a misalignment in what assessments test forcontent knowledge versus the ability to apply that knowledge. In terms of educational equity, socio-economic status is still the most significant driver of variance in student outcomes, despite the governments concerted investment in financial support for students from low-income families. The best available data on unity suggests that student and teacher diversity in SKs is decreasing, although the level of interaction across ethnicities remains robust. Finally, high
levels of spending have not yielded as much impact as desired, which calls for a renewed commitment to ensuring that the nations funds are efficiently used. Looking ahead, it is important to understand what drives these outcomes so that the Malaysian education system can scale up its successes, and reduce, if not eliminate, its areas of shortfall. Over the course of the development of the Blueprint, it is clear that the National Education Philosophy and many of the systems existing policies remain as relevant today as when they were first designed. The challenge has been in the implementation of these policies. Accordingly, the next four chapters delve deeper into the more important factors that drive or inhibit student learning and, most importantly, develop solutions to address these concerns.
CHAPTER 4
student
4-1
4. student learning
All education systems are judged by how much students learn and develop during their time in the system. The Ministry aspires to elevate the quality of Malaysian student outcomes to a level at par with the top third of education systems in the world. In line with the National Education Philosophy, the Ministrys approach to education is focused on developing students holistically. This means, the education system addresses intellectual, spiritual, emotional, and physical development, alongside a strong sense of national identity. This section examines how the Ministry plans to achieve its student learning aims by re-assessing its curriculum and assessment, language policy, provisions for students with specific needs, and finally, its ability to translate policy into actions for school improvement.
Curriculum and assessment must be aligned with international benchmarks to ensure that Malaysian students are acquiring the knowledge and skills necessary for their success in the 21st century and beyond, along with a passion for lifelong learning. To fully capitalise on Malaysias natural multicultural advantages, language policy will be updated to promote proficiency in at least Bahasa Malaysia and the English language. In making these improvements, special care will be taken to ensure that groups with needs that differ from the mainstream still have every opportunity to fulfil their potential. Finally, as school is the centre where learning takes place, state and district capabilities will be strengthened to ensure that ambitious policies consistently and credibly translate into a world-class experience in the school and classroom.
4-2
The Ministry enlisted the help of UNESCO and Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia to assess different aspects of curriculum development and implementation. The Malaysian curriculum was analysed from three dimensions (Exhibit 4-1): What is written in the curricula, or the Written Curriculum: the knowledge, skills, and values that form the content, outlining what is to be taught by teachers; What is taught in the classroom, or the Taught curriculum: the knowledge acquired, skills developed, and values inculcated in students; and What is examined, or the Examined curriculum: students knowledge, skills, and values that are tested, either in summative national examinations such as the UPSR, PMR, and SPM, or through formative and/or summative PBS that guide teaching. EXHIBIT 4-1
Three dimensions of curriculum
The knowledge, skills and values that form the content, outlining what is to be taught by teachers
WRITTEN
TAUGHT
The knowledge acquired, skills developed and values inculcated in students
EXAMINED
The knowledge, skills and values tested, in summative examinations or formative, class-based assessments
The Written Curriculum should articulate a holistic education of international standard. Both the Taught and Examined Curricula should be closely aligned with the Written Curriculum. In other words, the curriculum that is taught in the class and examined at the national level should match the intent of the written curriculum. The curricula currently in place are the KBSR and KBSM. In 2011, the Ministry started rolling out the new KSSR in stages, starting from Year 1. By 2016, the KSSR will be in place for all primary school years. A comparable standard-based reform of the KSSM will be ready to rollout to Form 1 students in 2017. A revised version of the KSSR will also be rolled out in 2017.
4-3
allow students from different school types, public and private, to mix during co-curricular activities. The KSSR standard document is based on two components, content standards and learning standards. The content standards specify the specific knowledge, skills, and values that students need to acquire. In comparison to KBSR, the KSSR has an increased emphasis on skills such as reasoning, creativity, innovation and entrepreneurship. The learning standards describe the degree of proficiency that students need to display in relation to each of the content standards on a yearby-year basis. This year-by-year articulation of learning standards is different from the KBSR and KBSM curricula which described learning objectives at the end of each phase only (see Exhibit 4-3 for a summary of the main differences between the KBSR and KSSR curriculum). The new KSSM, expected to be implemented from 2017, will adhere to a similar approach to standards. EXHIBIT 4-3
Main differences between KBSR and KSSR curriculum
Compulsory
Elective
Bahasa Malaysia English language Chinese language (SJK) Tamil (SJK) Mathematics World of science and technology Islamic education Moral education Physical education Health education World of music World of visual arts Arabic Chinese language (SK) Tamil (SK) Iban language Kadazan-dusun language
Bahasa Malaysia English language Mathematics Science Islamic education Moral education History Geography Living skills Civics and citizenship Music education Physical education Health education Arabic Chinese language Tamil Iban language Kadazan-dusun language
Bahasa Malaysia English language Mathematics Islamic education Moral education History General Science (for Art stream students) or Biology, Chemistry and Physics (for Science stream students) Music education Physical education Health education
KBSR
KSSR
Integrated education to enhance mastery of 3R (Reading, wRiting and aRithmetic) with focus on knowledge, skills, values, critical, and creative thinking Three pillars: Communication, interaction with the society, personal development
Integrated education to enhance mastery of 4R (Reading, wRiting, aRithmetic and Reasoning) with additional elements of creativity, innovation, and entrepreneurship Six pillars: Communication, spiritual attitude and values, humanities, literacy in science and technology, physical and esthetic development, and personal development Curriculum written based on content and learning standards National examination (UPSR) + school-based assessment
92 subjects available in the academic, vocational and technical streams including: Arts Information technology Languages and literature Science and Mathematics Social Sciences Vocational and technical
In addition to academic learning, the curriculum focuses on spirituality, along with artistic and sporting ability, to develop the child holistically. Programmes and initiatives to develop these components are present both during formal class time as well as through a variety of after-school co-curricular activities. In line with policy that states that every Muslim child must receive Islamic education in school, the KSSR curriculum (as well as the KBSR curriculum before it) provides 160 minutes per week of Islamic Education to Muslim students and 120 minutes per week of Moral Education to non-Muslim students. Additionally, all schools incorporate Visual Arts, Music, Health, and Physical Education classes into their curriculum and adhere to the 1 student 1 sport (1 Murid 1 Sukan) policy by ensuring that each child participates in at least one sporting activity. Beyond formal class hours, the Ministry encourages active involvement in co-curricular activities. All students are encouraged to participate in one sport, one club, and one uniformed body to ensure access to a breadth of experiences. To enhance the co-curricular experience and ensure that students are exposed to the full diversity of Malaysian society, the Ministry is expanding the RIMUP programme which will
4-4
In 2014, the PMR national examinations will be replaced with school and centralised assessment. In 2016, a students UPSR grade will no longer be derived from a national examination alone, but from a combination of PBS and the national examination. The format of the SPM remains the same, with most subjects assessed through the national examination, and some subjects through a combination of examinations and centralised assessments. Initial feedback on the rollout of PBS suggests that teachers have yet to fully grasp the magnitude of the change. Some teachers and schools are also struggling to develop their own test questions for the school assessment component. To that end, the Ministry is strengthening the training provided to teachers to ensure that teachers are developing test questions that accurately test the standards laid out in the curriculum, and that grading is done against this absolute standard, rather than a relative standard.
An external review by Pearson Education Group of the English Emeritus Professor Dylan Williams, examination papers at UPSR University of Londons Institute of Education and SPM level noted that these assessments would benefit from the inclusion of more questions testing higher-order thinking skills, such as application, analysis, synthesis and evaluation. For example, their analysis of the 2010 and 2011 English Language UPSR papers showed that approximately 70% of the questions tested basic skills of knowledge and comprehension. LP has started a series of reforms to ensure that, as per policy, assessments are evaluating students holistically. In 2011, in parallel with the KSSR, the LP rolled out the new PBS format that is intended to be more holistic, robust, and aligned to the new standard-referenced curriculum. There are four components to the new PBS: School assessment refers to written tests that assess subject learning. The test questions and marking schemes are developed, administered, scored, and reported by school teachers based on guidance from LP; Central assessment refers to written tests, project work, or oral tests (for languages) that assess subject learning. LP develops the test questions and marking schemes. The tests are, however, administered and marked by school teachers; Psychometric assessment refers to aptitude tests and a personality inventory to assess students skills, interests, aptitude, attitude and personality. Aptitude tests are used to assess students innate and acquired abilities, for example in thinking and problem solving. The personality inventory is used to identify key traits and characteristics that make up the students personality. LP develops these instruments and provides guidelines for use. Schools are, however, not required to comply with these guidelines; and
the roadmap: Developing and applying 21st Century curriculum and assessment
In the last few years, two major changes have been introduced that have the potential to fundamentally change the way students today learn when implemented well: the KSSR and PBS. The Ministry recognises, however, that there is still more to be done. Wave 1 (20132015) of the reform will focus on short-term initiatives to improve the written, taught, and assessed curricula individually, while laying the groundwork for more fundamental reform. Waves 2 and 3 (2016-2025) will see the introduction of the KSSM and a revised KSSR, and the development of alternative models to allow for more learning at the students own pace.
Wave 1 (2013 to 2015): improving the current curriculum and preparing for structural change
The Ministry intends for the education system to not only improve the quality of its curriculum and assessments, but also achieve much tighter integration across them. In the short-term, the Ministry will roll out initiatives to improve the written, taught and examined curricula individually, as well as to create tighter alignment across all three dimensions.
The KSSR and KBSM will continue to be refined in line with policy that the National Curriculum should incorporate international best practices and be of a standard that produces globally competitive Physical, sports, and co-curricular activities assessment citizens. During the development phase, the Ministry will continue refers to assessments of student performance and participation its practice of benchmarking its curriculum learning and content in physical and health education, sports, uniformed bodies, clubs, standards against that of high-performing systems to ensure that these and other non-school sponsored activities. Schools are given the standards are aligned and that the syllabi are not overcrowded flexibility to determine how this component will be assessed. where the breadth and depth of content covered in the curriculum is more than can be effectively taught in a given school year. Additionally, The new format enables students to be assessed on a broader range of output over a longer period of time. It also provides teachers with more the Ministry will engage independent, international experts to validate the results of this benchmarking exercise for English Language, regular information to take the appropriate remedial actions for their Science, and Mathematics. students. These changes are hoped to reduce the overall emphasis on teaching to the test, so that teachers can focus more time on delivering meaningful learning as stipulated in the curriculum.
4-5
National Trainers
State Trainers
From 5-tiers
to 3-tiers
The number of SISC+ that will be introduced (almost 2,500 SISC+ by 2015) and their focus on coaching (60% time must be spent on coaching activities) will provide teachers with greater, more direct onthe-ground coverage than previously possible. This will keep them more focused on teaching as they do not have to leave school to attend courses. Training will also be more tailored to the teacher in question as SISC+ will have the chance to observe teachers in class and provide instant feedback. The focus of these coaching sessions will be on the mastery of key pedagogical skills such as developing higher-order thinking skills, teaching children of different ability levels, and assessing students effectively.
4-6
In addition to the SISC+, the Ministry will roll-out additional teaching resources to ensure that teachers are better able implement KSSR in the classroom. These include supporting materials such as video libraries of exemplar teaching (see Chapter 5 for more information). The Ministry will also examine what materials are required at the secondary level to help teachers deliver the existing KBSM in a manner that emphasises skills and competencies critical for the 21st century. This will be an interim measure until the new KSSM is rolled out with its own set of teacher resources.
among children in lower primary school. The programme showed encouraging success, improving Bahasa Malaysia literacy from 87% to 98%, and numeracy from 76% to 99% in its pilot cohort. LINUS 2.0 will build on the successes of LINUS 1.0 to address English literacy as well as Bahasa Malaysia literacy and numeracy. Students who are falling behind will be grouped together during the relevant classes and taught according to their needs. Teachers working with such students will receive targeted training to ensure that they are equipped with the best strategies to help students catch up and transition back to the mainstream curriculum.
upgrading assessment framework to increase questions that test higher-order thinking skills
Waves 2 (2016 to 2020) and 3 (2021 to 2025): Regular monitoring routines will ensure that schools that are struggling to implement the new PBS are identified quickly. Teachers rolling out new and revised curricula and principals from these lagging schools will receive additional on-site The new KSSM and a revised version of the KSSR will be rolled out training from the SISC+ on setting and conducting PBS, particularly in 2017. These will incorporate the feedback, benchmarking, and with regard to standard-referenced grading. stress-testing results from Wave 1. The Ministry will develop the new curricula using the total number of hours in the schooling year as the The Ministry will also systematically increase the proportion of starting point, and remove non-priority content and skills to avoid questions in both PBS and National Examinations that test higherovercrowding. Additionally, the skills and competencies identified as order thinking in the next three years. These questions will be based important for success in todays globalised environment will be fully on Blooms taxonomy, testing skills such as applying, analysing, embedded in the curricula. The Ministry will also amend existing evaluating, and creating. By 2016, questions that test these skills regulations to give schools flexibility over timetabling as long as will make up 80% of UPSR questions, 80% of the Form 3 central schools can still deliver the learning and content outcomes laid out in assessment, 75% of the questions for SPM core subjects and 50% of the the curriculum. questions for SPM elective subjects.
Piloting the international Baccalaureate (iB) middle Years Programme (mYP) to explore alternative approaches to learning
The Ministry is continuously exploring new pedagogical approaches to enhance the quality of teaching and learning. To that end, the Ministry will pilot the IB MYP for secondary school students in ten schools, starting in 2013. (This is different from the IB Diploma Programme, a qualification equivalent to the A-Levels, which is already provided by two Fully Residential Schools or Sekolah Berasrama Penuh (SBP) in Malaysia). The sample schools will come from Bands 1 to 4 and include both rural and urban SMK and National Religious Secondary Schools or Sekolah Menengah Kebangsaan Agama (SMKA). Schools will be selected based on a list of defined criteria focusing on the schools leadership and infrastructure. Learnings from this pilot will be used to inform the development of KSSM. The IB Middle Years programme will use the Malaysian curriculum. The pedagogical approach emphasises the use of project-based activities and questioning techniques to develop students capacity for higher-order thinking and to help students see the connection between different disciplines. IB is used in over 141 countries and its graduates record of consistently outperforming the OECD average and A-level graduates at university provide the assurance that it will offer many valuable best practices for the broader system. The Ministry will also start exploring accelerated learning pathways. This would include allowing high-performing students to complete secondary school in four years instead five and/or primary school in five years instead of six, as well as creating a gifted and talented programme for the top 1% of the student population. The Ministry will carefully research and evaluate these options to ensure that these pathways are psychologically and developmentally beneficial to the children in question and can be implemented in a manner that is not disruptive to the whole system. More details on these programmes can be found in the section on Students with Specific Needs.
4-7
lANguAge
The Ministry will aim to develop students who are operationally proficient in Bahasa Malaysia and the English language. Measures taken will include: Using one Bahasa Malaysia curriculum and assessment standard across all schools; Introducing LINUS 2.0 with an expanded scope to address English language literacy; Strengthening the delivery of English language lessons, for example via the Oral Proficiency in English language for Secondary School (OPS English) Programme or set teaching where students are grouped based on their skill level; Intensifying testing and upskilling of all English language subject teachers; Introducing Bahasa Malaysia and English language remedial interventions and support for students who struggle to keep up; and Providing access to learning an additional language at primary and secondary level. As the world grows more connected and competitive than it has ever been before, it is imperative that Malaysia capitalises on its inherent advantages to strengthen its position in the global economy. Neighbouring Asian education systems in China, South Korea, and Singapore are increasingly focused on developing students that are proficient in their national language, and the English language to maximise their employability in the global workforce. Malaysia needs to develop a similar employee value proposition. Proficiency in Bahasa Malaysia will remain the cornerstone of Malaysias language policy and focus will be on ensuring that students across all ethnic groups are universally able to learn and converse effectively in the national language. Additionally, exposure to the English language will be increased and the quality of English language teaching will be raised. In parallel, in recognition of the social and economic value of multiculturalism, steps will be taken to strengthen access to and availability of Chinese language, Tamil, Arabic and other leading global languages as subjects. This language policy is already reflected in the schooling system, where all students learn Bahasa Malaysia and English language and many students learn additional languages. The aspiration of the education system is to create students that are at least operationally proficient in both Bahasa Malaysia and English. All students will also be encouraged to learn an additional language to independent proficiency. As defined by CEFR, independent proficiency indicates the ability to hold ones own in social discourse. By 2025, the Ministry aims to meet the following targets: 90% students achieve a minimum credit in Bahasa Malaysia at SPM level; 70% students achieve Cambridge 1119-equivalent minimum credit in English at SPM level; and 30% students achieve independent proficiency in an additional language.
In addition to equipping students with a means to communicate, languages provide students with a medium to absorb other knowledge such as Mathematics, Science, History and Geography. Malaysias language policy has three goals: Foster a unique shared identity between Malaysians anchored in the ability to be proficient in the national language, Bahasa Malaysia; Develop individuals that are equipped to work in a globalised economy where the English language is the international language of communication; and Provide opportunities for students to learn an additional language. Malaysia is blessed with a multicultural heritage. While Bahasa Malaysia is the national language spoken by all communities, Chinese, Indian, and other minority communities retain deep knowledge and active usage of their languages. Additionally, the English language is an active language largely used in many parts of Malaysian professional and social life. This makes the country well-positioned to develop a nation of people who are at least operationally proficient in more than one language. Operational proficiency is defined by the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR) as the linguistic fluency required to participate fully in professional and academic life (Exhibit 4-5).
4-8
EXHIBIT 4-5
map of malaysian grades against the Common european Framework of references (CeFr)
CEFR Description BASIC (TOURIST) Able to carry out real life tasks of a touristic nature A1 Able to use familiar everyday expressions and very basic phrases aimed at the satisfaction of needs of a concrete type. Able to introduce himself/herself and others, and can ask and answer questions about personal details such as where he/she lives, people he/she knows, and things he/she has. Able to interact in a simple way provided the other person talks slowly and clearly and is prepared to help Able to understand sentences and frequently used expressions related to areas of most immediate relevance (e.g., very basic personal and family information, shopping, local geography, employment). Able to communicate in simple and routine tasks requiring a simple and direct exchange of information on familiar and routine matters. Able to describe in simple terms aspects of his/her background, immediate environment and matters in areas of immediate need Able to understand the main points of clear standard input on familiar matters regularly encountered in work, school, leisure, etc. Able to deal with most situations likely to arise whilst travelling in an area where the language is spoken. Able to produce simple connected text on topics which are familiar or of personal interest. Able to describe experiences and events, dreams, hopes and ambitions and briefly give reasons and explanations for opinions and plans D-E B2 Able to understand the main ideas of complex text on both concrete and abstract topics, including technical discussions in his/her field of specialization. Able to interact with a degree of fluency and spontaneity that makes regular interaction with native speakers quite possible without strain for either party. Able to produce clear, detailed text on a wide range of subjects and explain a viewpoint on a topical issue giving the advantages and disadvantages of various options Able to understand a wide range of demanding, longer texts, and recognize implicit meaning. Able to express himself/herself fluently and spontaneously without much obvious searching for expressions. Able to use language flexibly and effectively for social, academic, and professional purposes. Able to produce clear, well-structured, detailed text on complex subjects, showing controlled use of organizational patterns, connectors, and cohesive devices Able to understand with ease virtually everything heard or read. Able to summarize information from different spoken and written sources, reconstructing arguments and accounts in a coherent presentation. Able to express himself/herself spontaneously, very fluently and precisely, differentiating finer shades of meaning even in the most complex situations G Equivalent SPM grades
A2
INDEPENDENT (SOCIAL) Able effectively express views and hold ones own in social discourse
B1
C1
A-C
C2
students perform strongly with 84% achieving at least a Credit in SPM Bahasa Malaysia. However, only 63% of Chinese students and 57% of Indian students reach the same level of achievement (Exhibit 4-6). This is primarily due to the lower exposure to Bahasa Malaysia in National-type schools. 96% of Chinese and 56% of Indian students attend National-type schools where content subjects are taught in Chinese language or Tamil. As instruction time allocated for languages at National-type schools is split between Bahasa Malaysia, English language, and Chinese language or Tamil, students receive fewer instructional hours in Bahasa Malaysia compared to National school students. To compensate for this, the standards of the Bahasa Malaysia curriculum and assessment are slightly lower for Nationaltype school students.
4-9
EXHIBIT 4-6
English and Bahasa Malaysia performance (2010 and aspiration for 2025)
Students that achieve at least a credit in BM SPM Percent 90 84
Bumiputera
90
Chinese
63
70 42
90
Indian
57
70 35
2010
SOURCE: Examination Syndicate
2025 aspiration
2010
2025 aspiration
Compared to Bahasa Malaysia, Malaysian students performance in English language is weaker. Only 28% of students achieve at least a credit benchmarked to Cambridge 1119 in English language SPM. While performance in English language also varies by ethnicity, all three major ethnic groups fall significantly short of the target of 70% proficiency target. Only 23% Bumiputera, 42% Chinese and 35% Indian students achieve at least a Credit benchmarked to Cambridge 1119 (Exhibit 4-6). English language results are also the lowest of the core subjects at UPSR, PMR, and SPM level. Lower student performance in English language appears to be driven by low proficiency among English language teachers. When a sample of over 7,500 English language teachers took the CPT, a significant number did not meet the minimum proficiency standard required for teaching English language. There is also a mismatch between subjects that teachers were trained to teach and the subjects they end up teaching. Due to unavoidable circumstances, approximately 30% of current English language teachers were not originally trained to teach English while approximately 3,600 that were trained to teach English language are teaching other subjects. Lastly, international research also indicates that Malaysias 15-20% instructional time in English language may be insufficient for students to build operational proficiency. The availability of and proficiency in other languages beyond Bahasa Malaysia and English language is relatively good. Approximately 20% of primary school students attend National-type schools with instruction in either Chinese language or Tamil and an additional 2% attend religious schools with some instruction in Arabic. As per the Peoples Own Language Policy, all public schools are required to offer a language subject when at least 15 students request it. Under the KSSR, every child may also choose to learn an additional language depending on availability of teachers. Currently, 15% of students pass the optional Chinese language, Tamil or Arabic papers at SPM and there are many other students who opt to learn other languages like Japanese, French, German, and Spanish.
4-10
Efforts to develop Bahasa Malaysia into a Language of Knowledge will be intensified. This includes encouraging academics to develop new bodies of work in Bahasa Malaysia, strengthening the Malaysian Institute of Translation and Books or Institut Terjemahan dan Buku Malaysia to translate international research and key terminology into Bahasa Malaysia, and greater provision of training courses in Bahasa Malaysia by Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka and local universities. The Government will also send Bahasa Malaysia teachers abroad to train Malaysians overseas as instructors in Bahasa Malaysia to further spread and strengthen the language.
The English Language Training Centre (ELTC) within the Ministry will be strengthened to support the effective training of English language teachers and to continuously develop English language teaching and learning materials and programmes. The Ministry will also launch a series of MBMMBI initiatives to strengthen the delivery of English lessons. The OPS English Programme focuses on improving students listening and speaking skills and is in the process of being scaled up following a successful pilot. OPS English teaching and learning materials are being refined based on feedback from principals and pilot programmes. Additionally, teachers will undergo training to ensure they can effectively use these new tools to re-focus lessons on listening and speaking skills. Comprehensive English remedial support will be introduced. In Years 1 to 3, the existing LINUS programme will be expanded from Bahasa Malaysia literacy and Mathematics to include English literacy. Additionally, the Ministry aims to increase differentiation of teaching approaches using the new set system to help secondary school students struggling with the English language. Upon entering Form 1, all students will take a diagnostic test. Based on test results, students will be assigned to a set with students of similar English proficiency levels. Sets will be smaller than normal classes (each set is expected to be 20 to 30 students) and will allow teachers to tailor pedagogical styles according to students skill level and learning requirements. Given the planned roll-out of the 1BestariNet system, the Ministry has started exploring the use of ICT models to bring more effective English instruction to students. ICT solutions have the dual advantage of offering personalised learning customised to individual needs and being quickly scalable. Three models are currently under considerationself-directed online learning, interactive online tutoring, and software-based learning guides (Exhibit 4-7).
The teachers will be evaluated at the end of the year and those who still do not meet the minimum competency standard in the CPT will be given up to two years to make the necessary improvements. As the average non-proficient teacher only requires training over two years to EXHIBIT 4-7 meet the proficiency standard, it is anticipated that most who adhere to ICT models under consideration for English instruction the training regime will be able to pass the evaluation by 2015. Those who still do not meet the proficiency standard will be redeployed to Model Key characteristics Advantages Students learn English Timing flexibility for user teach other subjects. Redeployment of teachers who do not meet the proficiency standard by 2015 could result in a small shortfall of English language teachers. These gaps will be proactively filled with teachers that already meet the minimum competency bar in English proficiency. To fill these gaps as rapidly as possible, the Ministry will hire teachers using alternative pathways. The primary sources of these new teachers will be existing English language teachers that are not currently teaching the subject, and new graduate teachers from the IPGs or IPTAs. These groups of people have the advantage of having already completed teacher training and can quickly start teaching. If primary sources do not produce sufficient teachers, secondary sources such as retired teachers will be tapped. Over time, the matching of what teachers have been trained to teach and the actual subject they end up teaching will also be improved. It is estimated that this should release an additional 2,000 English language teachers into the system.
Self-directed online learning
without active facilitation Various delivery channels videos, audio clips, eBooks
Relatively low cost Abundance of content suitable across baseline proficiency levels Accessibility to highquality teachers across the world Guided learning experience with both teacher and student participation
Live interaction between teacher and student Classroom or tutoring experience in cyberspace
Language learning softwares that deliver content in an indirect and intuitive manner
Abundance of softwares in the market to choose from Creative delivery of language learning content makes learning experience entertaining
4-11
into instruction time at secondary school, as is the case in the new KSSR. Larger schools may, subject to resourcing, offer several language options while smaller school will explore leveraging the use of technology to increase the number of language options on offer.
4-12
EXHIBIT 4-8
Infrastructure maintenance expense by school type
There are a few groups of students whose circumstances or needs are different enough from the mainstream that they are likely to fall through the gaps and not reach their full potential unless specifically catered to. These groups include children in under-enrolled schools, students from indigenous and minority groups including Orang Asli and Penan, gifted children, and children with special needs. Programmes, schools, and initiatives that cater to the additional needs of these students will allow them to benefit equally from the Malaysian education system.
195
SKM Average primary schools
under-enrolled schools
Currently, 34% of Malaysian primary schools have fewer than 150 students and are officially classified as under-enrolled schools or Sekolah Kurang Murid (SKM). They account for just 7% of total primary school enrolment. On average, SKM produce weaker educational outcomes in comparison with other public schools. Their average composite scores of 68% trail other public schools by 4 percentage points. This under-performance is linked to three structural challenges. Firstly, 73% of under-enrolled schools are located in distant rural areas. This requires students to travel long distances to attend school and reduces the likelihood of securing high-performing teachers and principals. Secondly, these schools lack the benefits associated with scale: co-curriculum offerings, better facilities, and interactions with a more diverse set of peers. Thirdly, many of these schools are located in low-income areas and face difficulties associated with lower socio-economic status. Lowincome families face greater challenges in keeping their children in school due to the costs associated with supplies, uniforms, and transport, which often leads to higher rates of student absenteeism. Maintenance expenses are seven times more per student at SKMs compared to those of regular schools (Exhibit 4-8). These higher costs coupled with lower teacher-student ratios of 1:6 versus the national average of 1:13 results in SKMs being more expensive to operate. Despite the significant challenges involved, there are some highperforming SKMs that have beaten the odds to produce exemplary student outcomes and become the pride of their communities. Examples include SK Ulu Lubai, an under-enrolled school in Sarawak that was one of the best primary schools in the country in 2011. These schools are encouraging case studies that provide unique insight on what works in the unusual circumstances that under-enrolled schools face.
4-13
the Ministry will introduce educational software, teaching aids, and virtual learning environments specifically designed to raise educational outcomes at schools in remote areas.
4-14
the value of pursuing basic and further education. The Ministry has undertaken multiple initiatives to address the issues raised above. Key among them are: The development of a contextualised curriculum (Kurikulum Asli dan Penan, KAP) tailored to Orang Asli and Penan students. KAP was piloted in 2007 at 14 Orang Asli and 6 Penan schools, and contains two elementsa minimum adequate syllabus and a curriculum that has been contextualised to the Orang Asli and Penan communities. Initial results have been promising. For example, KAP students are reportedly more confident, achieve higher levels of literacy and numeracy, and have better self-esteem; The development of a Special Comprehensive Model School Programme (K9) which provides residential education from Year 1 to Form 3. The main objective is to reduce the drop-out rate between Year 6 and Form 1. This programme was piloted in 2007, and thus far, it appears that attendance rates for students have been increasing every year, from 85.7% in 2007 to 97.6% in 2010; The inclusion of indigenous and other minority languages in the curriculum. Under the new KSSR introduced in 2011, the Ministry also expanded the elective language choices to include Iban, Kadazan-Dusun and Semai; and The provision of Kelas Dewasa Orang Asli dan Pribumi (KEDAP) classes for Orang Asli adults to provide them with sufficient literacy and numeracy to support their childrens learning.
61%
The Ministrys current policy is to provide Orang Asli and Penan students with educational opportunities relevant to their needs. As such, in July 2012, the Ministry launched a dedicated 5-year transformation plan for Orang Asli education that will run from 2013 to 2018, that is during Waves 1 and 2 of the Blueprint. A comparable plan for the groups in Sabah and Sarawak will be launched by 2013.
30% 65% 35% Orang Asli National average SK (Asli) National average 1% SK (Asli) Primary schools Bands 3,4&5 Bands 6&7
Wave 1 (2013 to 2015): improving access and laying foundations for further reform
The focus of Wave 1 will be on improving enrolment and attendance rates of Orang Asli students from primary through to secondary school. The first major initiative is to expand the number of K9 schools from two to six, followed by infrastructural upgrades for existing schools and residential facilities, and the construction of new residential schools. Secondly, the Ministry will focus on curriculum enhancements. This includes updating KAP to ensure alignment with the design framework and principles of KSSR, and the broadening of the Basic Vocational Education or Pendidikan Asas Vokasional (PAV) curriculum at secondary schools to offer more class options. The Ministry will also roll out the KEDAP program to benefit unserved remote communities, especially in Sabah and Sarawak. Thirdly, the Ministry will improve teacher recruitment, support, and training. To achieve this, the Ministry will increase the number of Orang Asli candidates in teacher training programmes, and strengthen resources for indigenous education research at the five National
SOURCE: Dropout Prevention Initiatives for Malaysian Indigenous Orang Asli Children, Md Nor et al, (2011); Day School Management Division
Several economic, geographic, and cultural factors limit Orang Asli students access to quality education. Firstly, higher incidences of poverty and the tendency to live in remote locations means that many Orang Asli students do not attend preschool and thus start from a low literacy and numeracy base in Year 1. Additionally, Bahasa Malaysia is not the mother tongue for most of these students, which further impedes learning. Secondly, principals and teachers report that existing training programmes do not sufficiently prepare them for the complexities of working with these communities. They struggle to support students on multiple levels: from helping them integrate with their non-Orang Asli peers, to convincing them and their families of
4-15
Centres of Excellence for Indigenous Pedagogy. To better support teachers in terms of classroom learning activities, the Ministry will expand the number of teacher assistants recruited from Orang Asli communities. The parent engagement toolkit that is being rolled out to all schools in Malaysia (see Chapter 7 on System Structure for more information) will also contain specific information for teachers and principals on working with indigenous and minority communities. Lastly, to establish accurate performance baselines and goals for all IOM students, the Ministry will refine the student data collection processes. This information will be used to inform the development of further strategies for non-Orang Asli or Penan IOM students.
papers for UPSR that are aligned with KAP curriculum standards.
As Malaysia becomes a developed economy, grooming top talent will become increasingly important towards achieving our growth objectives. Competitive Asian economies, such as Hong Kong, Singapore, and South Korea, employ education for gifted students as a driver of human capital development and national innovation. These countries provide an education for gifted children through a two-step process. Firstly, the governments identify gifted students, through measures of aptitude, as well as mathematics and verbal achievement scores. Next, the students are admitted into specialised programmes at the preschool, primary, and secondary levels.
There are currently some programmes in Malaysia that cater to high-performing students in the private and public sector. Within the public sector, the PERMATApintar National Gifted Programme conducts School Holiday Camps, a series of science, technology, and mathematics enrichment programmes for students from Year 3 to Form 3. There are also dedicated residential schools for high-achieving students from Forms 4 to 5. However, there are limited centralised policies for the long-term planning, administration, and evaluation of The Ministry will also review the KAP curriculum to determine whether the gifted segment. it should be extended from a purely primary school curriculum to encompass lower secondary education, or even whether it should be the roadmap: Developing a national strategy for gifted students eliminated completely once the basics of literacy and numeracy have Wave 1 of the reform will focus on building a better understanding of been established. If a decision is made to retain the KAP curriculum, the needs of gifted children in Malaysia, and designing programmes the Ministry will look into the development of dedicated examination
4-16
that address their needs. Wave 2 will see the piloting of these new programmes, with nationwide scale-up occurring in Wave 3.
the required standard for admission each year. Upon successful completion of the programme, students will be promoted to Year 3 in the following academic year; and The gifted and talented programme for the 1% of the student population that is gifted in a specific area (e.g., Mathematics, Linguistics, Music, Visual Arts). Students will have a tailored, flexible education programme that enables them to receive instruction from experts in their field while still participating in mainstream schooling.
4-17
Special education schools: Specific schools where all students have disabilities (all students could have the same disability, such as visual impairment, or different disabilities); SEIP: Mainstream schools with specific classes dedicated to students with special needs; and Inclusive education programmes: Mainstream schools that integrate one to five students with special needs into mainstream classes. Only a small fraction of students with special needs are currently in inclusive programmes (~6%). Most attend integrated programmes (~89%), and the rest attend special education schools (~5%). While students do have access to these different schooling options, the quality of the education provided across all options have several shortcomings. Firstly, there has been a shortage of qualified teachers and professional support such as audiologists and occupational therapists. Secondly, while a tailored curriculum for certain special needs groups have been developed (for example, Kemahiran Asas Individu Masalah Penglihatan for blind students, Bahasa Isyarat Komunikasi for deaf students), there is less support for students with learning disabilities such as autism). There are also concerns that these students may be better suited to a more applied and vocational curriculum that better prepares them with life skills than the mainstream academic curricula currently available. Finally, there is a general lack of facilities in mainstream schools such as disabledfriendly facilities, and assistive technological devices such as hearing aids and Braille typing machines.
ones. In implementing these initiatives, the Ministry will collaborate with specialist organisations such as the Southeast Asian Ministers of Education Organisation Regional Centre for Special Education (SEAMEO-SEN).
4-18
also exists within states, at district level. For example, Kelantans and Sarawaks state average composite scores vary from 49% to 75% as compared to states like Johor and Terengganu where the variance is much smaller (Exhibit 4-10). Differences in wealth or urbanisation alone appear insufficient to explain the differences in performance. For example, Selangor and Penang, which have two of the highest household income levels in Malaysia, only produce average performances with significant variance between districts. By contrast, Johor, a state with an average household income level, performs in the top third of all states, and has one of the lowest variances in UPSR student performance. EXHIBIT 4-10
Weak
1 Based on average composite scores of all primary schools within each PPD NOTE: Average composite scores are rounded to the nearest whole number SOURCE: National Key Result Area
Among the more recent efforts launched by the Ministry to improve school performance is the NKRA School Improvement Programme (SIP) launched in 2010. The SIP provides targeted support for schools in Bands 6 and 7, through principal and teacher coaches, and increased the roadmap: Accelerating school monitoring from the PPDs. Additional efforts to tailor support include improvement through states and districts the provisions for Special Award schoolsHigh-Performing Schools Analysis of twenty of the most improved school systems including (HPS) and Cluster Schools (CS) that have been recognised for their Singapore, South Korea, and the UK reveals that successful education outstanding performance. transformations drive change through an effective middle layer. State The success of these measures in improving student learning outcomes success stories such as that of Johor and Terengganu also suggest that strong state and district management practices are key to creating varies significantly between states. As Exhibit 3-22 illustrated, at UPSR, the best performing state, Wilayah Persekutuan, Putrajaya, has widespread impact (see case study on Johor for an illustrative example of effective practices). an average GPS score that is 33% higher than the lowest performing state, Sabah. Similar levels of variance exist at SPM level. This variance
The variance in performance suggests that some states and districts have, through sheer discipline and administrative skill, managed to drive significant improvement across all schools and maintain narrow performance gaps between the best and lower-perfoming schools. The student learning experience that these administrations have managed to create has to be scaled-up from a handful of schools to all schools in the system. High-performing school systems recognise that the only way to do this is by creating a strong middle layernamely the layer of management between the Ministry and the schools. In Malaysias case, this means empowering the JPNs and PPDs.
4-19
4-20
What are the types of practices that rapidly improving or good schools 4. use data aggressively: In Johor and Terengganu, the states believe make a difference? examination data tracking system is used extensively at the school level to inform changes in teaching practice. Within a few days of 1. safeguard and extend teaching and learning time: Good schools each assessment, teachers are able to determine groups of students limit activities that encroach on the regular timetable, for example, by who are at the threshold between grades, particularly those on the not calling teachers out of class for meetings, requiring all teachers verge of a pass grade, or others who are near-misses for achieving to find a replacement in the event they need to leave the school for A grades, for instance. The analysis is further supported through meetings or training sessions, and in some cases, extending the an item analysis, where exam responses are examined in detail to amount of time available for teaching and learning such as through determine the particular type, scope and difficulty of questions that after-school remedial classes for weaker students. One school in are giving students problems. Lessons are then devised to help Sabah, SK Babagon Toki has even set up learning booths that are students practice in the weaker areas. manned by teachers during the daily recess break. Students who visit these booths and complete fun-filled learning activities receive stars, 5. intensify engagement with parents, communities and students: with a prize at the end of each month being awarded to the student Good schools often enlist parents, students and even communities with the most stars. as partners in the learning process. Critically, this engagement is focused on what each party can do to improve learning outcomes. For 2. intensify support for teachers: Among the good practices noted example, some schools provide explicit guidance to parents on what was the provision of extra support to new teachers, for example they can do to help their child: check their homework daily, ensure through the shared teaching of classes with more experienced they spend at least an hour each day on revision, etc. Others also teachers, the creation of a timetabled slot each week for teachers engage parents and students in joint discussions on their goals for the to spend in lesson-planning workshops, and the assigning of year, and then get them to sign an aku janji pledge as a commitment mentors from the pool of more experienced teachers to provide to working towards that goal. on-going coaching and feedback. Good schools also tend to have increased the lesson observations requirement beyond the minimum prescription of twice a year.
4-21
Johors Best Practices -- identifying the right things and doing them Well
Johor is one of the better performing states in Malaysia at the primary level. In 2010, it ranked second in the country, behind WP Putrajaya, on the UPSR examinations. While it dropped in rankings in 2011, the difference between the states that jumped ahead of it was a marginal 0.3 to 2.0 percentage points. Nonetheless, Johor continues to have one of the lowest variances in student performance in UPSR across its PPD. What is impressive is that Johor has made the journey from Bottom 5 to one of the top states in the country in the span of just five years. Johors success can first and foremost be credited to the strength of its leaders at the State and District level, particularly three successive State Education Heads driving its transformation programme. 4. Phased professional development targeted at districts and school leaders. In parallel with the roll out of the Headcount system, the JPN also rolled out a professional development programme targeted at principals, deputy principals and district officers. The programme started with the fundamentals of instructional leadership so that the principals and districts would be equipped to develop solutions to the challenges they were identifying with the Headcount data. The state continued to focus all professional development on the topic of instructional leadership for 2 to 3 years until all school leaders and officers had a strong grasp on the topic, before rolling out a new programme on change leadership. 5. Prescription to ensure a minimum standard of good practices. The State prescribes a number of different programmes to create a certain degree of uniformity in practice. This includes: 1) Plan J, which sets out the number and difficulty level of homework questions for each lesson, differentiated by the students abilities, and 2) a Minimum adequate syllabus that teachers can use for academically weaker students
1. Clarity of shared vision. At the start of Johors reform journey, the JPN leadership started rallying districts together around the share vision of Johor Top 5. This was both simple to understand, and compelling in its level of ambition (as Johor was starting from the bottom 5 in the national examination rankings). Five years later, this shared vision remains on the lips of all officers, principals, teachers and even parents. Without prompting, they would offer this refrain as a 6. differentiated interventions based on performance. This is not only evident at the school level, where streaming and tailored drills are succinct articulation of what the state was constantly striving for. common practices, but also at the system level, where school clusters 2. Prioritisation of programmes to focus on academic outcomes. of different performance bands receive different types of support During the initial roll-out of the Johor Top 5 strategy, there was from the district and state. For example, Band 4 and 5 schools are pressure from stakeholders both within and outside the State coached on improving teaching and learning practices, while Band Education Department to broaden its focus. The JPN leadership 3 schools are coached on improving school management. Within however held firm on the grounds that schools could not afford to schools, each school is required to create at least three differentiated spread themselves too thinly, and that improving academic outcomes tiers of student ability good, average and poor. This manifests as would have a positive knock on effect on the other issues facing the groupings such as Bintang, Sinar and Harapan, for example. Each system (e.g. discipline). This commitment to delivering on a small group applies a differentiated programme, be it in the approach taken handful of priorities remains a hallmark of the Johor story. to teaching and learning in the classroom, or the attention students get from their teachers, or in the intensity and pace of the drills 3. strong performance culture anchored on data. Johor started given to the students. PPDs adopt schools and give more focus to using its online-based performance reporting system (Headcount) underperforming schools in 2006 which tracks data to the student level. The system collects student examination results (down to each subject question) from Johors officials are quick to point out that the system is not doing every state and national assessment. At the school level the principal anything particularly new or difficult. What differentiates it from the will have a performance discussion with the schools teachers other states is the rigour and discipline with which every action is to understand why the students may have failed or succeeded followed through. It has ingrained in its system a performance culture in meeting their targets. Critically, the focus is on identifying the that is centred around data and clear evidence, a strong grasp of appropriate remedial action to support students (for example, extra the notion of differentiated interventions based on ability, and an classes after schools). A similar performance dialogue is then held atmosphere of collaboration in which the stronger districts, schools between the district head and school principals, and the JPN head and teachers help support the weaker ones. and district heads. Rankings are communicated in a timely manner to all districts and schools.
4-22
PPDs will be able to use the NKRA performance bands and school performance against these common KPIs to target resources where they are most needed. At the end of each year, the top five most improved PPDs nationwide will be recognised for their efforts. This new set of KPIs will be piloted in Sabah and Kedah from January 2013 and rolled out nationwide by the end of 2013. The Ministry will continuously monitor their usefulness to informing the school improvement process, and make adjustments as required. The Ministry will also review the current calculation methodology for the NKRA performance bands to determine if further refinements are required.
Wave 2 (2016 to 2020): increasing operational flexibility for JPNs, PPDs and schools
Having strengthened state and district management capabilities and significantly reduced Bands 6 and 7 schools, the Ministry will look into ways to give state, district, and school leadership greater independence. At the state and district level, the Ministry will look into providing these offices with greater operational flexibility over budget allocation and personnel deployment. Further, in line with the roll-out of KSSR and KSSM, the Ministry will change existing regulations to give schools greater flexibility over curriculum timetabling, as long as they are able to deliver the learning and content standards expected.
Gap analysis
Study of data to find root cause of underperformance, e.g. to level of school, subject, teacher and student Action plan and program development
Performance tracking
Providing focused support where best served, e.g. more frequent monitoring in specific subjects identified as problem areas
Clear and targeted plan of action to close achievement gaps, e.g. tailored and administered directly to target groups
Execution Focused resource deployment Execution prioritises meaningful programmess that directly relate to student outcomes and/or identified problem areas
4-23
4-24
The Ministry is at the starting point of its journey to develop an education system capable of producing Malaysians who will be competitive in a globalised, 21st century world. This requires a reconsideration of what student learning means, and a rearticulation of the kinds of skills that the Malaysian education system wants to inculcate in its students. In order to truly transform student learning, change needs to happen at all levelsthe Ministry, states, districts, schools, principals, and teachers. In the initial years of its journey, the Ministry will focus on strengthening existing foundations as well as delivering early results. The Malaysian education system will also evolve from a one-sizefitsall approach to implement contextspecific solutions in order to thrive. As the system improves, the Ministry will roll out more structural reforms to curricular and assessment and award greater operational flexibility to states, districts, and schools.
CHAPTER 5
Teachers and
5-1
Malaysia Education Blueprint 2013 - 2025 Chapter 5 Teachers and School Leaders
5-2
TEACHERS
The Ministry will ensure the delivery of effective student-centred and differentiated teaching and learning in every classroom and elevate teaching to become a profession of choice. The Ministry will achieve this goal by introducing a new Teacher Career Package to fundamentally change the way teachers are selected, developed and rewarded throughout their entire careers. Measures undertaken will include: Raising and enforcing entry standards into teacher training programmes; Improving the effectiveness of pre-service and continuous professional development; and Developing exciting new career pathways that support fast-tracking based on performance and competencies, along with opportunities for redeployment for consistent underperformers.
Barber and Mourshed (2007) How the Worlds Best Performing Systems come out on top.
Quality of teaching
In 2011, researchers from the Higher Education Leadership Academy or Akademi Kepimpinan Pengajian Tinggi (AKEPT) at the MOHE observed 125 lessons in 41 schools across Malaysia. They found that 12% of lessons were delivered at a high standard, utilising many bestpractice pedagogies and 38% met satisfactory standards. However, 50% of the lessons were observed to be delivered unsatisfactorily. Lessons did not sufficiently engage students, relying on a more passive lecture format of content delivery by the teacher. The focus was more on achieving surface-level content understanding for summative assessment purposes, rather than on cultivating higher-order thinking skills. For example, students were more likely to be tested on their ability to recall facts (70% of all lessons observed) than to analyse and interpret data (18%) or synthesise information (15%).
The quality of teachers is the most significant school-based determinant of student outcomes. Seminal research conducted in the state of Tennessee, USA in the mid-1990s showed that when two average, eight-year-old students were given different teachers one high-performing and the other low-performingthe students academic performance diverged by more than 50 percentile points within three years (Exhibit 5-1). Similar results have been found in studies conducted in Dallas (USA), Boston (USA), and England. EXHIBIT 5-1
Impact of teaching quality on student performance
Student performance 100th percentile 90th percentile Two students with same performance 50th percentile
Stu d perf ent wit h orm ing lowteac her
37th percentile
11
Age
SOURCE: Sanders and Rivers Cumulative and residual effects on future student academic achievement (1996)
5-3
There also appears to be differences in perceptions of what constitutes good quality teaching and learning between schools and the JNJK. For example, 63% of schools rated themselves as having Good or Excellent teaching and learning practices, as compared to just 13% by school inspectors (Exhibit 5-2). Combined, these data points suggest that more can be done to build a common understanding of what good teaching looks like, and to prepare teachers to meet that expectation. EXHIBIT 5-2
Effectiveness of teaching and learning practices as assessed by schools and JNJK
Percent of total practices observed (2009-2011)
60
School inspection1 Self-assessment2
In line with international best practices, applicants are selected based on a range of factors including attitude, aptitude for teaching, and personality. The Ministry also sets a minimum academic requirement for entry into IPGs. For example, the requirement for the Bachelor of Education programme or Program Ijazah Sarjana Muda Pendidikan (PISMP) is three distinctions and three credits in the SPM. The Ministry has also recently started prioritising applicants with a minimum of seven distinctions. This prioritisation is producing a fundamental shift in the profile of teacher trainees. In 2010, 93% of PISMP applicants scored below the minimum academic requirement, and only 1% of applicants had at least seven distinctions. In contrast, in 2012, the percentage of applicants scoring below the requirement had dropped significantly to 38%, while the percentage of applicants with at least seven distinctions had risen to 9%. More importantly, the prioritisation effort led to 65% of academic high-performers receiving offers in 2012 as compared to 3% in 2010 (Exhibit 5-4). The Post-graduate Teaching Course or Kursus Perguruan Lepasan Ijazah (KPLI) has also seen a slight improvement in intake standards, from 7% of academic high-performers receiving offers in 2010 to 13% in 2012. These are promising steps towards the practices of top-performing systems like Finland, Singapore, and South Korea where only the top 10-30% of students are accepted into teaching. There are two additional points worth noting. Firstly, there are sometimes insufficient qualified applicants for specific subjects and locations. The Ministry is therefore exploring ways to attract highperforming candidates from a broader range of backgrounds into the teaching profession. Secondly, at least 50% of each new teacher intake is trained in programmes run by IPTAs. Comparable data on the academic results of IPTA teacher trainees was not available.
40
20
0 Excellent
Good
Aspiring
Satisfactory
Poor
Very Poor
1 N = 3,352 for 2009; N = 1,552 for 2010; and N = 5,049 for 2011 2 N = 9,859 for 2009; N = 9,849 for 2010; and N = 7,714 for 2011 (excluding secondary schools) SOURCE: School Inspectorate and Quality Assurance
Selection
The Malaysian system attracts a large number of applicants for its teacher trainee programmes. The applicant-to-trainee ratio is as high as 38 applicants per place, and surpasses that of high-performing education systems like Singapore, South Korea, Finland (Exhibit 5-3). This is promising as it implies that there is strong interest in the profession. EXHIBIT 5-3
Applicant to student ratios for teacher training programmes in Malaysia and other high-performing education systems
Ratio (2010)
38 32
Pre-service training
16 10 5 6 8
KPLI1 IPG
PISMP2
Dip (Ed)
B (Ed) IPTA
South Korea
Singapore
Finland
In 2007, the Ministry raised the minimum pre-service training qualification from a diploma to a bachelors degree for primary teachers, in line with the existing practice for secondary school teachers. The Ministry provided allowances for existing teachers to further their education to deliver on this aspiration. The results are promising. As of 2010, 31% of primary school teachers had at least a Bachelors degree. Despite these gains, the Ministry recognises that there is still room for improvement. In comparison to top-performing education systems, Malaysias pre-service programmes appear to have a limited practical component in which trainees are able to practice their skills in schools under the guidance and supervision of an experienced teacher. For
1 KPLI refers to Kursus Perguruan Lepasan Ijazah, a Post-graduate Teaching Course 2 PISMP refers to Program Ijazah Sarjana Muda Perguruan, a Bachelor of Education programme SOURCE: Ministry of Education (Malaysia); Ministry of Higher Education (Malaysia); Ministry of Education, Science and Technology (South Korea); Ministry of Education (Finland); Ministry of Education (Singapore); Press search
Malaysia Education Blueprint 2013 - 2025 Chapter 5 Teachers and School Leaders
5-4
EXHIBIT 5-4
Academic achievement of PISMP applicants July 2010 intake Number of As in SPM 2009
Academic achievement of PISMP applicants July 2012 intake Number of As in SPM 2011
100% =
119,782
70%
0-2
38%
22%
93%
33%
19%
1% 5% 1% 3%
65%
20%
9% Application Offered
8%
Application
Offered
NOTE: PISMP refers to Program Ijazah Sarjana Muda Perguruan, a Bachelor of Education programme SOURCE: Teacher Education Division, MOE
5-5
example, in the KPLI, approximately 20% of the credit hours are allocated to practicum. In contrast, top-performing teacher education programmes at the National Institute of Education in Singapore and the Melbourne Graduate School of Education in Australia allocate around 40% of the course time to this component.
The aspiration is to raise the percentage of school-based professional development activities, such as peer observations and lesson planning, from its current level of 16% today. This is based on international research which demonstrates that on-site training grounded in what actually happens in the classroom is more effective than offsite training programmes. Focus groups of Malaysian teachers also reported that they find it most useful when their subject head or principal observes them in action, as it enables them to receive direct insight into how they should improve their classroom practices.
Placement
During pre-service training, teachers specialise in a subject known as their option. This is to ensure they have sufficient content knowledge and understanding to teach the subject effectively. The Ministry aims to place teachers by option but is not always able to do so due to unavoidable circumstances. This has led to a situation wherein teachers teach subjects in which they were not specifically trained, and for which they may not be adequately skilled. In 2011, for example, approximately 6,000 primary school Bahasa Malaysia teachers were assigned to teach other subjects as there were more teachers than available positions.
Working conditions
The Ministry examined several dimensions that directly affect the teaching experience: the availability of adequate working spaces for teachers, average class size and student-teacher ratio, total working hours, and types of activities teachers take on. Each of these dimensions will be considered in turn in this section, except for the discussion on the quality of school infrastructure which can be found in Chapter 6.
92% of primary schools and 88% of secondary schools have class sizes of less than 35 students, in line with the current guideline for maximum class size (Exhibit 5-5). This implies that the majority of teachers work with class sizes that are within the targeted threshold, and in schools where the student-teacher ratio is at or below the OECD average of 16:1. Schools with class sizes larger than 35 students tend to be popular, urban schools.
Malaysia Education Blueprint 2013 - 2025 Chapter 5 Teachers and School Leaders
5-6
EXHIBIT 5-5
Breakdown of average student-teacher ratio and class size for primary and secondary schools
x% Distribution of average class size and student-teacher ratio at primary level 2011 N = 7,6561
18.6 23.9 16.8 5.8
Schools with an average class-size of > 35 students
~8%
1.3 0.5 0.2
12.2
9.9
10.6
< 10 3
10-15 6
15-20 8
20-25 10
25-30 13
30-35 15
35-40 19
40-45 20
45-50 23
>50 19
28.8 9.7
~12%
1.7 0.4 0.2
0.2
0.1
< 10 3
10-15 5
15-20 8
20-25 10
25-30 13
30-35 15
35-40 17
40-45 18
45-50 17
>50 14
1 Excludes 163 schools in the system with incomplete data SOURCE: EMIS database
5-7
average hours reported to be as high as 77 hours per week (Universiti Pendidikan Sultan Idris 2011 survey), which would imply a working day of 15 hours. This could reflect a reality wherein some teachers simply work longer hours than others. While total working hours are long, the proportion of time spent teaching in the classroom is relatively low. Based on the Ministrys Education Management Information System (EMIS) database, teachers only spend between 2.4 to 2.9 hours a day on average teaching in the classroom (this does not include time spent on lesson preparation, homework grading, or one-on-one student contact time). This is about 40% lower than the OECD average (Exhibit 5-6). EXHIBIT 5-6
Comparison of teaching hours in Malaysia and other systems
Hours taught per teacher per day (by school timetable)
2009 Malaysia (schools
with >150 students1) Malaysia (schools with <150 students1)
EXHIBIT 5-7
Average starting salaries of teachers in comparison to other professions in Malaysia
Average starting salaries including allowances RM per month (2010) Civil service doctors Civil engineers1 Lawyers1 Civil service teachers2 IT executives1
3,000 2,800 2,750 2,500 2,500 2,500 4,300
Accountants1 HR executives1
Primary school
Secondary school
1 Private sector includes only base salary as allowances are usually provided to reimburse out-of-pocket expenses and do not form a significant portion of compensation 2 Weighted average of starting salaries of graduate teachers based on teacher trainee data, assuming average of approximately RM 2,000 (range of RM1,786 to RM2,510) basic salary and RM 750 in allowances. SOURCE: Human Resource Management Division, Ministry of Education; Public Service Department; JobStreet; Kelly Services; OECD; McKinsey & Company, Closing the Talent Gap (2010)
EXHIBIT 5-8
Mid-tenure salary levels of teachers in Malaysia and peer systems
Average salary of a 15-year tenured teacher Percent of GDP per capita (2009) S. Korea Chile Japan Singapore1 Finland Malaysia2 Thailand U.S. Indonesia Vietnam
48 46 97 100 113 109 154 149 148 196
1 Based on average number of periods taught per teacher (excluding teachers who have been posted to other departments such as IPNs or PPDs by primary and secondary schools in 2011. Each period consists of 30 minutes and 40 minutes respectively for primary and secondary schools SOURCE: EMIS database (2011); OECD (2009)
It appears that administrative duties are taking up a larger portion of teacher time (anywhere from 15% to 30% depending on the survey) than would be desired. During the National Dialogue, teachers consistently raised concerns that administrative paperwork reduced their ability to focus on teaching and learning. Given the large pool of teachers and the relatively low proportion of their time spent on classroom teaching, there appears to be an opportunity to optimise how teachers spend their time.
OECD = 120
1 Singapore based on 2007 data 2 Malaysia based on 2011 data with monthly salary of RM3,434 as an average for teacher with tenure of 15 years and grade DG44 with allowances of RM400 for housing, RM400 for remuneration allowance and RM100-300 for cost of living based on location SOURCE: Human Resource Management Division, Ministry of Education; Public Service Department; JobStreet; Kelly Services; OECD; McKinsey & Company, Closing the Talent Gap (2010)
Malaysia Education Blueprint 2013 - 2025 Chapter 5 Teachers and School Leaders
5-8
role) in 25 years. Nonetheless, this progression is still primarily tenurebased which may reduce incentives for teachers to constantly develop themselves. Further, a 25 year promotion timeframe is still relatively long and will not address the current challenge wherein there are insufficient senior teachers to coach new teachers as they enter the system. 58% of teachers are still at the lowest grade level of DG41 or DG29, as compared to 1.2% at DG52 or DGA34 (Exhibit 5-9). Another challenge to effective career progression is that the primary instrument used in teacher evaluations, the Annual Performance Report or Laporan Nilaian Prestasi Tahunan (LNPT) is not tied to specific teaching competencies, such as subject knowledge and the mastery of a range of teaching strategies. As the LNPT is the same instrument used for all civil servants, its evaluation dimensions are relatively generic and do not lend themselves well to performance differentiation. In a 2010 sampling of approximately 48,000 teachers, more than 60% of respondents were graded above 90%, while a further 38% scored between 70% and 90%. 2% of respondents were graded below 70%. This lack of differentiation does not allow the Ministry to provide targeted support to those who need it. EXHIBIT 5-9
Distribution of teachers by grade level
Percentage of teachers, 2012
DGA34, DG 52
JUSA
DGA38, DG54
0.01% 0.2%
DGA32, DG44
58%
To counter this shortfall, the Ministry has developed other instruments to support the evaluation process. However, this solution has inadvertently created some confusion among teachers as to which dimension or criteria really matter. Teachers have also raised concerns that this duplication becomes a waste of time and resources.
5-9
Lesson preparation
II
Sometimes gives
contribution to assigned tasks
III
Unable to prepare
special task plan
IV Professional Contributions
Prepares full
Under the new evaluation instrument (see Exhibit 5-10), it is proposed that ~60% be based on the teachers effectiveness in teaching students. This will be determined both by observations of the teacher in the classroom, as well as the student outcomes of the classes the teacher works with. The Ministry also proposes using more than one evaluator for each teacher, including a peer evaluator, and creating an appeals process for teachers who disagree with their evaluation. The objective is to create an approach that ensures greater consistency and objectivity across evaluations and to instil a stronger performance culture in schools.
Malaysia Education Blueprint 2013 - 2025 Chapter 5 Teachers and School Leaders
5-10
dimensions of curriculum, assessment, and pedagogy. Thirdly, the SISC+ will focus on providing school-based coaching to teachers in lower band schools (Bands 5, 6, and 7). The new SISC+ role will be rolled out as part of the broader District Transformation Programme discussed in Chapter 4. The Ministry also remains committed to ensuring that 60% of primary school teachers and 90% of secondary school teachers are graduates by 2015. The Ministry will therefore also continue to provide support for teachers to further their education.
Wave 2 of the new Teacher Career Package will build on the Wave 1 focus on raising standards by improving the quality of pre-service training programmes and ensuring that only the best graduates are Two initiatives will be launched in January 2013 to give teachers a taste recruited into the teaching profession. It will also see the roll-out of of the new professional development programmes on the horizon. The enhanced career pathways that offer different specialties for teachers first is an e-Guru video library of exemplary teaching. This will enable depending on their interests, as well as faster progression for highteachers to concretely visualise good classroom skills, so that they can performing teachers and redeployment options for consistently underimplement these in their own classrooms. These videos can also be performing teachers. It is worth noting that the groundwork for all of used during training and coaching sessions on pedagogical skills. these reforms will need to begin during Wave 1, to allow for immediate implementation in 2016. The second initiative is an expansion of the School Improvement Specialist Coaches (SISC+) teacher coaching programme first Further developing of pre-service training and recruitment systems introduced under GTP 1.0. Specifically, three changes will be made. The Ministry will review the pre-service teacher training curriculum in Firstly, the SISC+ will become full-time positions to allow them to IPGs to ensure that teachers are being adequately prepared to teach the work with greater frequency with more teachers. Secondly, the SISC+ 21st Century Skills desired of Malaysias students (refer to Chapter 4 will now be responsible for coaching along the three interlinked
5-11
for more information on the changes envisioned to curriculum and assessment). It will also discuss with MOHE incorporating similar curriculum in IPTAs. Further the Ministry will improve the consistency and quality of teachers practicum experience in terms of increasing time spent on practicum training and engaging experienced teachers with strong mentoring skills to supervise trainees. This measure will enable teachers to increase their effectiveness in the classroom from day one.
The Ministry will also launch a transition scheme for teachers who perform poorly for three consecutive years despite the provision of intensive support. The Ministry recognises that retaining such teachers in teaching roles does a disservice to them as they will lack opportunities for advancement. Their future prospects would be brighter if they were able to find a role more suited to their particular talents. The Ministry is committed to providing teachers with these options, and ensuring they receive sufficient support to make the transition. Under this scheme, the Ministry will redeploy teachers to other functions within the school such as administration, discipline management, or co-curricular management (Exhibit 5-12). The Ministry will also explore different retraining options to ensure that teachers are set up for success in their new chosen role. EXHIBIT 5-12
Proposed pathway for consistent underperformers
What happens to underperforming teachers? Check point 1 Check point 2 Check point 3 Check point 4
Unable to master basic competencies Student outcomes constantly decline/ show no improvements
Intensive support (additional Continue to get coaching coaching and development guidance and (principals and coaches) mentoring)
Postsupport evaluation
Professional upskilling
Quickly master
competencies
Strong
High performing teacher
years
Masters
Year 0-8
Year 9-16
Moderate
Normal performing teacher
DG54
years
Malaysia Education Blueprint 2013 - 2025 Chapter 5 Teachers and School Leaders
5-12
SCHOOl lEADERS
The Ministry will ensure that every school, regardless of location and performance level, will have a high-quality principal and supporting leadership team to provide instructional leadership and drive overall school performance. The Ministry will achieve this goal by introducing a new career package to enhance the way principals are selected, developed and rewarded. Measures undertaken will include: Refining and clarifying the selection criteria; Building a pool of potential future school leaders; Improving preparatory and continuous professional development; and Introducing a performance and competencies based performance management approach.
Research also shows that top performing school systems are moving away from the idea of one heroic leader to one of distributed leadership where assistant principals and other members of middle management such as subject heads have a greater share in decisionmaking in schools. Due to limited system data on assistant principals and subject heads, the diagnostic has focused solely on the role of the principal (encompassing both Pengetua and Guru Besar). Nonetheless, the proposed roadmap forward takes a more expansive view of school leadership to encompass principals, assistant principals and other teachers in a school leadership position.
Selection of principals
A rigorous, clear, and transparent principal selection process is critical for building and sustaining effective schools. As with the promotion of teachers, the selection criteria for new principals in Malaysia are more linked to tenure than competencies. Selection is based primarily on the achievement of a minimum civil service grade, which in turn, is linked to length of service. This presents a clear opportunity to enhance the professional criteria required for selection. Another challenge is the length of the current selection process. As many parties are involved at the district, state and federal level, the end-to-end process from identification of a suitable candidate to a formal appointment can take up to a year. This situation is exacerbated by the historical existence of two schemes: one for non-graduates in primary schools and one for graduates in secondary schools. The Ministrys move to raise minimum qualifications (as discussed in the section on teachers) has led to more and more graduate teachers serving in primary schools. The principal post in primary schools is, however, still designated for non-graduates, which eliminates qualified, graduate primary school teachers from consideration.
Good teachers alone are not enough. The international evidence clearly shows that strong school leadership is also required to produce significant improvement in student achievement. In high-performing school systems, principals are more than just administrative leaders they are instructional leaders who focus on improving the quality of teaching and learning in their schools. Similar to high-performing teachers, the impact of an effective principal is significant. Research shows that replacing an average principal with an outstanding one can improve outcomes by up to 20 percentile points (Exhibit 5-13). EXHIBIT 5-13
Relationship between principal performance and student achievement
Percentile1 Student achievement in school
75 70 65 60 55 50 45 40 40 45 50 55 60 65 70 75 80 85 90 95 100
Leadership in school Average principal High-performing principal Outstanding principal
Replacing an average principal with an outstanding principal focused on instructional rather than administrative leadership could increase student achievement by over 20 percentile points
1 For leadership and student achievement, percentile implies the relative placement within the distribution SOURCE: A meta-analysis of 69 studies of school leadership conducted between 1978 and 2001, involving an estimated 14,000 teachers and 1.4mn students, Marzano, Robert J., Timothy Waters, and Brian A. McNulty (2005)
5-13
in their length of service (such as in Singapore, and Englands Future Leaders programme). As a result, Malaysias principals are generally appointed later in their tenure than their counterparts in other systems (Exhibit 5-15). EXHIBIT 5-14
Distribution of principals in Malaysia by age
Percent (2011) N = 9,690
Retiring in the next 5 years
42% 38%
15%
0% Age n/a
0% < 35
1% 35-39
EXHIBIT 5-15
Average tenure of principal at appointment for Malaysia and peers
Years of teaching prior to appointment
23 23 20 20 19 15 13 10
englands Future leaders programme: Identifying and developing school leaders early
The Future Leaders programme is a three-year leadership development programme that aims to fast-track high-performing teachers into school leadership roles such as senior teacher, assistant principal, and principal within four years. In particular, it aims to develop school leaders who are committed to working in schools in the most disadvantaged areas around the country (termed challenging schools). Candidates are selected following a rigorous assessment and interview process that evaluates their thinking, leadership, and interpersonal skills. They are then put through a three-year programme that starts with a summer of intensive leadership training, followed by a year of residency in a challenging school, under the guidance of a mentor principal. Thereafter, candidates are supported in applying for a full-time school leadership position. If successfuland 95% of candidates arethen the programme will continue to provide one-on-one coaching and off-site training over a further period of two years as the candidates carry out their roles in school leadership. The expectation of the programme is that it is possible to transition from a teacher to a principal within a period of four years, with this intensity of training and support. The programme started in 2006 with 20 candidates. In just 6 years, the programme has grown over tenfold. Collectively, there are now 350 Future Leader graduates working in 200 schools across the country, of which 95% are in senior school leadership positions and 24 are full principals.
Malaysia South Korea Indonesia Mexico Hong Kong U.S. Singapore Finland
SOURCE: Ministry of Education; TALIS Survey; Commonwealth Department of Education, Science and Technology; Press search
The exception to this practice is in rural schools, where the difficulty in placing principals has led to a high occurrence of teachers being promoted at a younger age. This practice has its pros and cons. On one hand, it allows for the promotion of young talent who can serve for many more years until retirement. On the other hand, those promoted may be unprepared for the responsibilities of leadership.
Malaysia Education Blueprint 2013 - 2025 Chapter 5 Teachers and School Leaders
5-14
Reviews indicate that these training programmes are effective. For example, research conducted by Universiti Malaya and Universiti Pendidikan Sultan Idris has shown that newly-appointed principals who have undergone NPQEL training are better prepared for their duties compared to those who enter without such training. Attendance of these programmes by principals is low. Reviewed collectively, approximately 55% of current principals have not participated in either the KKPP or NPQEL training programmes (Exhibit 5-16). Further, only a quarter of all NPQEL graduates since 1999 have actually been appointed as principals (Exhibit 5-17), potentially due to the fact that participation in the programme is neither a prerequisite for promotion nor a fast-track opportunity. EXHIBIT 5-16
Participation rates of existing principals in preparatory or induction training for principalship
Percent of principals (2010)
9,436
154
2%
598
6%
303
3%
3,146
33%
5,235
100% 55%
Total principals
N/A1
Appointed pre-1998
NPQEL/ NPQH2
KKPP
No training
1 Data on principals year of appointment not available 2 Includes 65 principals who took both NPQEL and KKPP SOURCE: Institut Aminuddin Baki
EXHIBIT 5-17
Position of graduates who have completed the principal preparatory training course (NPQH / NPQEL)
Percent of NPQEL graduates (1999-2010) 1,2641 303 24% 412 33% 100% 549
43%
Total participants
Principal
Remained as teachers3
1 Not including 66 NPQEL graudates that have retired 2 Includes Penolong Kanan Akademik, Penolong Kanan Hal Ehwal Murid, Penolong Kanan Kokurikulum, Penyelia Petang and Penyelia Tingkatan 6 3 May include teachers who have other leadership positions of subject head and department head SOURCE: Institut Aminuddin Baki
5-15
EXHIBIT 5-18
Perception of principals on most important skills required
Q: What do you think are the most important skills required to be a good principal? (choose 3) Percent of respondents agreeing to each dimension N = 570 79 Planning and administration Improving curriculum Coaching and supporting teachers and other staff Leading assessment of school performance Budgeting Engaging parents and the community Managing student and school security Planning and teaching the curriculum Understanding and using data Managing and setting policies for behavior of students Managing and evaluating teachers Managing your own time and work life balance
SOURCE: Education System Review Principal survey 2012
55 50 23 23 13 12 9 9 8 8 3
Wave 1 will focus on raising standards, improving support systems, and laying the foundation for creating a large pool of highlycompetent leaders in all schools in Malaysia. Wave 2 will see the rollout of new career pathways and progression schemes, and support the transition towards a distributed leadership model involving assistant principals and subject heads. Wave 3 will see greater empowerment of all school leaders as the system moves towards a model of school-based management.
Malaysia Education Blueprint 2013 - 2025 Chapter 5 Teachers and School Leaders
5-16
Establishing a principal residency programme and enhancing the existing immersion programme
The Ministry will establish a principal residency programme and enhance the existing immersion programme to support newlyappointed principals in their transition so they are able to act effectively from the beginning of their tenure. The former is an onboarding programme where the incoming principal spends one month with the outgoing principal at the school in question. This period not only allows the new principal to acclimatise to the school, but also provides them with direct mentoring from an experienced principal. The immersion programme, on the other hand, is a formalisation of the voluntary mentoring programmes many state-based Majlis Pengetua Cemerlang already run. Here, principals will receive seven days or 42 hours of direct coaching and mentoring from an experienced principal or School Improvement Partner (SiPartner+) (more information on the SiPartner+ coaching programme can be found in Chapter 4).
via activities such as mentorship, and how effectively the principal manages relationships with stakeholders. As with the teacher instrument, the dimensions will remain the same throughout the principals career. However, the competencies expected will differ as they rise through three levels: Competent, Excellent, and Expert. The Ministry proposes evaluating principals on both their individual competencies as well as the impact they have on their schools. As such, their final score will be a composite of their individual performance score plus the school improvement score. This new instrument will likely replace the LNPT component of the New Deal reward.
Wave 2 (2016 to 2020): Elevating the profession and moving towards distributed leadership
Wave 2 of the new Principal Career Package will see further enhancements to the selection and enhancement processes, and a single scheme for primary and secondary principals. The Ministry will also roll out fast-track and transition options for principals, expand capability building support to assistant principals and subject heads, as well as increase decision-making autonomy for principals based on performance.
Vision and Purpose Quality Focus Reasoning Proactive 1. 2. Achievement Orientation Instructional Planning & Development Knowledge Sharing Curriculum Focus Supervisor
Leadership
Professional Values
1. 2. 3. 4.
Contribution
External Relation
3. 4. 5.
Problem Solving Managing Change Informed Decision Making Managing School Improvement Creativity & Innovation
Leadership will be the core dimension of the new instrument and contribute to 70% of the overall weightage. It will include key aspects of school leadership such as instructional leadership and people leadership. The other dimensions will encompass attributes such as personal integrity, individual contribution to the broader profession
5-17
Malaysia Education Blueprint 2013 - 2025 Chapter 5 Teachers and School Leaders
5-18
No education system can succeed without the dedication and commitment of its teachers and school leaders. No true reform can occur without taking the needs of teachers and principals into serious consideration, and looking for ways to nurture and sustain excellence. While it is of crucial importance to provide existing teachers and school leaders with greater resources in the form of more support and professional development, and better career pathways, it is also important to make teaching a profession that is vibrant, self-sustaining, and rewarding, so that it will attract and retain the very best talent that Malaysia has to offer.
CHAPTER 6
Ministry
6-1
6. Ministry transformation
The Ministry assumes a key role in the journey of the Malaysian education system, providing leadership, policy direction, and the necessary support wherever needed. As it upholds the hopes and aspirations of the rakyat and faces the challenges ahead, the Ministry will need to transform the way it operates and organises itself to bridge the gap between policy formulation and delivery capacity and to ensure optimal return on investments. This is particularly true for two of the most capital-intensive investments managed by the Ministry: school infrastructure and ICT.
The system aspirations for improved access, quality, equity, unity, and efficiency are ambitious, and necessary. Meeting these aspirations will require the Ministry itself to transform the way it operates. This transformation will centre on two key areas. Firstly, the Ministry will strengthen its delivery systems to ensure better implementation of policies. This will require redefining the roles and functions of JPNs and PPDs, and empowering them with greater decision-making power, operational flexibility and accountability so that they can devise and deliver tailored solutions for schools. Having capable, committed individuals in place at all levels of the organisation is also critical to successfully driving this process. The Ministry will therefore continuously improve the way it attracts, develops, and retains the talent required for these changes. This will cut across the entire organisation, from education-related functions such as curriculum development and teacher education, to managerial functions such as planning for human capital development and infrastructure. Secondly, the Ministry will improve resource productivity by focusing on its core concern of student outcomes, allocating resources to those initiatives with high ROI. The goal is to provide faster delivery with greater consistency and reliability on the initiatives that drive critical outcomes. This not only requires the ability to rapidly redeploy existing funds to priorities for reform, but also fundamentally changes the way the Ministry allocates resources, and monitors its projects and services. These changes will be further fleshed out in this chapter in two of the most capital-intensive investments managed by the Ministry: school infrastructure and ICT. While focusing on its core business, the Ministry will also work more closely with internal and external stakeholders such as other ministries and PIBGs, leveraging each partys competitive advantages to deliver better results with fewer resources.
6-2
The Ministry assumes several different roles within the education system: at the federal level, it is a policymaker and macro-level implementation planner; at the intermediary middle layer of the states and districts, it is responsible for cascading administrative, instructional, and financial policies and programmes from the federal administration (Head Office) to all schools. To achieve its many roles, the Ministry is a massive operational delivery agency. It employs approximately 6,800 officials and support staff at the federal level, almost 6,400 at the state level, and a further 6,000 at the district level. This is in addition to approximately 420,000 principals and teachers in schools, and more than 13,100 officials and support staff in the IPGs, IABs, and matriculation colleges.
total number of programmes. While good schools are typically able to manage this demand, weaker schools struggle, both in terms of handling the increased workload, as well as in the dilution to their focus on teaching and learning that this brings; Limited use of data to inform decision-making: The Ministry has invested substantially in data collection and management systems over the past few decades. However, data-driven decisionmaking is still not as widespread or effective as desired. In a 2011 survey conducted by Universiti Putra Malaysia of over 800 officers, principals, and teachers, the respondents raised a number of concerns, ranging from the user-friendliness of the databases (due to, for example, poor connection speeds and complexity of the user interface) to the duplication of requests for identical data made by different divisions across the federal, state and district levels;
Lack of coordination across key divisions creating overlaps or gaps in activities: In some instances, The UNESCO review identified specific weaknesses in the policyimplementation and planning is hampered by siloed practices making and implementation process that need to be addressed: within the Ministry. For example, 2011 saw the launch of the new KSSR by BPK, with a new set of content and learning standards. In A large number of programmes leading to a lack of focus parallel, LP launched a new school-based assessment system that for schools: Schools report that they are expected to manage had its own set of performance standards based on the content a very large number of programmes in any one yearin some standards of KSSR. In the first year, the BPK and LP training districts the total can exceed 100encompassing both academic sessions were not conducted together, leading to initial confusion and non-academic areas (Exhibit 6-1). Some of these programmes amongst teachers regarding how these different standards were are legacy programmes carried over from previous years, while related. Although subsequent training has seen better coordination others are new. In 2011 alone, the Ministry issued about 30 circulars between BPK and LP, upfront collaboration remains an area for on programme additions and adjustments. Additional directives improvement; and were also issued at the JPN and PPD levels, potentially tripling the
6-3
EXHIBIT 6-1
Nilam 1Malaysia Reading Camp LINUS PLBS / PBS SMART PLANT SMART Prayers Camp TASMIK Class MBMMBI PPSMI PROTIM School Improvement Programme 1 Student 1 Sport 1Malaysia Run 1Malaysia Grassroots Camp Identify the Talent TID Programme MSSM SJK(C) Bahasa Malaysia Campaign Competition Uniformed Body, Club and Association, Sport and Game Syiar Islam Development Programme
Excel Programme Strengthening Pedagogy SAGA TELT 200m Programme Final Acceleration Programme Answer for Success UPSR Motivation Camp SJK(C) Success in UPSR Programme SJK(C) Professional Learning Community (PLC) TORA TORA Teaching & Learning for Teachers MSSN Hockey Talent Camp Language Village MSSD Integrated Uniform Unit Camp
ELITE Programme Emerald Programme Al-Fatah Programme Big Brother/Sister Programme Mentor-Mentee Programme Excellent Student Award Motivational Programme (UPSR, PMR, SPM, STPM) Techniques to answer questions / marking scheme UPSR Clinic Planned Revision Programme Junior teachers SPM / PMR Clinic Enzyme-making Programme Gardening Programme School annual sports Project Boom 1 Teacher 1 Co-curriculum SERASI Programme LESTARI Programme KEKAS Programme
Monitoring focused on process rather than outcomes, resulting in weak consequence management and follow-through: All programmes designed at the federal, state, and district levels require close tracking to ensure effective implementation. However, most tracking measures are processbased (for example, the percentage of schools that have conducted a certain training programme), rather than outcome-based (for instance, the proportion of teachers that demonstrate competency in a given area following training). Further, these outcomes are not always explicitly linked to improvement in student performance. This focus on process rather than outcomes reduces the ability of school and system leaders to resolve why certain programmes may not be yielding the impact expected, or how they should be adjusted to better contextualise the programme to the needs of schools.
The Ministry is well aware of these issues and a number of initiatives are already in place to address them. These efforts are beginning to bear fruit, as the implementation of more recent programmes such as LINUS are cited as examples of successful programme implementation.
6-4
EXHIBIT 6-2
Ministry1 6,800
IPG
8,000
JPN2 6,400
IAB
800
PPD 6,000
1 Does not include staff who are pursuing studies, on various types of leave, and budgeted positions for new schools 2 JPN headcount includes approximately 2,200 BTPN officers stationed in state offices SOURCE: Human Resource Management Division, Ministry of Education
The Ministrys large Head Office, consisting of 36 divisions, is the legacy of a highly centralised education system. Multiple divisions are often involved in key day-to-day processes such as teacher recruitment and placement, and development planning. While this is the natural consequence of a system as complex as the education system, this has also given rise to process inefficiency. For example, teacher recruitment and placement currently involves at least six different divisions at any one time, each of which is responsible for a different part of the process (Exhibit 6-3). The difficulty with this arrangement is that each division is optimising for a slightly different outcome, and that there is no single division responsible for ensuring that the different objectives are drawn together. The result is that the Ministry struggles with mismatches in the supply and demand of teachers, though each division has delivered precisely on its requirements.
EXHIBIT 6-3
Teacher recruitment and placement process
Activities
BPPDP
Optimises for
estimating future requirement closing gaps in supply and demand of teachers select the best candidates suited for the teaching profession (within limits of specified option) filling up available seats and maximising graduation rates selecting the most suitable graduates for the job matching supply of teachers to demand
Forecast demand of teachers by comparing Estimate no. of training places required Compile candidate information Conduct pre-screening and conduct
candidate interviews with current teacher stock
BPKP1 / BPG
IPTA / IPG
teachers with relevant knowledge and skills and IPTA to SPP for interview (BPSM) Interviews new graduates from teacher training programmes (SPP) Allocate names of successful candidates (from SPP) to BPSH for placement (BPSM) Issue letters of appointment and/or placement of teachers to JPNs and PPDs (BPSM)
Reviews needs by each state Allocate teachers based on preference Post teachers to schools based on needs
indicated by JPN
1 BPKP,a unit of MOHE, is responsible for screening candidates for the teacher training programmes run by IPTAs. BPG is responsible for screening candidates for the programmes run by IPGs
6-5
also realign its organisation structure with these improved processes. A number of key objectives guided the development of a model for the future state of the Ministry through to 2025. These were the following: Establishing clear priorities. The Ministry will articulate a clear sense of direction both for itself and the overall education system. This will provide Ministry initiatives with a more coherent longterm focus and instill greater confidence in the education system among stakeholders;
Establishing a nimble, responsive organisation. The Ministry must be able to recognise, diagnose and solve problems purposefully. This will require the design and realignment of the Ministrys organisational structure and business processes. It will also mean investing deeply in building the capabilities of every Ministry official to enable it to become a learning organisation, capable of continuous improvement. Achieving these changes will enable the Ministry to better carry out its mission in a more costeffective manner; and Increasing accountability for system performance. The Ministry will move from a predominantly administrative role to one focused on improving system performance. It will ensure that every programme undertaken is linked to clear student outcome targets to ensure that all activity contributes to the systems improvement.
In Wave 1, the Ministry will develop a proposal and secure the approval of the Public Service Department or Jabatan Perkhidmatan Awam (JPA) on how the functions and structure of the federal, state, and district offices will be realigned. During this planning phase, the Ministry will also implement a few interim measures to Thirdly, there is detailed, continuous performance tracking down strengthen the capacities of the JPNs and PPDs. Wave 2 will see to the individual student level. There are also regular performance the commencement of the full-scale reorganisation, including the dialogues between the school teachers and their designated streamlining and strengthening of core functions at the federal level. FasiLINUS, the FasiLINUS and the district leaders, and so forth. This process will be completed by the end of Wave 2. Wave 3 will see greater decentralisation of the system, as schools receive greater decision-making rights and take on increased accountability for While the federal level was designed for top-down policy making, their performance. With the completion of the transformation, the JPNs and PPDs were historically conceived as an administrative arm of Ministrys structure will be fundamentally changed (Exhibit 6-4). the Head Office. This explains both their smaller size and the weighting EXHIBIT 6-4 towards support staff. As the needs of schools have evolved, however, so too has the scope of activities expected of JPNs and PPDs. As the Officers Proposed transformation of Ministry structure closest Ministry entity to the frontline of schools, PPDs in particular Support staff are expected to be very hands-on, providing direct support to schools CURRENT FUTURE and managing their performance. The challenge is that this change in role expectations has not been followed by a change in resourcing. For example, there is a real shortage of coaches who can support principals and teachers. In Selangor, just two principal coaches support 900 schools in the state. Unsurprisingly, these coaches are only able to see a third of schools each year at best, and each visit is limited to one day at most.
Federal (Head Office) State (JPNs) District (PPDs)
6-6
EXHIBIT 6-5
Current and future roles of the levels within the Ministry of the layers within the ministry Current and future roles
Current Planning & Policy Policy Development Programme Development Delivery Planning Delivery Provision Evaluation & Feedback School Network & Delivery Coordination Provision Federal State District Policy Development Programme Development Delivery Planning Delivery Provision Evaluation & Feedback School Future Planning & Policy Federal State District Network & Delivery Coordination Provision
Similar functions. JPN and PPD structures and roles are mirrors of MOE Overlapping functions. Overlap of functions in multiple levels Generalised responsibilities. Lack of specialisation within various functions
State as coordinator and administrator. JPN will assume more coordination, procurement and administration work from PPD District as support partner and monitor. No direct intervention to school from Head Office and JPN; PPD to have greater decision-making power, and to be the main coaching and support partner to principals and teachers Greater school based management for schools that meet minimum performance criteria
Wave 1 (2013 to 2015): redefining roles and strengthening JPNs and PPds
The complexity and breadth of the upcoming transformation requires a fundamental improvement in the Ministrys capacity and capability to implement policies and programmes. Wave 1 will therefore need to combine long-range planning on what the end-state structure and functions should look like, and short-term measures to bolster the work of the PPDs, which are responsible for accelerating school improvement through systematic, district-led initiatives.
6-7
Federal: The Head Office will retain its functions of policy-setting and macro-planning; States: JPNs will focus on coordination and delivery planning, providing the vital link between policy development and on-theground implementation. They will customise implementation of programmes and initiatives based on the different needs and segmentation of districts within their state. They will be responsible for monitoring the progress of each PPD and encouraging collaboration and sharing of best practices across districts. Additionally, they will manage stakeholders at the federal level and within the state to coordinate resources in order to have greater impact. Districts: In line with the District Transformation Programme, PPDs will act as support partner and monitors to schools. Critically, this requires that PPDs have the capability to analyse school data, diagnose underlying problems, and design differentiated support for schools. PPDs will also assist schools in engaging parents and the broader community to maximise the impact of delivery provision. Most importantly, PPDs will be the primary communication channel to schools, integrating all directives from the federal or state offices and reducing bureaucratic confusion and gridlock. The Ministry will streamline and clarify decision-making rights between the federal, state, district, and school levels based on these new roles and responsibilities. This will include granting JPNs and PPDs greater decision-making rights in selected areas such as principal deployment (Exhibit 6-6). For example, previously, all requests for transfers of principals required final approval at the federal level. Under the new system, PPDs will be allowed to approve transfers within a district and JPNs may approve in-state transfers across districts, while the Head Office will retain the right to approve transfers between states. These enhanced decision-making rights will be balanced by greater accountability at the JPN and PPD level for performance to ensure delivery of targets. EXHIBIT 6-6
Example of realigned decision rights after Wave 1
Decision Authority Key Decision Principal Deployment Teacher Deployment Federal Across States (All Grades) Across States (All Grades including GCs) Across States JPN Across Districts (All Grades) Across Districts (All Grades including GCs) Across Districts PPD Within District (All Grades) Within District (All Grades including GCs) Within District
enhancing performance management and capability building for all JPN and PPd officers
To help JPN and PPD officers adjust to these enhanced functions, the Ministry will clearly articulate expectations on how the day-today activities of these offices and officers will change. For example, to reflect their shift from a more administrative role towards more planning and coordination, JPN Directors will be expected to spend 20% of their time on planning activities such as setting clear goals for their districts, 30% on coordination, 30% on monitoring and troubleshooting, and only 20% on administrative duties. These priorities will be cascaded appropriately throughout the organisation across all levels. PPDs will also receive similar guidance for their shift towards supporting and sharing best practices with schools.
Across States
Across Districts
Within District
6-8
These changes will be supported by a new performance evaluation process linked to achievement of key results and required competencies. This evaluation system will be cascaded at every level throughout JPNs and PPDs. As an example of the new performance measures, JPN and PPD leaders will be evaluated based on the performance of their state or district against a set of pre-agreed targets and their demonstrated leadership competencies. These targets will be customised to account for the different starting points and conditions in each state and district. Comparable processes will be put in place for all officers. To help officers and support staff meet these new competencies and targets, the Ministry is committed to providing an improved set of CPD programmes. It may also mean including sponsorship or loans for Ministry officers to obtain bachelors, masters, and doctoral degrees, where appropriate.
control processes (LP and JNJK) of the Ministry. One measure being considered for these divisions is the delegation of greater decisionmaking power by setting them up as independent bodies or centres of excellence. Once these divisions have been strengthened, the Ministry will turn its attention to other divisions such as the Technical and Vocational Education Division or Bahagian Pendidikan Teknik dan Vokasional (BPTV) and Special Education Division or Bahagian Pendidikan Khas (BPKhas) that will need to be further strengthened to deliver the Blueprint initiatives under their jurisdiction.
reconciling data collection and management systems to establish a solid platform for decision-making
The Ministry will link system data (covering both operations and financial data) to obtain clearer, timelier insight into performance. Currently, financial and operational data are not linked and remain scattered across multiple platforms, such as the Modified Budgeting System (MBS), EMIS, and e-Procurement (e-Perolehan). Creating a single, integrated dashboard will provide the Ministry with the relevant, timely information required to enable quick analyses of performance along key measures down to the level of individual schools. The Ministry will use 1BestariNet as its central platform for consolidating all data. This will entail identifying the key datasets (at the student, school, and system levels) that the system leaders require in making critical decisions, assessing the present databases ability to meet these requirements and augmenting them as need be, and training database staff to ensure that they are capable of providing the required data entry and data synthesis services. The Ministry will also agree with key stakeholders on a unified method for distributing information on a regular basis. The goal is to ensure easy and timely access to data to inform decision-making at all levels.
6-9
The Ministry will also prioritise the ongoing development of core EXHIBIT 6-7 managerial and administrative functions within the organisation, such as Finance, ICT, Development and Procurement. This includes determining High level overview of proposed future role demarcation the extent of duplication across these core functions and identifying opportunities for streamlining, or even restructuring. This will provide MOE a strong foundation for ongoing initiatives to improve organisational Finance, HC, Procurement effectiveness and resource productivity, as detailed in the subsequent Curriculum School Management & Admininstration sections in this chapter. Critically, the Ministry will also look into Planner & Coordinator Shared Service Centre School Administration ways of breaking down the present silos so that there is greater cross Monitor curriculum Coordinate/provide training Centralised administration J function (academic and coand resources to upskill functionality and coordination in the planning and implementation P curricular) roll-out and PPD officers process. N pedagogy quality in state
Coordinate coaching resources across districts Teacher Support Provide coaching and mentoring support to teachers in terms of content and pedagogy skills
Principal Support Provide school improvement support to schools. Identify, codify, and share best practices within districts Create collaboration across schools
Basic Clerical Basic clerical functions such as data input, leveraging 1BestariNet as the platform
6-10
resourCe ProduCTiviTy
The Ministry will ensure that it maximises the student outcomes from every ringgit. This will be accomplished through a shift in the way the Ministry evaluates, allocates resources, and monitors its programmes and initiatives. The focus will be on results: priority will be accorded to programmes and initiatives that will have a substantial impact on student outcomes. Measures undertaken will include: Linking every programme to clear student outcomes and rationalising low-impact programmes to reallocate Ministry resources to the programmes that have the highest impact; Developing more strategic financial management and procurement within the Ministry, including outcome-based budgeting; and Upskilling relevant staff in critical competencies such as value management.
EXHIBIT 6-8
Ministry operating education budget vs. actual expenditure
RM million (2006-2010)
Budget Actual spend
14,000 12,000 10,000 8,000 6,000 4,000 2,000 0 2006 % surplus/ (10.6) (deficit)1 07 (18.3) 08 (4.8) 09 (5.4) 2010 (10.7) 10.7%
1 Computed as surplus or deficit divided by budget allocated SOURCE: World Bank Public Expenditure Report 2011
As highlighted in Chapter 3, the Government is highly committed to education. Basic education expenditure for the Ministry was RM37 billion (in terms of the operating and development expenditure) in 2011. This is the single largest budgetary item, representing 16% of the total 2011 federal budget. This also excludes the additional RM12 billion allocated to the MOHE and other ministries providing education-related services. Malaysias financial commitment to education compares favourably to peers. Malaysia spends 3.8% of GDP on education, more than twice the ASEAN average of 1.8%, and substantially more than the Asian Tiger economies of South Korea, Hong Kong, Japan, and Singapore. The level of expenditure on education as a percentage of total government spending is not only relatively high when compared to regional peers, but also against GDP per capita peers such as Mexico and Chile. However, the Ministrys education expenditure has for the last five years exceeded its allocated budget (Exhibit 6-8). Much of this variance was due to unanticipated changes and events. As the World Bank reports, There were unanticipated changes in policy or priorities requiring the reallocation of funds from lower to higher priority areas or additional funds for new initiatives. In addition, some planned activities could not be implemented because of delays in tendering or delivery of goods and services.
There is also significant variation in expenditure between states. While some of this variance can be attributed to their different operating circumstances (for example, Sabah and Sarawak have a much higher proportion of rural schools than states like Selangor and Penang), there is still an opportunity for states to learn and adopt relevant best practices from one another. As a developing country, Malaysia has invested significant resources into building additional infrastructure, particularly in rural areas and the interior of Sabah and Sarawak, and increasing the size of the teaching force to enable the expansion of access to education. This spending has successfully translated to almost universal access to primary education, and significant improvement in access to secondary education. However, there remain areas for improvement in other dimensions such as quality and equity. Chapter 3 illustrated that education systems that make lower investments, such as Thailand, Chile, and Armenia, achieve comparable or better student outcomes. This suggests that the Malaysian education system may not be allocating funds towards the factors that have the highest impact on student outcomes such as teacher training. High-performing systems such as Singapore and Shanghai, however, do spend more funds per student than Malaysia. The education system is also about to embark on a major transformation effort. Consequently, Malaysias expenditure levels should be maintained but the efficiency and effectiveness of how funds are allocated and spent should be reviewed.
6-11
EXHIBIT 6-9
Approach and methodology for cost savings based on 2012 budget
RM billion (%)
Emolument
25.0 (67)
Development Expenditure
Non-Emolument Development Expenditure 7.7 (21) 4.6M (12) 2012 KIV 2.1 (45) 2.5 Being (55) reviewed
Reviewing average cost per school for different building types Reviewing benefit of adopting approach similar to JKR Industrialised Building System (IBS) construction method
6-12
EXHIBIT 6-10
RM 710M
RM 47M
Purchases for Minor Support and Reduce 5% contract value, by increasing number of schools Maintenance per contract Utility Expenses Supplies and other materials Raw materials Transportation of materials Total Reduce electricity bill by introducing LED lights Tighten guidelines to control spend across MOE
RM 1,051M
RM 44M
RM 502M RM 136M
RM 73M RM 16M
RM 3,059M
RM 190M
1 Estimated cost savings are based on 2012 budget amount by individual operating item savings percentages
Through this rationalisation effort, the Ministry expects to reduce the annual cost of those initiatives that can be deprioritised by approximately RM579 million to RM813 million by 2015. These funds will be reallocated to other Blueprint priorities. Any new initiatives introduced will be subject to stringent evaluation. This will ensure that the new programmes do not tie up valuable human and financial resources that could have greater impact if used elsewhere. To this end, the burden of proof will be on the proposing division. It will need to demonstrate: (i) the potential positive impact on students, teachers, and principals; (ii) the manpower and financing required to deliver the programme and whether these resources are new or to be reallocated; and (iii) the tradeoffs that this reallocation of resources would require.
of individual line items to identify opportunities for cost savings. This includes potential measures such as devolving the authority for the procurement of certain goods and services to state authorities. This is to enable better matching of supply and demand. Another potential measure is to contract out certain services to the private sector in cases where the Ministry is less well-placed to provide such services. This exercise is expected to generate annual savings of RM190 million based on actual expenditure in 2011. This is spread across various line items such as cleaning and utility expenses within the education operations cost category (Exhibit 6-1o). The money saved through this initiative can then be reallocated towards the Blueprints priorities.
The Ministry will also ensure that this detailed review process cascades down to the JPN and PPD levels. The significant variances in expenditure observed at these levels indicate that there are important revising procurement processes lessons that JPNs and PPDs can learn from each other. JPNs and PPDs As current contracts come up for renewal, there is an opportunity to will be required to benchmark their expenditure according to peer tighten existing procurement mechanisms and processes to ensure greater value for money. The Ministry has undertaken a detailed review performance and justify their variances.
6-13
to ensure that they are capable of developing comprehensive, needsbased, and forward-looking budgets.
6-14
sChool iNfrAsTruCTure
The Ministry will ensure that all schools provide a conducive learning environment for students. It will adopt a common standard for school infrastructure, while providing sufficient flexibility to tailor facilities and equipment to local needs. Measures undertaken will include: Ensuring that all schools have a minimum level of acceptable infrastructure, adapted to individual school needs, in a costeffective manner; Undertaking immediate maintenance on all schools in critical need of repairs; and Upgrading facilities and equipment across all schools to support evolving learning requirements of students over time. In the 2006-10 Education Development Master Plan, the Ministry highlighted a number of infrastructure facilities that it intended to invest in over the next five years. These were : (i) 24-hour electricity supply; (ii) treated water that is safe for drinking; (iii) computer laboratory; (iv) science laboratory; and (v) sufficient classrooms and buildings to enable single-session teaching with no need to divide students into morning and afternoon sessions. To meet this aspiration, the Ministry spent more than RM20 billion on infrastructure development from 2006 to 2010. This sum was utilised for the development of 400 new schools, the expansion of ICT infrastructure, and the upgrading and maintenance of existing facilities. During this period, the Ministry provided 24-hour electricity supply to an additional 473 schools, access to clean water to an additional 47 schools, and 103 additional computer labs. The most significant gain was in the percentage of schools with a 24-hour supply of electricity, which improved from 92% in 2005 to 97% in 2011. This infrastructure upgrading has continued under the 10th Malaysia Plan. Despite these improvements, the Ministry acknowledges that significant gaps in school infrastructure remain. A sizeable number of schools still lack basic infrastructurean estimated 300 schools still lack access to 24-hour electricity while 1,500 schools do not have access to water suitable for drinking. In addition, many schools also lack more advanced facilitiesapproximately 2,700 schools do not have computer labs while 2,000 schools also lack functioning science labs (Exhibit 6-11). These results are substantiated by research by Universiti Pendidikan Sultan Idris (2011). In a survey of 7,107 teachers nationwide assessing teachers perceptions of infrastructure quality, the researchers found that while there have been improvements, standards are still far from universally satisfactory: 77% of teachers reported that they work in schools that have at least 1 science laboratory, up from 73% in 2005; 74% of teachers report they work in schools with at least 1 functioning computer laboratory, up from 71% in 2005. Maintenance of existing facilities is also a significant concern. A 2011 Physical Infrastructure Audit report found that over 30% of all schools
in Malaysia were in need of immediate repair (Exhibit 6-12). The Ministry allocated RM600 million in 2012 to address these concerns and will make further investments as necessary. There are several issues involved in improving infrastructure. Firstly, there is continuing debate on the definition of what constitutes essential infrastructure for schools. Beyond certain basicsfor example, access to treated water that is safe for drinking and at least 12-hours of electricitythe debate about what should be provided to schools becomes more complicated. With 10,000 schools to provide for, it is important to strike the right balance for basic versus more advanced infrastructure needs. EXHIBIT 6-12
Maintenance requirements for schools in Malaysia
Number of schools in severely damaged condition % of all primary schools Primary Number (2011) 100% = 7,715 Physical infrastructure: Very badly worn down Electrical wiring: Very badly worn down Secondary Number (2011) 100% = 2,285 % of all secondary schools
20%
1,571
685
30%
28%
2,152
1,293
57%
Currently, the Ministrys understanding of minimum infrastructure requirements is reviewed every five years through the standard brief for new school buildings included in each Malaysia Plan. The standard brief stipulates the provision of utilities, such as 24-hour access to electricity and clean water, and facilities such as science laboratories, staffroom, canteen, library, and school playing field. The Smart School roadmap, introduced in 2005, added another layer to this by committing to provide one computer to every 20 students, along with internet access. This situation has resulted in a degree of uncertainty about whether or not the standard construction brief is the right definition of the required minimum infrastructure and, more significantly, whether or not every school needs to be upgraded to meet those specifications. In addition, different divisions are involved in the planning process. For instance, the Education Technology Division or Bahagian Teknologi Pendidikan (BTP) is responsible for planning and monitoring the delivery of the computer labs and school-based ICT infrastructure, the BPPDP forecasts the overall number of new schools required based on requests from the JPNs and other divisions responsible for schools, the Development Division or Bahagian Pembangunan (BP) is responsible for the construction of new schools, while the Procurement and Asset Management Division or Bahagian Perolehan dan Pengurusan Aset (BPPA) is in charge of procurement as well as renovation and maintenance of all education institutions. This division of responsibilities has resulted in the development
6-15
EXHIBIT 6-11
Percent of schools lacking in infrastructure % (2011) 100% = 10,000 schools No 24-hour electricity No access to clean water 3%
15%
+1%
80
Computer lab 14
Science lab2
1 Include Ministry expenditure, consulting fees and land acquisition 2 Due to damaged science labs that are no longer functional SOURCE: Educational Policy, Planning and Research Division, MOE
6-16
In order to deliver on this target, the Ministry will implement repairs and upgrades in stages. The Ministry has conducted a detailed infrastructure audit to establish the amount of repairs required to bring all schools in line with the benchmark for basic infrastructure. This is compounded by insufficient funding to undertake preventive The repairs and upgrades will proceed in stages, starting with Sabah maintenance. Currently, schools lack funds to make minor repairs and carry and Sarawak as schools in these states are in most need of repairs. By out ongoing service maintenance. In the longer term, early maintenance the end of 2013, critical repairs and upgrades will be completed across could avoid serious deterioration that would be costlier to repair. all 1,608 schools with critical needs. of multiple databases, which need to be streamlined to provide an integrated picture of the facilities and equipment at each school, and the condition of these facilities.
The roadmap: Adopting a common standard for school infrastructure, adapted to local needs
To provide greater clarity on infrastructure needs for the future, the Ministry has developed a consolidated definition for school infrastructure (Exhibit 6-13). This defines the minimum acceptable standard for a conducive learning environment for students across all schools and will be adjusted over time as targets are met and student needs evolve. While many schools in the system meet or even exceed these standards, the intent is to raise the standards of the entire systems facilities and equipment. This will include upgrading the specifications of facilities and equipment to improve quality, durability, and economic life of facilities. The Ministry will also work with relevant government bodies such as local authorities to ensure that all pertinent government agencies involved in the planning and construction of school infrastructure are aligned with this standard. It is also important to recognise that a common standard does not translate to a one-size-fits-all approach. The infrastructure requirements may differ due to school location or type of school. For instance, a technical, vocational or special education school may have very different requirements from a mainstream school. The Ministry will continue to provide a degree of flexibility in establishing each schools infrastructure requirements, tailored to local needs, to be determined further in Waves 1 and 2. In Wave 1, the focus is on ensuring that every school has the basic essentials such as sufficient physical infrastructure and access to utilities. In Wave 2, after these minimum absolute standards are met, the Ministry will further ensure that every school will have the facilities and equipment required to deliver on the enhanced curriculum and pedagogies as described in Chapter 4 of this Blueprint. In Wave 3, the Ministry will refine its definition of infrastructure needs prior to investing in further upgrades as necessary.
In line with the 10th Malaysia Plan and aspirations to raise resource productivity, the Ministry will enforce value-management analysis and life-cycle cost evaluation for large projects valued at more than RM50 million. This structured and multi-disciplinary approach is a proven technique for maximising value from projects. For example, value management requires a detailed review of specifications to determine functionality and considers life-cycle costs when deciding on the optimal project design. The Ministry has also identified measures that can reduce the cost of these upgrades by up to 70%. For example, physical buildings currently have a standard size and are constructed from concrete, regardless of school location. By allowing schools to select different sizes of buildings based on their needs and by employing alternative, more durable materials such as fibre composites in rural areas, the Ministry can save up to 88% in construction costs for physical buildings. The Ministry will also seek to incorporate green building materials to improve the resource productivity and cost efficiency of its infrastructure facilities in the long term. Underpinning these efforts to improve the project management process and deliver cost savings is the integration of existing databases to provide a consolidated, timely perspective on infrastructure requirements. The reliability of data on the number and condition of facilities will also be improved by requiring PPDs to audit reports from individual schools on the condition of their facilities. The Ministry will also ensure appropriate levels of maintenance of existing school equipment and facilities by providing an annual allocation to schools for maintenance activities. The funds will be disbursed to JPNs, PPDs, and individual schools with enhanced authority and accountability to commission maintenance works.
Wave 1 (2013 to 2015): ensuring a good standard of basic infrastructure for all schools
The Ministry will ensure that all schools meet the minimum acceptable standards defined for basic infrastructure by 2015. As noted earlier, these standards will be adapted to fit the local conditions for each school. For example, facilities at schools in remote locations will be adjusted to accommodate the lack of regular access to utilities, such as the inclusion of pump wells.
Wave 2 (2015 to 2020): equipping schools to support enhanced curriculum and pedagogical delivery
By the end of 2015, all schools will have achieved at least a good standard of basic infrastructure, as defined in Wave 1. The focus will then shift to ensuring that all schools are properly equipped to support the enhanced curriculum and pedagogical delivery detailed in Chapter 4. This will include facilities and related equipment to support student learning such as Science labs and Living Skills workshops and designated spaces for Islamic education activities. The Ministry will also liaise closely with other agencies to ensure wide access to sport In line with the initiative to rebrand Form 6 (discussed in further detail facilities in every district. Further, the Ministry will ensure that these in Chapter 7), the Ministry will review the infrastructure requirements new facilities are environmentally sustainable. for Form 6. This is in recognition of the higher and often more specialised requirements of post-secondary students, compared to One area of particular focus during this stage is the investment in ICT primary and secondary students. facilities. This will be critical not only to ensure that students are ICT
6-17
EXHIBIT 6-13
Basic (2013-2015) For all schools to at least achieve the bare essentials required for a safe, hygienic and conducive environment for teaching and learning
Baseline (2016-2020) To provide the minimum level of facilities to enable curriculum and pedagogical delivery
Requirements to be further tailored based on school type (e.g., urban, rural, SKM, schools with hostels)
Physical structure (roof, walls, wiring, paint) Classrooms that meet ratio of 15-20 sq ft / student Toilets that meet ratio of 1 toilet bowl / 50 students 12 hours electricity, except for schools with hostels which require 24 hour supply Treated water, that is safe for drinking 1 table and chair per student 1 workspace per teacher 1 whiteboard or blackboard per classroom At least 20 devices per ICT device in all schools Internet connectivity at minimum speed of 2 Mbps
1 sporting facility 24-hour internet access at speeds of at least 4-10 Mbps At least 10 devices per student in all schools 1 library / resource centre Accessibility features for the disabled, such as ramps and toilets Designated places for Islamic education activities
Internet connectivity: At least 10 Mbps for all schools 1 device / student at secondary level At least 1 video conferencing facility to support distance learning 1 advanced sports facility per state Further changes to school design may be required based on requirements of new curriculum (e.g., specialist teaching room based on student grade and performance)
For secondary schools (subject to size of school): Science (biology, chemistry and physics) + General Science labs Living Skills workshops (e.g. Home Economics, Agriculture,) Hostel for rural school students who travel more than one hour to school daily
SOURCE: Guidelines and Rules on Development Planning by the Committee of Standards and Cos; Economic Planning Unit, Prime Ministers Office
6-18
literate but also to support future innovations in pedagogy. This will be detailed further in the subsequent section on ICT policy in education. The Ministry will also study in detail the targeted conversion of overcrowded double-session schools into the single-session format. In such scenarios, the first priority will always be to enforce student enrolment limits and to add additional classrooms to existing school grounds. Only if these measures are not sufficient will the Ministry evaluate the need to build new schools. During Wave 2, the Ministry will also review the infrastructure requirements for matriculation colleges. The objective is to provide a college environment conducive for learning at a post-secondary level.
6-19
The 2011 audit of physical infrastructure in schools indicates no difference between single- and double-session schools. An equal There is a perception among some parents and other stakeholders proportion of both single- and double-session schools in urban areas that single-session schools provide a better quality education across a require upgrades and repair. number of dimensions. This section will review the facts on the relative performance of single-and double-session schools. 4. Discipline Perception: Double-session schools have poor discipline 1. student outcomes Reality: Discipline levels at double-session school are comparable to Perception: Double-session schools compromise learning outcomes Reality: Learning outcomes in single- and double-session schools are single-session schools comparable The absolute numbers of students with discipline issues are similar A review of student performance over the past three years at both in single- and double-session schools. About 5% of double-session primary and secondary schools indicates that there is no significant schools and 3% of single-session schools have more than 150 difference between single- and double-session schools. In fact, disciplinary infractions annually. Conversely, 76% of double-session double-session secondary schools perform slightly better than their schools and 82% of single-session schools have fewer than 50% single-session counterparts (Exhibit 6-14). cases per year.
EXHIBIT 6-14
Learning outcomes in single- and double-session schools in Malaysia
Double session schools Single session schools
EXHIBIT 6-15
Average time spent on co-curricular activities per week
Percentage
>10 hours 5-10 hours 2-5 hours 0 & 0-2 hours
69.2 2009
69.3
70.3 2010
At least 2 hours
60
6 12 Detailed breakdown 42
10 11
38
57.0 2009
54.7
58.8 2010
56.4
58.7 2011
56.7
40
42
Note: Only SK, SMK, SJK(C), and SJK(T) schooling options considered. Schools with insufficient data excluded. SOURCE: EMIS database; Examination Syndicate
1 Only students from SK, SMK, SJK(C), and SJK(T) considered SOURCE: Student survey 2011 (N=1,436 for double session schools, N = 6,153 for single session schools)
6-20
Malaysia has long recognised the transformative potential of ICT in education. The UNESCO review noted that Malaysia was among the first few countries in the world to have pioneered a strategic ICT plan for its education system. The review also noted an impressive array of policies and plans developed since 1990, including the Smart School Roadmap and the Policy on ICT in Education 2010. The goal is to harness the potential of ICT to enhance the depth and improve the overall quality of education. The intent is more ambitious than simply teaching students to be able to employ basic ICT functions such as using word processors, the Internet, and email. ICT in education should also help students foster higher-order thinking skills. The Ministry also seeks to leverage ICT to improve the efficient delivery of quality education to under-served groups such as rural and under-enrolled schools. Accordingly, one of the most capital-intensive investments the Ministry has made in the past two decades has been in the ICT infrastructure for schools. From 1999 to 2010, the Ministry has invested approximately RM6 billion on ICT in education initiatives. The bulk of these funds went towards additional computer labs to support PPSMI (RM2.6 billion) and the building of a computer lab in every school (RM2.5 billion). A study conducted by the Ministry in 2010 found, however, that ICT usage was relatively limited. Approximately 80% of teachers spend less than one hour a week using ICT. Only a third of students perceive their teachers to be using ICT regularly. Further, the UNESCO review noted that even when ICT is used in teaching, in most cases it has not gone much beyond the use of PowerPoint as an instructional tool. There is no evidence that ICT is being used to foster students creativity, problem solving, and critical thinking and communication skills.
6-21
One reason usage still appears to be limited is that hardware was rolled out without sufficient training and support services to schools, such as technicians to maintain the equipment. Even in cases where training and support were provided, it was often not continuous or sustainable. As such, teachers were ill-prepared in terms of how to actually use the computers in their day-to-day work. This finding is in line with international research that suggests that high-end facilities, like computer laboratories, smart classrooms, and science laboratories only become useful once teachers and students alike know how to use the technology and equipment in meaningful ways within learning processes. Another issue is the lack of a long-term strategy for sustaining and scaling up key policy implementation elements, such as ICT infrastructure and teacher competencies. For example, there is no explicit guaranteed period of computer renewal, such that schools that received equipment in the early 2000s are now in dire need of renewal. In line with the earlier findings on resource productivity, these investments have not been consistently linked to a clear set of expected student outcomes, and have not been rigorously monitored to determine impact.
education, the Ministry will adopt a sequenced approach to ICT. Critical elements for ICT usage such as devices, network and applications, ICT competencies in teachers, and curriculum and assessment must be in place prior to shifting to more intense, innovative usage of ICT; Building on established foundations. The Ministry will ensure that successive initiatives build on earlier programmes. For example, the Ministry will ensure that all future ICT initiatives enhance and strengthen the effectiveness of 1BestariNet. This is to maximise the Ministrys return on investment in this programme and to ensure that 1BestariNet becomes the catalyst for ICT innovation in education in Malaysia. Investing in ICT solutions for groups with specific needs. Despite the uncertainties highlighted in international research, current ICT solutions can still be utilised to enable cost-efficient access to high-quality teaching and learning resources to groups with specific needs such as rural schools, under-enrolled schools, and gifted students (refer to Chapter 4); and Relying on outcome-based assessments. Evidence-based assessment should form the basis for evaluating significant potential investments in ICT. This will require improving the existing set of measurement tools such as the Smart School Qualification Standards (SSQS), particularly as international standards are established. Employing these principles will require first ensuring a strong foundation in ICT. Once these foundations are in place, the Ministry will consider opportunities for delivering more innovative ICT-based solutions, supported by clear evidence of positive impact.
6-22
What is 4G?
4G, an acronym for fourth-generation wireless, is a type of technology that can be used with cellular phones, wireless computers, and other mobile devices. This technology gives users faster access to the Internet than most previous thirdgeneration (3G) networks can offer, and it also offers new user options such as the ability to access high-definition (HD) video, high-quality voice, and high-data-rate wireless channels via mobile devices. Common standards for 4G are still in the process of being defined by the International Telecommunications Union (ITU), governments, industry, and other stakeholders, but currently includes a minimum download speed of 2 megabits per second (Mbps). ensure that all teachers meet a minimum level of ICT literacy by the end of 2015. The systems standard for ICT literacy is based on an established rubric for ICT competency developed by the International Society for Technology in Education (ISTE). All teacher trainees will be required to meet these competency standards as part of their preservice training. Current teachers will be required to pass an online diagnostic test by 2014. Those who do not pass the test will be required to complete a series of online training modules and re-sit the test by the end of 2015. This process of testing and training will be supported by a professional development platform run on 1BestariNets VLE. ICT standards for teachers and related training modules will be continuously updated as ICT evolves over time. As highlighted in the earlier sections of this chapter, other Ministry personnel will also be continuously trained in ICT to ensure that they are equipped to achieve their tasks efficiently and effectively. This includes proficiency in more specialised financial and other management applications to support resource management.
ensuring that all teachers and ministry officials are iCT literate
The Ministry will enhance its existing set of training programmes to
6-23
discussed in Chapter 4, and will establish a process for managing usergenerated content.
exploring iCT solutions for specific groups, reviewing best practices for the system
It is important to distinguish between system-wide interventions to be embedded in every classroom and every schooland niche interventions for specific target audiences. During this period, the Ministry will focus on introducing and piloting niche programmes for groups with specific needs such as under-enrolled and rural schools, and gifted students. This could, for instance, include virtual delivery of lessons and online adaptive learning tools as an enhancement activity to classroom learning. The Ministry will also investigate options for employing ICT solutions to improve parental and community engagement in education. As an international consensus forms around best practices for use of ICT to develop higher-order thinking skills, the Ministry will also conduct a detailed review to establish the path forward for ICT in education policy. The review will be conducted employing an outcomebased assessment of potential options.
6-24
6-25
6-26
As the education system embarks on its ambitious journey of transformation, the Ministry must also transform itself to provide continued guidance, direction, and support as needed. The Ministry transformation will strengthen two key areas: resource productivity and delivery capacity. These reforms will enable the Ministry to better focus on and deliver what really counts: student learning and outcomes. Firstly, the Ministry will reallocate its resources to programmes and policies that impact critical levers such as teacher training, thus improving the ROI of Ministry expenditure. It will also change its spending approach on school infrastructure and ICT. Secondly, the Ministry will empower its middle layerthe JPNs and PPDsto help bridge the gap between policy and practice. Providing more authority and accountability at the JPN and PPD level will bring decision-making closer to where learning occurs, allowing schools to better identify and address the unique needs and challenges of their students.
CHAPTER 7
SyStem
7-1
7. System structure
The Malaysian education system continuously strives to ensure every child receives the right set of educational opportunities at the right timefrom cradle to career. In so doing, a number of structural shifts in the system structure will be required. This chapter investigates structural considerations for the Malaysian education system and how to match practices from high-performing education systems in order to deliver better outcomes. It will discuss expanding access to preschool so all have an equal head start to learning, along with other shifts to the phases of education. The system will also develop the flexibility to provide students with the educational pathways best-suited to their individual talents, interests, and learning styles. Finally, it will shift from being school-based, to a learning system that incorporates parents and the broader community in order to ensure that every student enjoys the most conducive and effective learning environment possible.
The Ministry aims to help all children discover their own gifts, to make the most of these talents, and to put these children on the path towards achieving their full potential. This will require ensuring every child receives an equal headstart regardless of their background, has access to the right set of education opportunities, and learns in the most conducive environment. These approaches in education will help children develop the skills that they will need for the 21st century. This will help train young Malaysians who will ask questions and look for answers, and who are willing to think in new ways, design new solutions, and create new opportunities.
7-2
EXHIBIT 7-1
WORK
PRIMARY
6 YEARS 12+-14+ years old Academic Academic
National school National-type Chinese school National-type Tamil school Special Education school Religious school Other programme schools (e.g., Special Model school) Primary School Evaluation Test (UPSR) embedded with schoolbased assessment
3 YEARS
WORK
National secondary school Religious school Special Education school Sports school Arts school Other programme schools (e.g., K9 Comprehensive Model)
National Secondary school Religious school Special Education school Technical school Sports school Arts school Other programme schools (e.g., Full boarding schools) Malaysian Certificate of Education (SPM)
Matriculation
ABC
Community College and Polytechnic Malaysian Skills Diploma (DKM) / Malaysian Vocational Diploma (DVM) / industrial certificates according to courses
Preschool
Vocational
Vocational
Vocational
Vocational college ILKA, ILKS, TEVT
PAV Programme
7-3
Malaysia has achieved notable success in education. As highlighted in Chapter 3, near-universal enrolment in the primary and lower secondary phases and the rapid expansion in preschool and upper secondary enrolment is laudable. However, as the system moves to prepare students for the demands of the 21st century, the education system must bring structural elements in line with international best practices.
Phases of education
There are five phases of education primarily overseen by the Ministry: preschool, primary, lower secondary, upper secondary, and postsecondary (Exhibit 7-1). Tertiary education mostly falls under MOHEs purview, with exceptions such as the PISMP and KPLI, which are provided by the Ministry and other government agencies. Malaysian students in the national system have 12 to 13 years of formal schooling prior to entering tertiary education (excluding preschool education). The extra year of schooling depends on the type of postsecondary or pre-university programme chosen. Students who take the two-year STPM (equivalent to A-levels qualifications) or its religious alternative, the STAM, require 13 years to complete their studies. Students who take the Matriculation programme require 12 years. Students with special needs also have the option of an additional two years to complete their schooling. This 13-year timeframe to STPM completion is comparable to other developed systems, with many education systems achieving A-Levels standards in 13 years, such as England and Scotland. As the experiences of Hong Kong and Singapore (Exhibit 7-2) illustrate, it
is also possible to complete an A-Levels equivalent programme in 12 years. To achieve this, Hong Kong removed their O-Levels equivalent examination to create learning time for students. In Singapore, around 30% of students in the normal academic stream still take five years, instead of four years, to reach A-Levels equivalent qualifications. Malaysia provides an equivalent total number of instructional hours across the primary, secondary, and post-secondary phases of education when compared to other education systems (Exhibit 7-2). This implies that the current system provides sufficient time for Malaysian students to learn and grow holistically, comparable to high-performing education systems. Formal schooling in Malaysia begins with entry into primary school at the age of 6+ years. This starting age of 6+ for primary education is in line with many high-performing education systems, such as in Singapore and Ontario (Canada). In fact, Finland (one of the best performing systems in international assessments) begins primary school at the age of 7+. At present, only primary education is compulsory. Over the years, Malaysia has relied on other initiatives to increase enrolment. This includes informational campaigns for parents and financial assistance for families. As noted in Chapter 3, these initiatives have been highly successful in increasing access to education. Enrolment in each phase has increased steadily over time with near-universal enrolment in public and private schools at the primary and lower secondary levels (96% and 91% respectively in 2011). Enrolment in upper secondary education has also increased dramatically over the yearsincreasing from 45% in the 1980s to about 82% in 2011. However, more needs to be done to enroll the 5-10% hardest-to-reach population.
7-4
Preschool education
Early Childhood Care and Education (ECCE) programmes are divided into preschools for children aged 4+ to 5+ years old and daycare centres for younger children. ECCE plays a vital role in a childs psychological and intellectual development. The Ministry is targeting universal enrolment in preschool for 5+ year old children, in order to provide all children with an equal head start through access to preschool. Research evidence from the OECD (2011) links preschool education to increased lifetime earnings and other beneficial life outcomes. As students from low-income families are less likely to have attended preschool, they will enter primary school without the advantages of the preschool education that their more affluent peers enjoyed. In order to promote greater equity, the Ministry is already investing heavily in encouraging preschool enrolment as part of the Education NKRA.
As noted in Chapter 3, there has been rapid expansion of preschool education over the decades. As of the end of 2011, around 77% of children aged 4+ to 5+ are enrolled in some form of preschool education. This amounts to approximately 733,000 children enrolled in almost 40,000 classes. The target is to drive enrolments to 92% in registered preschools by 2015. This translates to an additional 3,500 classes required to accommodate almost 71,000 new children by 2015. By 2020, the Government expects universal preschool enrolment with approximately 900,000 students enrolled in preschools across the country.
EXHIBIT 7-2
Years
6,080 4,497 4,750 3,800 5,122 4,952 6,089 3,910 8,322 2,138
8,465
12,065
12 12 13 13 13 13 12 12 12 12
2,442
12,525
Noncommonwealth, systems
7,776
13,536
12
SOURCE: Education Bureau (Hong Kong); Ministry of Education (Singapore); Department for Education (UK); Ministry of Education (Malaysia); Department of Education & Training (NSW); Education Bureau (Shanghai); Ministry of Education & Culture (Finland); Ministry of Education (Ontario); Ministry of Education (Taiwan); OECD
7-5
performing education systems. The Ministry will focus on making structural adjustments across each phase of education, wherever necessary. In particular, the preschool phase of education will be scaled up in successive waves, with the objective of ensuring universal preschool enrolment and an equal head start in education for all children. In contrast, the other phases of education are already aligned with other similar school systems in terms of numbers of years of schooling as well as schooling hours. Consequently, the focus on these other areas will be on further improving the already high levels of enrolment. This objective will be achieved through a more targeted approach to help children who do not enrol in primary school, as well as students most at risk of dropping out of school (at either the primary or secondary level). In line with the system aspirations as laid out in Chapter 2, universal enrolment across the preschool, primary, and lower and upper secondary phases of education is expected to be achieved by 2020.
during this critical period of childhood. These initiatives will be in place by mid-2013. To ensure that private preschools meet national quality standards, the Government has established an ECCE Council. Acting as a body to increase the level of professionalism in the private ECCE sector, the Council registers preschools and other ECCE providers and sets guidelines for pre- and in-service training programmes for teachers. All schools are also required to adhere to the National Preschool Curriculum. The Ministry will strongly encourage registration of private preschools with the Council. The 92% enrolment target will apply to registered preschools only. Working with the Council, the Ministry will also implement a quality standard and inspection mechanism for ECCE centres, harmonising qualification requirements across the sector. By 2015, 100% of government preschools and 50% of private preschools will be inspected. The Ministry will cooperate with the MOHE, the Malaysian Qualifications Agency (MQA), and other government bodies to ensure that teachers have access to the appropriate educational and training opportunities. The Ministry will also provide subsidies to existing teachers who lack a Diploma in Early Childhood Education to upgrade their qualifications to meet standards. 30% of all preschool teachers are expected to have minimum diploma qualifications by 2015.
Wave 1 (2013 to 2015): expanding preschools rapidly, increasing enrolment in other phases of education
Wave 1 will focus on rapidly scaling up the preschool phase of education. Building on recent gains in preschool enrolments, the target is to achieve near-universal access at the preschool level. The Ministry will also focus on driving further improvements in enrolment in the other phases of education.
7-6
EXHIBIT 7-3
Compulsory education policy and enrolment rates by education system
Percentage enrolment Preschool Malaysia Singapore Finland England Massachusetts1 77 99 99 95 99 Primary 95 100 99 100 99 Lower secondary 90 100 99 100 98 Upper secondary 80 100 90 100 96
Voluntary Compulsory
As with primary education, the Ministry will invest in specific measures to encourage greater enrolment by 2015. This includes targeting students who drop out between primary and secondary school, as well as students who actually enroll in lower secondary school but are at risk of dropping out. For example, 70% of places in SBPs will be reserved for rural poor students to enable access to better-quality education. By 2015, lower secondary enrolment in public schools is expected to reach 95% of the relevant population while upper secondary enrolments will hit 90%.
Wave 2 will focus on building on the gains from the earlier phase. In order to deliver further gains in enrolments and access, the Ministry will continuously adjust its grants and other forms of assistance to provide appropriate levels of support in an effective and efficient manner. This may require, for instance, adjustments to qualifying thresholds for financial assistance. For ECCE, the focus will be on continuously improving standards for preschool. This will include completing inspections for all preschools and ensuring that 100% of all preschool teachers will have minimum diploma qualifications. The Ministry will also explore options to raise standards in other ECCE programmes such as childcare. In line with Chapter 4, the Ministry will also pilot three programmes for high achievers (typically the top 15% of the student population) and for gifted students (1% of the student population). This will, for example, involve the placement of students in the top 15% in accelerated classes to allow them to complete lower and upper secondary school in four years instead of the normal five years. With these innovations, students will have more options to tailor the duration of education to their individual needs.
Average 9
Malaysia Singapore
Hong Kong
Finland
Ontario
SOURCE: Ministry of Education (Malaysia); Ministry of Education (Singapore); Education Bureau (Hong Kong); Ministry of Education & Culture (Finland); Massachussetts Department for Elementary and Secondary Education; Department for Education (UK); Ministry of Education (Ontario)
7-7
education PathWays
The Ministry will ensure that the education system includes distinct pathways to cater for different student interests and abilities. These pathways will be viable and attractive, providing development in the required skills and knowledge to provide a clear route to chosen professions. The Ministry will primarily focus on strengthening existing pathways to make them more attractive options to students. Measures undertaken will include: Increasing student awareness of the education pathways and career options available; Enhancing the Vocational Transformation Plan to include greater collaboration with the private sector; Raising the quality and availability of places in religious schools; and Ensuring the continued attractiveness of post-secondary options.
reported a labour shortage of over 700,000 skilled workers in the manufacturing, agriculture, and construction industries. Future demand will rise even higher. Out of the 3.3 million jobs created under the NKEA by 2020, at least 46% will require vocational certificates or diplomas, compared to 22% requiring university degrees (Exhibit 7-5). Closing this demand gap will require the creation of 50,000 additional places in vocational education per year. EXHIBIT 7-5
Job creation under Economic Transformation Programme, based on qualifications required
0.8 0.8 0.7 0.7 0.7
0.2 0.1
Unskilled
The Ministry recognises students diverse interests and abilities, and intends to help them develop these talents. This requires access to alternative, attractive, and viable pathways for individual student progression. The secondary education system already allows students to choose a pathway at various points in secondary school. Among the pathways offered are academic, technical, vocational, religious, sports, or arts school.
Degree 22
In addition to the challenge of meeting this demand, there is an associated challenge of ensuring levels of quality. A lack of qualified instructors and an industry-recognised curriculum, weak collaboration with industry, and limited on-the-job (OTJ) training leads to graduates who are not equipped to meet industry needs. Interviews with parents and students also highlighted a lack of awareness of the vocational pathway, and subsequent career opportunities. In order to address these concerns, the Ministry developed the Vocational Transformation Plan to strengthen the training of skilled graduates. As part of this plan, the Ministry has expanded vocational education to begin in lower secondary through the Basic Vocational Education or Pendidikan Asas Vokasional (PAV) programme and strengthened the existing pathway in upper secondary through the Vocational College or Kolej Vokasional (KV) programme. By 2015, the KV programme is expected to capture 10% of all upper secondary enrolment. Initial feedback from students, parents, and industry is positive as the plan is being rolled out.
7-8
partners to improve the industry recognition for this education. For instance, accounting students will receive partial accreditation with the Association of Chartered Certified Accountants (ACCA) for the professional ACCA qualification. There are currently more than 20,000 students enrolled in technical schools, representing less than 1% of secondary school students.
True
In transition towards
7-9
WORLD OF WORK Vocational College STPM Matriculation Polytechnic and skills institute Diploma certificate MOE
SPM
PMR
UPSR
7-10
In addition, there are approximately 350 private religious schools (1% of total primary and secondary enrolment). These schools may or may not teach the national religious curriculum. Most of these schools are small, rural, and under-resourced (sekolah agama rakyat persendirian or sekolah pondok). However, there are a growing number of urban private religious schools (sekolah agama swasta) that closely resemble international schools. More and more parents are interested in sending their children to SMKA, as demonstrated by the fact that it is one of the fastestgrowing schooling options in Malaysian education. However, 50% of applications are rejected due to limited places.
Recent developments such as relaxing restrictions for international school enrolment of local students are expected to further accelerate growth in local students enrolled in the private sector.
Post-secondary options
The Ministry is committed to ensuring that all students in postsecondary education will receive qualifications in line with international standards. Currently, students completing SPM have several post-secondary choices: STPM, STAM, matriculation, foundation programmes or private sector alternatives. There are many private sector qualifications available. The most popular include the IB diploma, A-Levels, South Australian Matriculation, the American Degree Programme, and Canadian Pre-University. Among public sector options, the STPM is recognised by many universities overseas while the matriculation programme is currently only accepted for admission into public universities in Malaysia.
7-11
EXHIBIT 7-8
Growth rate of enrolment in private schools by type
% (2007 2011)
26
14
13
In 2011, approximately 3% or 145,000 of students aged 7 to 17 were enrolled in private schools. The four major categories of schools are: Private schools. This category refers to the approximately 130 primary and secondary schools that teach the national curriculum for at least the six core subjects identified in the 1996 Education Act. These schools also tend to offer more enrichment activities like drama, music, art, and foreign languages. 18% of Malaysian students attending private schools are enrolled in this category of schools, making it the second largest type in the market. International schools. These are primary and secondary schools that use international curriculum such as the British, American, Australian, Canadian, or International Baccalaureate programmes. Unlike the other categories of private schools discussed here, international schools largely source their teachers from abroad. In terms of enrolment, data as of 30 June 2011 shows that 18% of Malaysian students in private education options are enrolled in international schools nationwide. International schools are also one of the subsectors identified under the National Key Economic Areas (NKEA) to drive the economic growth of the nation. religious schools. 14% of private school students are enrolled in this category of school, with over 350 schools nationwide in 2011. These schools may or may not teach the national curriculum with an intensive focus on Islamic education. In contrast to other private schools, religious schools are also more affordable as most of them are conventionally run as non-profits and are usually founded by individuals, companies, or Islamic organisations. Independent chinese schools. These schools currently enrol 46% of the 145,000 students in private schools today. There are 60 schools nationwide, each managed by the school leadership and a Board of Trustees, with funds raised from student fees and philanthropic contributions. These schools use Chinese language as the main medium of instruction, and teach a curriculum developed by Dong Jiao Zong benchmarked against systems such as those used in Taiwan and England. The schools prepare students for a standardised examination known as the Unified Examination Certificate (at Year 6 of secondary school), although many schools also prepare their students for the SPM in parallel.
International Primary religious
-2
Primary1
1 Private secondary and primary schools following the national curriculum SOURCE: Malaysia Educational Statistics, 2011
Finally, the Ministry will also launch a promotional campaign to create awareness of the different education pathways, and their flexibility. The campaign will use radio, television, newspaper articles, online portals, roadshows, and other channels. The campaign will run from 2013 through to the end of 2015.
7-12
Moving forward, the Ministry will extend the availability of STAM to other religious schools such as SMKA. The Ministry will also market STAM as the standard for advanced Islamic religious education in schools throughout Southeast Asia. The Ministry will also maintain support to SABKs and investigate opportunities to make funding to SABKs equivalent to other government religious schools. In the meantime, the Ministry will proceed with the ongoing process of raising standards at private religious schools by offering assistance in the form of funding, curriculum, training, and personnel.
EXHIBIT 7-9
Iskandar Malaysia - Johor Manufacturing Logistic and Transportation Marine Services Technology (existing infrastructure, equipment & facilities) Global Logistics and Supply Chain technology Information Technology Computer System Technology Data Base and Programming Needs Network Support Service Game/Simulation/Animation Audio/Video Effects Agriculture Agricultural Biotechnology Agricultural Products Processing Tourism Sports Tourism (Golf)
7-13
students. In Wave 1, this will focus on identifying the competency levels of students with special needs in order to place them in the appropriate schooling options, including vocational skills courses. The Ministry will also improve quality of provision for students with special needs by upgrading infrastructure in both mainstream and special education schools, enhancing both pre- and in-service training for special education, and tailoring curriculum and assessments by student abilities. In line with Chapter 4, the Ministry will benchmark its current programmes for gifted education against top-performing national gifted education programmes to identify areas for improvement and replicate best practices. The Ministry will also further develop its gifted education programmes through partnerships with the private sector and leading research institutions, specialising in education for gifted children.
rebranding form 6
By the end of 2013, the Ministry will rebrand Form 6 and the STPM/ STAM to boost the popularity of the qualification among students. This will bring Form 6 in line with other pre-university options currently offered by private sector entities. Greater decision-making rights will be granted to schools to allow them to introduce initiatives to better prepare their students for university. This could include, for instance, relaxing the requirements for Form 6 students to wear school uniforms, allowing Form 6 students to form student councils that have input rights on some aspects of student life (such as student welfare and range of co-curricular activities) and introduction of modules that require students to undertake independent research and/or work in groups on specific projects.
7-14
enhancing provisions for gifted children and students with special needs
In Wave 2, the Ministry will launch two pilots for its high-achieving and gifted students. These pilots will draw on best practices from top-performing systems with gifted programmes and may be delivered in partnership with the private sector and other experts. The second wave of support for students with special needs will involve scaling up initiatives launched in Wave 1, and moving towards more inclusive education. Please refer to Chapter 4 for more details on specific initiatives.
7-15
As highlighted in Chapter 3, with multiple schooling options at the primary and secondary level, both public and private, the Malaysian education system provides an unparalleled degree of choice for parents and students (Exhibit 3-21). This variety is a result of the nations historical legacy and rich diversity. The Ministry is committed to providing quality education to all students across all types of schools. Today, of the 2.9 million students enrolled in primary school, 98% are in the public system. These 98% are split into 74% in the SKs where the medium of instruction is Bahasa Malaysia, 21% in the SJK(C)s where the medium of instruction is Chinese language, 3% in SJK(T)s where the medium of instruction is Tamil, and less than 1% in SABKs and special education schools. The remaining 2% are enrolled in private schools, where the options include private schools that teach the national curriculum, international schools, religious schools, and special education schools. There are a combined 2.3 million students enrolled in lower and upper secondary school across both public and private schools. Approximately 96% of these students are enrolled in public schools with 93% enrolled in SMKs. Within the overall SMK category, however, there are multiple school programmes that students can choose from. Specifically, students can choose from regular SMKs (88% of total secondary school enrolment), SBPs (2% of total secondary school enrolment), technical/vocational schools (2% of total secondary school enrolment), and SMKAs (1% of total secondary school enrolment). In addition to the SMK format, there are a number of other public options available to students which include secondary-level SABKs and special education schools (collectively 3% of total secondary school enrolment). Of the private secondary schools, independent Chinese schools are the largest with 3% of total secondary enrolments. The remaining privatesector options of international schools, religious schools, private schools that teach the national curriculum, and special education schools collectively make up about 1% of total secondary enrolment.
7-16
Vision schools
Vision Schools were introduced in 2003 to promote greater interaction and integration between students in different schooling options. Under this concept, three schoolstypically one SK, one SJK(C) and one SJK(T)share the same school compound and facilities while maintaining different school administrations. Vision schools are established where there is land available to build these shared compounds and where there is sufficient proximity of both National and National-type schools. However, this limits the scalability of this concept throughout the entire education system and consequently there are only five vision school complexes still in operation.
7-17
the roadmap: improving interaction and integration across all schooling options
Addressing these points of homogeneity is critical to fostering unity. It is important to teach the right set of values, attitudes, and behaviours when students are young and still developing their world views and behaviours. Later-stage interventions are unlikely to be as effective. The ultimate objective is for the National schools to be the school of choice such that interactions between students of different socioeconomic, religious and ethnic backgrounds naturally occur in school. These initiatives will be rolled out across all schooling options, including the most ethnically homogeneous ones. When implementing these initiatives, the Government will be respectful of the individual missions and beliefs of each of these school types. These initiatives will also support the holistic education of students. EXHIBIT 7-10
The RIMUP initiative
Schools grouped into clusters for combined activities1
EXAMPLE
The survey will serve several purposes. It will provide a basis for understanding the current level of unity among students as they transition from successive phases of education and into the world of work. This will help the Ministry to identify specific points within the education system requiring intervention, analyse the specific concerns such as a lack of exposure to diversity, and design an appropriate response. Over time, it will also track changes in national unity among students, providing a basis for measuring progress against the aspiration.
Activities are grouped under five categories 1 Activities for academic excellence 2 Sports and games 3 Co-curricular activities 4 Community service 5 Activities to enhance patriotism
Cluster Schools A B C D E SK, SJK(C), SJK(T) SK, SJK(C) SK, SJK(T) SJK(C), SJK(T) SMK, SMKA, SMJK
2.4
2007
1 Decided at the state level SOURCE: Co-curriculum and Arts Division
2011
7-18
They will be provided with additional, after-school classes to improve their Bahasa Malaysia proficiency. More proficient students will not be required to attend these classes. These initiatives will be in place by 2014 with Year 4 students.
component to the curriculum of all primary (Years 4 to 6) and secondary schools in Wave 2. Further, completion of the community service component will be a pre-requisite for graduation at the secondary level. The current option being considered is a weekly activity combining students of all ethnicities that runs for four months per year. Performing goal-oriented, team-based activities in diverse groups will foster greater unity among students. Through community service, students will also develop stronger attachments to their local communities. Parents and the broader community will be more explicitly involved in homework assignments, classroom lectures, and community service projects. Community involvement will further reinforce in-classroom learning. The pedagogy for Islamic Education and Moral Education will also be revised to incorporate more role playing, simulations, class discussion, and small group work. Such participatory learning methods are more effective at inculcating good values and reinforcing behaviours than lectures and workbook exercises. Islamic Education curriculum for Muslim-students will include a greater focus on understanding the core values and underlying philosophies of Islam and other main religions in Malaysia. Similarly, for non-Muslim students, Moral Education will include an understanding of the core values of all main religions in Malaysia. The Ministry will also look into having Islamic and Moral Education students share certain classes together when common universal values are taught.
Schools will be grouped to allow for interaction across different school types, public and private. The Ministry will also review the current set of activities run under the RIMUP programme. Currently, the programme includes a wide scope of activities, including academic enhancement, sports and games, community service, and co-curriculum activities. Research indicates, however, that not all of these activities are necessarily effective at fostering unity. The Ministry will therefore narrow the scope of activities under RIMUP to focus on those activities that are actually proven to be effective at fostering intergroup friendships and stronger ties to the community, such as sports, arts, and community service.
7-19
As noted in Chapter 3, only 27% of a childs waking time between the ages of 7-17 is spent in school. With the majority of their waking time spent at home and as part of the greater community, children also
EXHIBIT 7-11
to have a shared responsibility between parents and teachers to ensure quality learning for students to increase parents awareness in assisting student learning to develop parents role as partners with schools in improving their childrens outcome
SOCIAL INTERACTION
Learning systems recognise that learning happens beyond the school walls and can occur at home and in the community. School must create a conducive environment for a positive school-parent-community working relationship.
to tap volunteer organisations in the community that can provide an array of services and benefits to the local school to get students involved with community organisations and their projects while learning valuable lessons in the process
7-20
education can make a significant difference in learning outcomes. To ensure that a students entire environment is conducive to learning, the Ministry is shifting its focus from schools to building broader learning systems (Exhibit 7-11).
or once or twice a week during the first year of primary school had higher scores in PISA 2009+ than students whose parents reported that they read a book with their child never or almost never or only once or twice a month (Exhibit 7-12). Importantly, this holds true regardless of whether the family is low, middle, or high income. There is already a high level of baseline Many parent-child activities involvement among Malaysian parents. that are associated with 2011 survey of 1,800 Malaysians better reading performance nationwide conducted by the Minister of Educations Office found that 60% among students involve of parents report spending some time relatively little time and no every day helping their children with specialised knowledge. their homework. 50% say that they spend some time every day talking with PISA OECD (2011) their children about school. These are all factors that are associated with better student reading performance in school. The key now is to ensure these practices happen in every household, making families crucial partners in improving childrens learning outcomes.
EXHIBIT 7-12
PISA score point difference between students whose parents often (weekly or daily) read books with the student and those whose parents did not
80 60 40 20 0 -20
Croatia Portugal
Italy
Panama
Chile
South Korea
Denmark Hungary
Qatar
Germany
New Zealand
PISA score point difference between students whose parents often (weekly or daily) talk about what they had done and those whose parents did not
80 60 40 20 0 -20
Croatia
Hong KongChina
South Korea
MacaoChina
Portugal Hungary
New Zealand
Chile
Italy
Panama
Qatar
7-21
Research also shows that individual schools and school systems that have expanded their focus from parents to the local community have seen a boost in student outcomes. Engaging the communitybusinesses, non-profit entities, and community organisationscan bring in resources (in the form of funding and access to capabilities) beyond what the public sector may be able to afford. For example, a study by the Centre for Social Organisation of Schools in America found that schools that engage with community groups, including businesses, civic organisations, and colleges or universities, enjoyed benefits that included lower student absenteeism, higher rates of homework completion, and higher grades. Community engagement, especially fund-raising by PIBGs, is not a new practice for Malaysian schools. The Ministry, however, stresses the need for schools to build partnerships centred around the sharing of expertise. In some cases, some schools and communities have developed approaches to improve the delivery of educational services to students. The private sector can also play an important role in delivering on education system aspirations. While the private sector cannot replace the public system, it can act as a useful supplement to enhance public initiatives and drive greater efficiency in service delivery, including in niche areas. As acknowledged in the NKRA, well-executed publicprivate partnerships (PPP) can facilitate service delivery and lead to additional financing for the education sector, as well as expand equitable access and improve learning outcomes. This could be a particularly effective model for groups currently poorly served by traditional delivery methods. For example, the Ministry is piloting a new model for introducing private sector-led innovations in public schools curriculum, teaching and learning, and overall school management. These are the Trust Schools, with Yayasan AMIR as the private partner.
Wave 1 (2013 to 2015): supporting engagement with parents and private sector
The education system needs a two-fold change in outlook: firstly, all stakeholders need to transition to a new mindset that focuses on a system of learning, rather than just schooling; secondly, parents and communities need to learn to view themselves as having an important role in contributing to the success of their childrens education. In Wave 1, the Ministry will focus on helping schools reach out and develop strong ties with parents and the community.
Show your home, neighborhood, and community to your child. Point out animals, plants, and people. Together, discover all the wonders of the outdoors. Help your child experience different sights, sounds, textures, smells, and taste. Marvel together at trucks and equipment at a fire station or construction site. Remind your child of the fun things you have done together.
EDUCATIO
REALLY
7-22
7-23
to introduce world-class curricula based on the IB and International General Certificate of Secondary Education (IGCSE), and the power to appoint representatives from local stakeholders to the schools Board of Governors. The Ministry will assess the results of the current pilot of trust schools at the end of 2013. If the results from the pilot programme are promising, the Ministry will seek to expand this programme with the from the current 10 pilot schools to a target of 20 schools by 2015. Once the decision is made to expand the trust school network in 2013, the Ministry recognises that the intended diversity of sponsors and school types will require differing OMAs in order to succeed. For example, running a special needs school may require more specialist teachers than can be sourced domestically and would therefore require greater autonomy to hire foreign specialists. As part of the expansion process, therefore, the Ministry will develop an open framework and standardised OMAs for trust schools that grant sufficient autonomy and flexibility to a diverse set of sponsors and school types to be covered.
To support the application of potential sponsors, the Ministry will also publish a clear set of eligibility criteria and will also reduce potential barriers to entry (such as minimum financial commitments) while ensuring that there is no compromise on the quality of education provided. The application process itself will be streamlined to minimise bureaucracy (with an estimated end-to-end time frame of one year) while also including a dialogue and engagement process at selected schools to ensure alignment among key stakeholders prior to the conversion to the trust school programme. It is also important to institutionalise best practices with respect to innovations in teaching and learning from the Trust Schools initiative in the Ministry to ensure that the entire education system benefits from the programme in the short- to medium-term. To support this process, the Ministry will improve the linkage between the trust schools and JPNs/PPDs to ensure better accountability and a sense of ownership for the trust schools at the state and district levels.
to introduce new technologies, after-school activities, literacy projects, education clinics, and motivational talks to their students. The programme has enjoyed good results to-date, with 292 schools adopted by 35 corporate partners (primarily Government-linked companies). Going forward, the Ministry will encourage more corporate partners to join the programme and more schools to receive sponsorship.
7-24
a more diverse set of school sponsors in addition to Yayasan AMIR including private businesses, community organisations, and alumni bodiesas well as a more diverse set of schools. The Ministry sees particular promise in expanding the coverage of the trust school network to include under-performing schools (Band 6 or 7, or otherwise showing a declining performance in student outcomes), schools catering to groups with specific needs such as indigenous and other minority groups, students with special needs, and rural and under-enrolled schools. The Ministry will make continuous adjustments to the OMA to support this greater diversity in sponsors and schooling options in the Trust School programme.
For example, Hong Kong established the Hong Kong Academy for Gifted Education (HKAGE) to serve the gifted top 2% in the territory. HKAGE provides out-of-school enrichment programmes for students, as well as advice to teachers and parents. It was established as a nonprofit company in order to provide the independence and flexibility needed to serve this niche group. Nevertheless, HKAGE receives most of its funding from the Hong Kong government, as well as from private sources.
7-25
7-26
Malaysia must adjust the structure of its education system to allow all students to have access to the right set of educational opportunities at the right timefrom cradle to career. A four-pronged strategy is required to achieve this. Firstly, basic structural elements such as the number of years of formal schooling and compulsory education will be aligned with high-performing education systems such as Singapore and Hong Kong. The education system will also continue to develop attractive and viable pathways that cater to the diversity of interests and talents of Malaysian students. Particularly critical to the nations development will be the strengthening of vocational education. The Ministry is also systematically moving the education system from a school-based model of learning to a broader learning system. This will require stronger levels of ownership and engagement from parents and local communities towards their childrens education. Finally, the private sector will play a critical role in driving many of these changesin preschools, vocational education, and other segments.
CHAPTER 8
Delivering
8-1
8-2
Rapid: The expectations of parents and employers are high as the country urgently needs large numbers of well-educated young people to drive its growth aspirations and maintain its competitiveness. This urgency is underlined by the fact that approximately one third of each student cohort leaves school without meeting minimum standards in the SPM core subjects and before completing Form Five. This desire for immediate results will need to be balanced with the fact that transformative improvements will take time; and Sustainable: Although a number of early gains can be realised within the first year of reform, improvement to the system as a whole will require shifting structurally, which will take time to yield results. The critical point is to ensure that these improvements build successively on each other as the delivery capacity and capabilities of the system improves, so that they have a sustained and lasting impact on students. While the possibilities for transformation are exciting, it must be acknowledged that this ambitious path will nonetheless be a challenging one. Only a few education system transformation efforts have succeededmost fall short of their ambitions (Exhibit 8-1). Out of the 55 school systems that participate regularly in international assessments, only 12 have delivered significant, widespread and sustained improvements in the past decade, despite massive increases in spending on education internationally. One study of several OECD countries, for instance, found that school system performance had either flat-lined or deteriorated during the period of 1970 to 1994, despite real increases in expenditure (Exhibit 8-2). Internationally, education system reforms typically fail for common reasonsinsufficient will, time and commitment from all political and Ministry leaders; inability to stay the course under intense challenges from those opposed to the changes; paralysis in the face of polarising debates led by teachers and other stakeholders; resistance to change amongst teachers; or capacity gaps within the Ministry. Malaysia should therefore be aware of these challenges. Although these obstacles are daunting, it is vital that Malaysia rises to the challenge. Promisingly, research on the worlds most improved school systems indicates that it is possible to overcome these challenges to deliver fundamental improvements regardless of the starting point of the system, in as little as six years.
8-3
international assessments over the last ten years and the system in now in the bottom third cohort of systems across the world. Further, the improvements that are required on access, equity, unity and efficiency will largely be driven by quality improvements. For example, increasing secondary enrolment requires an improvement in the quality of vocational options. Similarly making National schools the school of choice to enhance unity first requires improving the quality of education in these schools. There will be three waves of reform (Exhibit 8-3). The Ministry will focus Wave 1 of the reform (2013-2015) on turning around the performance of the system. The objective is to improve education quality to the point where Malaysia is at par with the global average by 2015 as this will then set the education system up for future success. The Ministry has defined three focus areas during this wave:
EXHIBIT 8-1
0 0
1.1 -0.5
2.3 -0.9
3.4
4.6
5.7
6.9
8.0
9.2
10.3
11.5
12 43
-4.1
2009
-1.4
-1.8
2004
-2.3
2005
-2.7
2006
-3.2
2007
-3.6
2008
-4.5
2010
2000
2001
2002
2003
1 Trend is the regression of average scores on the universal scale; 2 The 12 improving systems are England, Hong Kong, South Korea, Latvia, Lithuania, Ontario/Canada, Poland, Saxony, Singapore, Slovenia, Boston, Long Beach. 3 The 43 stagnating or declining systems comprise: Australia, Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Bulgaria, Canada, Chinese Taipei, Colombia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Indonesia, Iran, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Malaysia, Mexico, Morocco, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Portugal, Romania, Russia, Scotland, Slovak Republic, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Thailand, Tunisia, Turkey, USA SOURCE: TIMSS, PISA, NAEP, national and provincial assessments
8-4
every principal is focused on driving school improvement, and the best leaders are in the top 150-200 pivotal positions in the Ministry; and meet the minimum proficiency levels to teach the subject.
all 410,000 teachers and 10,000 principals onto a new career package, restructuring the federal, state and district offices and aligning them to new roles to better empower them to support schools, and introducing a new secondary and revised primary curriculum that addresses concerns regarding the knowledge, skills and values needed to thrive in todays global economy. By the start of Wave 3(2021-2025), all schools, teachers, and principals should be performing well above the minimum standard. As such, the Ministry will focus on increasing operational flexibility to cultivate a peer-led culture of professional excellence. The Ministry will also move most, if not all schools, onto a school-based management model, and scale up successful models of instructional innovation. The goal is to create a self-sustaining system that is capable of innovating and taking achievements to greater heights. Appendix VII contains a more complete list of initiatives that will be undertaken in each of the three waves.
EXHIBIT 8-2
% Belgium United Kingdom Japan Germany Italy France New Zealand Australia
-5 -8 2 -5 1 -7 -10 -2
1 Real expenditure, adjusted using a price index of government goods and service 2 Mathematics and Science SOURCE: UNESCO, EFA Global Monitoring Report 2005, Pritchett (2004), Woessmann (2002)
8-5
EXHIBIT 8-3
Key outcomes
Malaysias performance on TIMSS and PISA in top third of systems Maintain or improve enrolment Maintain or improve urban-rural gap, 50% reduction in the socioeconomic and gender gaps
8-6
Wave 1 (2013 to 2015): turn around system by supporting teachers and focusing on core skills
The Ministrys focus during this phase will be on delivering a turnaround programme for the education system and arresting further decline in education outcomes. Early phases of the programme will cater to existing capability and capacity constraints and focus on more prescriptive initiatives. As described above, the focus will be on improving classroom instruction, enhancing Ministry and school leadership, and raising language proficiency levels. To this end, the Ministry will undertake initiatives in specific areas:
Tailored on-the-ground teacher coaching to improve classroom teaching: Tailored coaching will start for teachers that are in most need of help, starting with teachers in Bands 5, 6 and National 1BestariNet roll out to integrate ICT into day-to7 schools. Notably, this involves rolling out full-time SISC+ for the day learning: 1BestariNet is a project initiated by the Ministry. subjects of Bahasa Malaysia, English language, Mathematics and Under this project, 10,000 primary and secondary public schools in Science. These teacher coaches are responsible for rolling out the Malaysia will be equipped with internet access and a VLE by the end new curriculum and assessment format and training teachers on of 2013, providing internet connectivity and access to a world-class pedagogical skills. Additionally, a single competency-based teacher Integrated Learning Solution. The Ministry will also ensure that evaluation instrument will be introduced that will allow principals all teachers are competent in the use of the VLE by 2015, and that to evaluate teachers on an objective basis and identify strengths and sufficient fit-for-purpose devices are distributed to schools to enable development needs. The Ministry will also establish an e-Guru video them to make the most of this facility. library where teachers can access best-practice examples of good teaching. District support focused on under-performing schools, including those for students with specific needs, to Higher entry standards for teacher trainee intakes across accelerate school improvement: The JPN and PPD roles will IPGs and IPTAs on both academic and non-academic dimensions. be redefined to provide them with greater decision rights and more The Ministry will also put in place more stringent standards for direct interaction with schools. This increased operational flexibility graduation from teacher training programmes into teaching roles. will enable JPNs and PPDs to tailor policies and programmes to the specific contexts of their schools. Again, the initial priority will Dedicated principal coaches, and enhanced selection be on under-performing schools, including those for students with criteria for principals to improve quality of school specific needs such as indigenous and minority groups. The Ministry leadership: Strengthening the principal role will first require will centralise some of the more administrative functions currently improving the processes to fill principal positions and enhancing held by PPDs to give PPD officers more time to spend on the ground the selection criteria to focus on meeting a minimum leadership working with schools. A standard set of KPIs will be rolled out competency requirement. The Ministry will also introduce improved across all JPNs, PPDs and schools to ensure a common focus on the succession planning for principals, with active identification and Blueprints priorities. fast-tracking for teachers with the greatest leadership potential. Enrolment drives, greater parental involvement and better vocational programmes to increase preschool and secondary school enrolment: The number of compulsory schooling years will be extended from 6 to 11 years, namely to the Examination questions revamped with greater proportion end of Form Five. There will also be concerted efforts towards focused on higher order thinking skills: By 2016, higher order universal preschool enrolment and raising quality standards thinking questions will make up 80% of UPSR questions, 80% of across public and private preschools. Targeted preschool through the Form 3 central assessment, 75% of the questions for SPM core to secondary school enrolment campaigns will be launched and subjects, and 50% of the questions for SPM elective subjects. This the participation of parents will be encouraged and supported will refocus teachers attention on developing higher order thinking through the roll-out of a toolkit that provides parents with methods skills. A comparable shift will be undertaken for school-based on how to support their childs learning. The roll-out of two new assessment questions. vocational education reforms PAV in lower secondary and KV in upper secondary will expand the number of places in vocational programmes and options available in the system. To ensure that all principals have adequate support, principals of schools in Bands 5, 6, and 7 will receive guidance from SiPartners+, to help them improve their schools.
Uniform standards for Bahasa Malaysia rolled out at primary level, with remedial support for students struggling in Bahasa Malaysia and English language: The Ministry will standardise the Bahasa Malaysia curriculum and assessment across National and National-type primary schools from 2014 starting with the Year 4 cohort. In parallel, the Ministry will provide intensive remedial classes for National-type school students in Years 4 to 6 who are struggling to keep up with these raised standards. Low English proficiency is a problem across all school types. The successful LINUS programme will expand beyond basic Bahasa Malaysia literacy to include basic English language literacy to identify at risk students at an early stage in Years 1 to 3. The Ministry will also require all English teachers to undergo the CPT with those who fall short of minimum proficiency levels being required to undergo training.
8-7
Enhance teacher coaching and support: The Ministry will further strengthen the CPD programmes offered, allow for further individualisation of CPD plans, and improve the delivery of both academic and non-academic components of the curriculum. Competency and performance-based progression, enhanced career pathways and improved pre-service training rolledout: The Ministry will launch a revised pre-service teacher education curriculum in IPGs that better reflects the new competencies expected of teachers. It will also discuss with MOHE incorporating similar curriculum at IPTAs. It will roll out faster progression based fully on merit and competency rather than tenure and an integrated professional development system linked to performance management. Enhanced pathways will be developed to allow teachers to progress based on interests and skills. Teachers who consistently underperform, despite concerted support, will be redeployed to other school-based functions such as data or discipline management. New secondary and revised primary curriculum rolled out: The Ministry will roll out the new KSSM, and an updated KSSR, in 2017. This curriculum will still stress student-centred and differentiated teaching, but have a greater emphasis on problembased and project-based work, a streamlined set of subjects or themes, and formative assessments. The new curriculum will also support an accelerated learning pathway for high-performing students to complete the SPM in four rather than five years and the UPSR in five rather than six years. Additionally, clear learning standards will be laid out so that students and parents understand the progress expected within each year of schooling. Peralihan class ended, options for increased English language exposure piloted and additional language provision strengthened: The peralihan class, which provided remedial support for students struggling in Bahasa Malaysia will be stopped, with the expectation that students will receive remedial support at an earlier stage. Next, the Ministry will explore introducing options to promote increased English language exposure such as expanding the compulsory English Literature component in secondary schools. Once the Ministry has strengthened the standards of Bahasa Malaysia and English language in the current school system, it will look into ways to encourage the learning of additional languages. For example, it will train and deploy more Chinese, Tamil and Arabic language teachers to primary and secondary schools. ICT innovations: With the basics in place the Ministry will start to explore how innovations, particularly relating to distance and self-paced learning could be used to expand access to high quality teaching regardless of a students location or skill level. Enhanced programmes for groups with specific needs: Groups such as Indigenous and other Minority Groups (IOM), gifted and talented students, and special needs students frequently have needs that are not sufficiently catered to in the mainstream system. During Wave 2, the Ministry will roll out an accelerated learning pathway option for high-performing students, and a gifted and talented programme for the top 1% of every student cohort. The Ministry will also strengthen existing programmes for special needs
Enhanced practicum in vocational programmes through greater private sector collaboration: The Ministry is working with the industry to implement industry recognised curriculum in its vocational colleges. A key component of this curriculum is practicum placements to provide students with relevant work experience. Ministry transformation beginning with best leaders placed in pivotal JPN and PPD positions: The Ministry is redefining the roles of the JPN and PPD. Instead of being predominantly administrative managers, the JPN and PPD will be empowered to provide direct (and tailored) support to schools. With this redefinition of roles, the Ministry will deploy capable employees to the critical positions of JPN and PPD leaders.
8-8
and IOM students by investing additional physical and teaching resources to allow for an expansion of places and greater tailoring of support to the contexts of these specific student groups. Strengthened core divisions, PPD and JPN roles, and restructured Ministry to improve Ministry delivery: Building upon Wave 1 and the redefined PPD and JPN roles, core divisions of the Ministry, namely BPPDP, BPK, BPG, JNJK and LP will be strengthened. The overall organisation will also be restructured to eliminate silos and shift more personnel to the JPN and PPD offices which provide frontline support to schools.
teachers, this includes flexibility over professional issues related to curriculum timetabling and lesson organisation, pedagogical approaches and school-based assessment. For school leaders, this includes flexibility on instructional leadership matters such as school improvement, curriculum and co-curriculum planning, and administrative leadership matters such as allocation of school funds; The creation of a peer-led culture of professional excellence wherein teachers mentor and inspire one another, share best practices and hold their peers accountable for meeting professional standards. The Ministry may also consider setting up a certification scheme that is linked to the mastery of teacher competencies set out in Wave 1; Innovations that successfully raise Bahasa Malaysia and English language proficiency are scaled up and provision of additional languages expanded; Nationally roll out ICT innovations and programmes for groups with specific needs to continuously raise learning standards; New career pathways and progression based on competencies and performance rolled out for all Ministry officials to strengthen and institutionalise Ministry transformation; and
Wave 3 (2021 to 2025): move towards excellence with increased operational flexibility
The focus of the third wave is on accelerating the performance improvement trajectory of Malaysias education system, moving it into the top third world-wide, and starting to embark on the journey to excellence. To this end, this phase will focus on increasing schoolbased management and cultivating a peer-led culture of professional excellence, capable of innovating and taking achievements to greater heights by ensuring the following:
Greater school-based management and autonomy on issues related to curriculum implementation and budget allocation for any school School structure reviewed to determine if further optimisation of that meets a minimum performance criteria. Teachers and all school pathways and schooling options are necessary. leaders should fully utilise the flexibility accorded to them. For
8-9
Delivering Differently
A well-conceived plan is only the starting point of an effective transformation. Having articulated what the aims of the education system are and when they need to be achieved, the final, critical piece that remains is defining how the Ministry will do this. The Ministry used three sources of information and experience to identify delivery elements that will enable it to successfully tackle the challenges that lie ahead: (i) research into the worlds most improved school systems; (ii) examples of successful transformations from Malaysian states; and (iii) in-depth analyses of the specific challenges Malaysia faces in attempting to improve the education system. The critical elements to initiate and ignite successful education reform are as follows:
The new EDU will drive execution of Blueprint initiatives and interact with the public to keep them informed of Blueprint progress and gather ongoing feedback. The EDU will integrate the current functions of the Delivery Management Office (DMO), and the Project Management Office (PMO). Driving the execution of education initiatives extends beyond tracking progress. The EDU also will provide on-the-ground problem solving and act as the first point to escalate issues for the Ministry on a day-to-day basis. It is important to note is that the EDU will play a supporting role; the accountability for delivering remains with the key people in the Ministry. The composition of the EDU is critical to its success. The EDU will have a leader who has a track record for delivering big, fast results and a broad range of influencing skills. The rest of the EDU will comprise fifteen to twenty highly skilled employees, from both the public and private sectors. These individuals will consist of some of the top talent in Malaysia and possess a strong track-record in problem solving, delivery, and engagement.
8-10
management system that sets high expectations of individuals, rewards months, KPPM and KSU will have a half-an-hour in-person session with strong performance, addresses poor performance and provides support individuals in pivotal Ministry roles to conduct detailed performance assessments and provide feedback. This practice should cascade needed for individuals to achieve their targets. down the organisation so that all leaders have rigorous performance discussions with their subordinates. Following these discussions, establishing consistent Key Performance indicators (KPis) Using the five system aspirations and initiative KPIs as a basis, KPIs will individuals will be provided with the professional development support needed to improve their performance. If performance remains poor be set for individuals throughout the system. Initially, KPIs will be set for the Ministry senior leadershipthe Minister of Education, Secretary- over a prolonged period of time despite this professional development support, employees may be redeployed to alternative roles that they are General of Education or Ketua Setiausaha (KSU) and Director-General better suited to. Over time, this should form a virtuous cyclerewards of Education or Ketua Pengarah Pelajaran Malaysia (KPPM). The and consequence management will incentivise individuals to work Ministers performance will be measured by the performance of the towards their KPIs and the developmental feedback will identify the Blueprint as a whole. The KSU and KPPMs performances will be support individuals will need to achieve their KPIs. measured on the basis of the progress of the initiatives that fall under their purview. Once this is done, KPIs will be set for the remaining 150 to 200 roles identified as critical to the Blueprint, including pivotal Ministry roles, JPN Directors, and PPD heads. Finally, KPIs will be cascaded down to the remaining individuals in the organisation.
monitoring KPis rigorously, conducting regular and robust feedback conversations based on differentiated performance, and providing meaningful rewards and consequences
For KPIs to be meaningful, individuals must be both supported and challenged to reach their targets. This means that detailed, regular developmental feedback must be used in combination with objective and meaningful rewards and consequence management. Once every six
8-11
getting StarteD
The first year, particularly the first hundred days, can define the success of a transformation. The Malaysian education system is entering an intensive period of change. Some of the most significant results of these changes, such as improvements in performances on international assessment, will only be visible a few years down the road. However, over the next twelve months, the public can expect to see significant changes in the way the system is run that will form the foundations of these future results. Here is what to expect over the coming months:
with various stakeholder groups. The Malaysian Review Panel and International Review Panel will also formally review the Blueprint and submit a final round of feedback. Release of the Final Blueprint: By mid-December 2012, the Ministry will have consolidated all feedback, incorporated it, and submitted the Final Blueprint to the Cabinet.
EXHIBIT 8-4
All 70,000 English teachers assessed against internationally recognised CPT 5,000 of these teachers upskilled
LINUS 2.0 (including English literacy) rolled out to all primary schools
Dec 2012
461 full-time SISC+ and SiPartners+ introduced in Kedah and Sabah to provide teachers and principals in Band 5, 6 and 7 schools with tailored, on-the-ground training Parent engagement toolkit rolled out to all 10,000 schools to equip parents to better support childrens learning
Dec 2013
All 10,000 national primary and secondary schools to receive 4G coverage through 1BestariNet rollout All 1,608 schools requiring critical repairs fixed
8-12
The changes laid out in the entirety of this Blueprint are ambitious, and geared towards delivering a comprehensive, sustainable and rapid transformation of the education system. These changes are sequenced over three waves to build successively on one another as the systems capacity and capabilities improve. The first wave of the transformation will focus on strengthening the foundations of the system through a focus on raising teacher quality and improving school leadership quality. The second wave will introduce more structural changes to accelerate the pace of change, from new teacher and principal career packages to a new secondary and revised primary school curriculum. The final wave of reform aims to create a peer-led culture of professional excellence. This means greater operational flexibility at the school levelgiving districts and schools the ability to make decisions that work for their individual communities and students.
Looking to the future, the only way to ensure that the Malaysian education system continues to be relevant in a constantly changing world is to integrate a spirit of innovation and creativity into the system itself. This paradigm shift must occur at every levelfederal, state, district, school, and teacher. It is only through this collective effort and transformation on the part of every single stakeholder can the Malaysian education system become truly able to tackle the ever-changing challenges of the 21st century.
G-1
1BestariNet 3Rs 4G
A project to equip all public schools in Malaysia with high-speed 4G internet access and a vle. Reading, wRiting, and ARithmetic. Fourth-generation wireless, is a type of technology that can be used with cellular phones, wireless computers, and other mobile devices. This technology gives users faster access to the internet than most previous third-generation (3G) networks can offer, and it also offers new user options such as the ability to access high-definition (hd) video, high-quality voice, and high-data-rate wireless channels via mobile devices.
Akademi Kepimpinan Pengajian Tinggi or higher education leadership Academy. School categorisation by performance on a scale of 1 to 7 according to composite score. Bayaran Insentif Subjek Pendidikan or Incentive Payment for educational Subjects. Bahagian Pendidikan Guru or Teacher education division. Bahagian Pembangunan Kurikulum or Curriculum development division. Bahagian Pendidikan Khas or Special education division. Bahagian Perolehan dan Pengurusan Aset or Procurement and Asset Management division. Bahagian Perancangan dan Penyelidikan Dasar Pendidikan or educational Policy, Planning and Research division. Bahagian Pengurusan Sekolah Berasrama Penuh dan Sekolah Kecemerlangan or Fully Residential School and excellent School Management division. Bahagian Pengurusan Sekolah Harian or Public School Management division. Bahagian Pengurusan Sumber Manusia or human Resources Management division. Bahagian Teknologi Pendidikan or educational Technology division. Bahagian Pendidikan Teknikal dan Vokasional or Technical and vocational education division. english language 1119 paper for GCe o-level. Common european Framework for References. A measure of school performance developed for the NKRA. It is calculated by taking the weighted average of a schools percent GPS (70%) and SKPM (30%). Continuous Professional development. Cambridge Placement Test.
BPSBPSK
CPd CPT
G-2
Cluster School. A school of excellence in a specialised field. development expenditure spent on property and plant, building, infrastructure and other assets. Public Sector employment Category for education. Programme to enable all states and districts to substantially improve performance of schools. Diploma Vokasional Malaysia or Vocational Diploma of Malaysia. A post-secondary qualification for vocational education. early Childhood Care and education. education delivery Unit, a new unit to be established at the ministry to oversee implementation of the blueprint. english language Training Centre. education Management Information System. Federal land development Agency. Gross domestic Product. Gred Purata Sekolah or School Grade Point Average. A weighted average of all the national assessments taken by the students in the school. It is a measure of the academic performance of schools. Government Transformation Programme. An initiative by the Government of Malaysia aimed at addressing key areas of concern to the rakyat while supporting Malaysias transformation into a developed and high-income nation as per vision 2020. high Performing School. Institut Aminuddin Baki or Aminuddin Baki Institute. The training institute for principals. International Baccalaureate. Information and communication technology. International Association for the evaluation of educational Achievement. International General Certificate of Secondary Education. Indigenous and other minority groups. Refer to Perlembagaan Persekutuan 1965. Institut Pendidikan Guru or Teacher education Institute. Institut Pengajian Tinggi Awam or Public Institute of higher education.
eCCe edU
GTP
G-3
IPTS ISo ISTe ITU JNJK JPN K9 Special Comprehensive Model School KAP KBSM
Institut Pengajian Tinggi Swasta or Private Institute of higher education. International organisation for Standardisation. International Society for Technology in education. International Telecommunications Union. Jemaah Nazir Dan Jaminan Kualiti or Schools Inspectorate And Quality Assurance. Jabatan Pelajaran Negeri or State education department. Schools that provide residential education from Primary Year 1 to Secondary Form 3 for IoM. The main objective is to reduce the drop-out rate between Year 6 and Form 1. Kurikulum Asli dan Penan or Curriculum for the Orang Asli and Penan Communities. Kurikulum Bersepadu Sekolah Menengah or Secondary School Integrated Curriculum. will be phased out in favour of KSSM. Kurikulum Bersepadu Sekolah Rendah or Primary School Integrated Curriculum. In the process of being phased out in favour of KSSR. Kelas Dewasa Orang Asli dan Pribumi or Adult Classes for the Orang Asli and Prebumi communities. Kursus Kepimpinan dan Pengurusan Pendidikan or educational leadership and Management Course. Kompetensi Pemimpin Sekolah or School leadership Competency. Key Performance Indicators. Kursus Perguruan Lepasan Ijazah or Post-graduate course in education. Ketua Pengarah Pelajaran Malaysia or director-General of education. Kurikulum Standard Sekolah Menengah or Secondary School Standard Curriculum. A standard-based curriculum for secondary schools to be ready for roll-out to Form 1 students in 2017. Kurikulum Standard Sekolah Rendah or Primary School Standard Curriculum. A standard-based curriculum for primary schools that commenced roll-out in 2011. Ketua Setiausaha or Secretary-General Kolej Vokasional or vocational College.
KBSR
KedAP
KKPP
KSSR
KSU Kv
G-4
KwAPM
Kumpulan Wang Amanah Pelajar Miskin or the Underprivileged Students Trust Fund. A programme established by the Ministry of education to provide cash handouts to students from poor households. Fast-track programme for high-performing students to compress Year 1 and 2 into a single year. literacy and Numeracy Screening Programme. A remedial programme designed to ensure students acquire basic literacy and numeracy skills at the end of three years of primary education. Lembaga Penasihat dan Penyelarasan Pendidikan Agama Islam or Islamic education Coordination and Advisory Board. Laporan Nilaian Prestasi Tahunan or the annual performance report. Lembaga Peperiksaan or examination Syndicate. Memartabatkan Bahasa Malaysia dan Memperkukuhkan Bahasa Inggeris or Policy to Uphold Bahasa Malaysia and to Strengthen the english language. Modified Budgeting System. Ministry of higher education. Ministry of Science, Technology, and Innovation. Memorandum of Understanding. Majlis Peperiksaan Malaysia or Malaysian examination Council, responsible for administering the STPM examination. Malaysian Qualifications Agency. MARA Junior Science Colleges. Middle Year Programme under the IB programme. National Key economic Area. economic sectors that will drive economic growth under the economic Transformation Programme. education is one of the NKeAs. National Key Result Area. Priority area in which the Government of Malaysia will focus on to improve the efficiency and quality of government services. Education is one of the NKRAs. National Professional Qualification for Educational Leaders. National Professional Qualification for Headship.
lePAI
lNPT lP MBMMBI
NKRA
NPQel NPQh
G-5
National dialogue
engagement and consultation process on the Malaysian education system, conducted between April and July of 2012 with various stakeholder groups and almost 12,000 members of the public. Assessment of each students achievement relative to that of all other students taking the same examination in that particular year. This is similar to using a bell curve to determine a students standing. outcome Based Budgeting. operating expenditure that includes emolument, supplies and services, asset maintenance, awards. organisation for economic Co-operation and development. Oral Proficiency in English language for Secondary School programme. on-the-job. operating and Management Agreement. Pengajaran dan Pembelajaran or Teaching and learning. Pendidikan Asas Vokasional or Basic vocational education. Pentaksiran Berasaskan Sekolah or School-based Assessment. Performance Management and Delivery Unit, part of the Prime Ministers Office. Its objective is to oversee the implementation, assess the progress, facilitate as well as support the delivery and drive the progress of the GTP and the economic Transformation Programme.
Norms-referencing
oBB oe oeCd oPS english oTJ oMA P&P PAv PBS PeMANdU
Percent GPS
Calculated from the schools GPS to allow for comparability between national assessments. It is based on a standard formula and is also a measure of the academic performance of schools. National gifted education programme. Program Ijazah Sarjana Muda Pendidikan or the Bachelor of education programme. Persatuan Ibu Bapa dan Guru or Parent-Teacher Association. Pelan Induk Pembangunan Pendidikan or education development Master Plan. Programme For International Student Assessment, a widely recognised international assessment coordinated by the oeCd. Conducted every three years, PISA aims to evaluate proficiency in Reading, Mathematics, and Science in students aged 15 years old. Penilaian Menengah Rendah or lower Secondary Assessment. National assessment taken at Form 3 level.
PMR
G-6
Pejabat Pendidikan Daerah or District Education Office. Public-private partnership. Pengajaran dan Pembelajaran Sains dan Matematik dalam Bahasa Inggeris or the Teaching and learning of Science and Mathematics in english language. Transition programme, lasting for one year, to build Bahasa Malaysia competency in students transitioning from SJK(C) or SJK(T) to SMK. Return on investment.
Remove class
RoI
RIMUP
Rancangan Integrasi Murid untuk Perpaduan or Student Integration Plan for Unity. A programme to foster interaction across different school types through shared co-curricular activities. Rancangan Makanan Tambahan or Supplementary Food Programme. The National Principles or national philosophy instituted by royal proclamation in 1970. Sekolah Agama Bantuan Kerajaan or government-aided religious school. Sistem Analisis Peperiksaan Sekolah or School examination Analysis System. Sekolah Berasrama Penuh or full boarding school. Southeast Asian Ministers of education organisation Regional Centre for Special education. Grouping of students with similar levels of English language proficiency. Sets will be smaller than normal classes (approximately 20 to 30 students) and will allow teachers to tailor pedagogical styles according to skill level and learning requirements for teaching english language. Special Education Integrated Programme. Mainstream schools with specific classes dedicated to students with special needs. Full-time School Improvement Specialist Coach. School Improvement Partner. Term for principal coach. School Improvement Programme. Student Information System. Sekolah Jenis Kebangsaan (Cina) or National-type Chinese school for primary education. Sekolah Jenis Kebangsaan (Tamil) or National-type Tamil school for primary education.
SeIP
G-7
SK SK (Asli)
Sekolah Kebangsaan or National school for primary level. Sekolah Kebangsaan (Asli) or National school catering predominantly to the orang Asli community. Not a formal school type. Sekolah Kurang Murid or under-enrolled school. Sijil Kemahiran Malaysia or Malaysian Skills Certificate. Standard Kualiti Pendidikan Malaysia or Malaysian education Quality Standard. A selfassessment conducted by schools based on a standard established by JNJK. Sekolah Menengah Kebangsaan or National secondary school. Sekolah Menengah Kebangsaan Agama or National religious secondary school. Sekolah Menengah Vokasional or vocational secondary school. Sijil Pelajaran Malaysia or Malaysian Certificate of Education. National assessment conducted at Form 5 level. Suruhanjaya Perkhidmatan Pendidikan or education Service Commission. Sistem Pengurusan Pentaksiran Berasaskan Sekolah or School-based Assessment Management System. Smart School Qualification Standards. Sijil Tinggi Agama Malaysia or Malaysian Religious Higher Certificate, a post-secondary qualification considered equivalent to STPM. Assesses student achievement against fixed standards, irrespective of the year of participation or peer performance. Student performance is evaluated against these standards for each grade level to allow for accurate comparison of results across different years. Sijil Tinggi Persekolahan Malaysia or Malaysian Higher School Certificate. National assessment conducted at Form 6 level. Teaching and learning International Survey. Trends in Mathematics and Science Study, an international assessment of student performance in Math and Science. It is conducted every four years for students in Grades 4 and 8 (equivalent to Year 4 and Form 2).
SPP SPPBS
SSQS STAM
Standard Referencing
STPM
TAlIS TIMSS
G-8
Trust school
Public schools that are managed jointly by private partners and school leaders. Trust schools receive greater decision-making autonomy with greater accountability to enable innovation and improved student outcomes. United Nations development Programme. United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation.
UNdP UNeSCo
Universal Scale
A scale that normalises results from international assessments such as TIMSS, PISA, NAeP and other assessments in order to compare different countries. Ujian Penilaian Sekolah Rendah or Primary School evaluation Test. National assessment conducted at Year 6 level. virtual learning environment.
UPSR
vle
A-1
Since independence, education in Malaysia has undergone tremendous changes and development. From a diverse and fragmented system of education based upon communal needs, it has evolved into an education system that strives to build a united nation according to the Malaysian mould. Malaysia aims to produce a competitive society that is strong, united and resilient in facing challenges and adversity.
Exhibit i-1
List of Important Education Committee Reports 1 Barnes Report 1951 2 Fenn-Wu Report 1951 3 Razak Report 1956 4 Rahman Talib Report 1960 5 Higher Education Committee Report 1967 6 Dropout Report 1973 7 Cabinet Committee Report 1979 8 Cabinet Committee Report on Training 1991
Malaysia Education Blueprint 2013 - 2025 Appendix I: Overview of Major Education Reports and Policies
A-2
The most important challenges facing the new nation after independence were unity and democratisation of education. The process of consolidating the diverse school systems into a cohesive national education system, with the national language as the main medium of instruction, was initiated during this period. In 1957, all existing primary schools were converted to national and national-type schools. Bahasa Malaysia medium primary schools were renamed national schools. English, Chinese and Tamil schools became nationaltype primary schools. Whilst Bahasa Malaysia was the medium of instruction in national schools, English and the vernacular languages were the medium of instruction in national-type schools. The national language was made a compulsory subject in these national type-schools. The English national-type schools were converted into national schools in stages beginning 1968, with the implementation of five subjects taught in Bahasa Malaysia for Year One to Year Three students. English and Chinese secondary schools were converted to nationaltype secondary schools. These schools became fully or partially assisted schools. Private Chinese Schools that opted to become governmentaided schools were termed as Conforming schools. The year 1958 marked the beginning of Bahasa Malaysia medium secondary education. Bahasa Malaysia medium secondary classes started as an annex in English secondary schools. These classes eventually developed into national secondary schools. Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka (1956) and the Language Institute (1958) were responsible for the development of Bahasa Malaysia. The main function of the Language Institute was to train Bahasa Malaysia specialist teachers. The Dewan Bahasa dan Pustakas main function was to promote Bahasa Malaysia as the national language, and to produce textbooks and reference books in the national language. In 1962, school fees were abolished in all fully assisted primary schools. Free primary education was made available to all children regardless of their ethnic group or religion. The entrance examination into the secondary school, the Malaysian Secondary School Examination was abolished in 1964 and universal education was extended from six to nine years in Peninsular Malaysia. This examination was abolished in Sarawak in 1974 and in Sabah in 1977. The national agenda to unite the various ethnic groups in Malaysia started with the reformation of the curricular. Curricular reforms were focused on reviewing the existing syllabuses and designing a common content curriculum with a Malaysian outlook. The first comprehensive review of the scope and content of what was taught in schools was conducted in 1956. The General Syllabus and Review Committee was set up in 1964 to revise, amend or in some cases to devise new syllabuses. A comprehensive education system for lower secondary education was introduced in 1965. Technical and vocational education was given an impetus with the establishment of the Technical and Vocational Education Division in 1964.
educatIonal develoPment durIng the era of new economIc PolIcy (1971 to 1990)
Social and economic issues shaped the development of education from 1971 to 1990. Racial harmony and efforts to curb economic imbalances in the society were crucial to sustain development, stability and progress. This was the period of the New Economic Policy (NEP) that is a socio-economic policy to achieve unity and development. The focus was on eradicating poverty and restructuring the Malaysian society to eliminate the identification of race with economic function and geographical location. Improving the income of the poor especially in rural areas, bridging disparities between races and location, increasing production and creating more opportunities in the commercial, industrial and professional sectors were of paramount importance. The NEP brought about significant changes in the national education system. All students followed the same curriculum and sat for the same examinations. Civics was introduced as a subject to instil self reliance in students. Science and technical subjects were offered at the secondary level to produce skilled workforce in the areas of science and technology. The aim of achieving unity through the use of Bahasa Malaysia as the medium of instruction in all primary and secondary schools had begun since 1970, and implemented in stages. In Peninsular Malaysia and Sabah, English ceased to be the medium of instruction at the primary level in 1975, at the secondary level in 1982, and at the tertiary level in 1983. In Sarawak, the conversion of the medium of instruction was implemented in 1977 beginning with Year One. Today Bahasa Malaysia is the medium of instruction in all national schools and a compulsory subject in Chinese and Tamil schools. English is taught as a second language in all schools. In 1980, the Sijil Pelajaran Malaysia (SPM) examination was conducted in Bahasa Malaysia. In 1970, English ceased to be the medium of instruction for teacher training at the primary level. The provision of education, which was more focused in urban centres, was extended to the rural areas. More schools were built in the rural areas, providing greater access for rural children, especially the economically disadvantaged. In addition, the government introduced support programmes such as the fully residential schools, science schools, rural school hostels, the textbook loan scheme and educational television programmes. The government also expanded the provision of scholarships, the school meal programme and health programmes. In 1974, a Cabinet Committee was formed to study the implementation of the national education system. The focus of this committee was to ensure that the education system was able to produce citizens who are united, progressive, disciplined and talented in diverse fields as required to achieve the national mission. As a result of the Cabinet Committee Report, the Integrated Primary School Curriculum (KBSR) was formulated in 1983 and the Integrated Secondary School Curriculum (KBSM) was formulated in 1989. The National Education Philosophy was also formulated in 1988 to guide and strengthen the nations education system.
A-3
educatIon develoPment durIng the era of natIonal develoPment PolIcy (1991 to 2000)
Drastic changes in education took place in the last decade of the 20th century. The vast development of ICT hasten the globalisation era. In concurrence with the demands of globalisation and the information and technology era, Vision 2020 was launched by Dato Seri Dr. Mahathir Mohamad in 1991 to aspire Malaysians towards achieving the status of a developed nation by the year 2020. Accordingly, the Ministry outlined an education system to realise the vision. Education legislation was amended in order to be relevant to current needs. The Education Act 1961 was replaced with the Education Act 1996. One of the major amendments made was to include preschool into the National Education System. The enactment of the Private Higher Education Act 1996 was also amended to allow the establishments of more private higher education institutes. The Ministry formulated four new acts to encourage a more systematic development of higher education. The acts are: National Council on Higher Education Act 1996 - to allow the establishment of a council that will determine the policy and manage development of higher education. Universities and College Act (Amendment) 1996 - grants more financial and management autonomy to public universities. National Accreditation Board Act 1996 - quality assurance, especially for the private higher education programmes. National Higher Education Fund Corporation Act 1996 - provides student loans and funds in order to increase access to higher education. One of the major moves at this time was to increase access to higher education by setting up more public universities, college universities, matriculation colleges, community colleges, private colleges and universities as well as branch campus of overseas universities. Maktab Perguruan Sultan Idris was upgraded to Universiti Pendidikan Sultan Idris (UPSI) in 1997. The Malaysian Teaching Diploma Programme was also introduced to replace the Teaching Certificate Programme for pre-service teachers at Teachers Colleges. Measures were also taken to improve leadership qualities amongst school heads. Institut Aminuddin Baki (IAB) was entrusted with the task to provide leadership and management training to school leaders and administrators. Another significant change was the introduction of the open concept for Sijil Pelajaran Malaysia (SPM) and Sijil Tinggi Persekolahan Malaysia (STPM) examinations in 2000.
educatIon develoPment durIng the era of natIonal vIsIon PolIcy (2001 to 2010)
Globalisation, liberalisation and the vast development of ICT continued to influenced the development of the national education system. The challenge for the nation was to produce knowledgeable, competent and globally competitive human capital. The National Education Policy was formulated based on the Education Ordinance of 1957 which was later amended through the Razak Report (1956), the Rahman Talib Report (1960) and the Cabinet Committee Report (1979). The education policy was further strengtened through the legislation and amendment of the following acts (See Exhibit I-2). Exhibit i-2
Education Acts
Steps were taken to provide quality infrastructure as well as to increase the number of education facilities in all education institutions, as an effort to accommodate the increase in student enrolment. Developing competency and efficiency amongst leaders, teachers and education officers was also an important agenda during this period of time. Empowerment and learning organisation concepts were widely instilled and encouraged. Allocations were made to promote continuous human resource development. Programmes such as in service training on developing management, leadership and research skills were carried out at all levels of the Ministry as an effort to implement a competent and efficient education management system capable of providing quality and relevant education to the nation.
Malaysia Education Blueprint 2013 - 2025 Appendix I: Overview of Major Education Reports and Policies
A-4
The aim of the EDMP was to provide quality education for all. To ensure this goal is achieved, two main approaches were identified under the Ninth Malaysia Plan: Complete tasks specified under the previous five-year plan, ensure access to education for all and to provide equal opportunities for all students. Further develop the potential of schools in their respective clusters of educational institutions, enabling teachers and students to promote the schools and the national education system at the international level.
A-5
governance structure
The governance structure for this comprehensive undertaking was defined and established in October 2011. This structure was anchored around a Project Management Office (PMO) and Project Taskforce, which would be responsible for conducting the overall review of the education system, developing the new national education blueprint, and engaging a broad range of stakeholders throughout the process.
Project taskforce
The PMO reported weekly to a Project Taskforce, which in turn provided regular updates to the Minister of Education, Tan Sri Dato Haji Muhyiddin Haji Mohd. Yassin. The members of the taskforce are: Tan Sri Abd Ghafar Mahmud, Director-General of Education and Chairman of Taskforce Dato Dr. Rosli Mohamed, Secretary-General of the Ministry of Education Dato Wan Khazanah Ismail, Deputy Secretary-General (Management) Dato Nazirruddin Abd. Rahman, Deputy Secretary-General (Development) Dr. Amin Senin, Deputy Director-General (Policy and Education Development), and Head of PMO as of April 2012 Haji Sufaat Tumin, Deputy Director-General (School Operations) Datuk Dr. Khair Mohamad Yusof, Deputy Director-General (Teacher Professional Development)
A-6
Datuk Dr. Haili Dolhan, Rector, Teacher Education Institute of Malaysia Dr. Faridah Abu Hassan, Director, Educational Policy, Planning and Research Division Dr. Raslan Haniff Abdul Rashid, Special Officer to the Minister Education Dr. Noorliza Zakuan, Head of Delivery Management Office Tengku Azian Tengku Shahriman, Director of NKRA (Education) and NKEA (Education) The members of the PMO are: Puan Satinah Syed Saleh, Head of PMO (January-March 2012) Dr. Habibah Abdul Rahim Dr. Rosli Yacob Dr. Mohamed Yusoff Mohd. Nor Dr. Isham Ishak Norliah Abdul Aziz Dr. Hayati Ismail Dr. Rusmini Ku Ahmad Hj. Mustaffa Majid Fatin (Lim Siew Geck) Abdullah Noor Azman Mohd. Johan Exhibit ii-1
Governance structure for the Education System Review and Blueprint Development
Prime Minister of Malaysia
Provide input and guidance to the education review Malaysian Independent Review Panel International Independent Review Panel
Dr. Marzuki Mohamad, Special Officer to the Deputy Prime Minister Nor Zamani Abdol Hamid, Special Aide to the Director-General of Education Abrar Idris, Islamic Education Division Dr. Asmah Ahmad, Educational Policy, Planning and Research Division Ho Wooi Cheng, Curriculum Development Division Zamzaitul Akmal Hisham, Curriculum Development Division Ida Hairani Bakar, Curriculum Development Division B. Jagdeesh Kaur Gill, Curriculum Development Division
Project Taskforce
Conduct education review and prepare education blueprint Co-ordinate national dialogue and stakeholder engagement
A-7
Changing Education Paradigms by Sir Ken Robinson, published in 2010; Cumulative and Residual Effects on Future Student Academic Achievement by Sanders and Rivers, published in 1996; Deliverology 101: A Field Guide For Educational Leaders, by Michael Barber, published in 2010; Education Today: Mother Tongue Dilemma by UNESCO, published in 2002; How the Worlds Most Improved School Systems Keep Getting Better by McKinsey & Company, published in 2010; Impossible and Necessary by Sir Michael Barber, presented at the ASCL annual conference in 2009; Reviews of Vocational Education and TrainingLearning for Jobs by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), published in 2010; Teachers Matter: Attracting, Retaining and Developing Teachers by the OECD, published in 2005; and
Teaching and Learning International Survey (TALIS) by the OECD, published in 2010. Major reviews and policy documents: Since independence, several major reforms and reviews have been conducted. The International data: To further quantitatively benchmark Blueprint has referenced these reports to provide a historical Malaysias education system outcomes and drivers, several perspective across a number of areas. To this end, reform and international data sources were analysed, including: strategy documents and supporting evidence were examined such as Education at a Glance from the OECD comprising yearly the Razak Report (1956), Rahman Talib Report (1960), Education indicators on global education; Act 1961, Cabinet Committee Report (1979), National Education Philosophy (1988), Education Blueprint (2006-2010), and Strategic PISA Results by the Australian Council for Education Research Plan: Transformation of Vocational Education (2011). (ACER) comprising information and analyses on student performance in PISA; Ministry database: The analyses at the core of the Blueprint, from student outcomes to the drivers of performance, is based on data provided by divisions across the Ministry. These include: EMIS from the EPRD, comprising student, teacher, and school information such as demographics of students and teachers, grade level of teachers, and infrastructure in schools among others; Secondary School Operations or Operasi Menengah (OPMEN) from the Day School Operation Unit comprising detailed personnel data on teachers to deployment of teachers throughout the education system; and The IAB EMIS database from the Aminuddin Baki Institute comprising data on principal participation in preparatory, induction, and in-service training. Literature review and international research: To benchmark aspects of the Malaysian education system with countries globally, a wide literature review of academic publications, education journals, non-governmental organisation publications, and the mainstream media was undertaken. A sample of these are included below: TIMSS Results by the International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement and PISA comprising information and analyses on student performance in TIMSS and PISA international assessments; UNESCO Institute for Statistics comprising statistics on education systems such as student enrolment and participation, teaching staff, and education expenditure; and World Bank Database comprising financial indicators of global education systems including spending as a percentage of total government budget. Nationwide surveys: The Ministry recognises the importance of obtaining first-hand information from a large portion of the population across the country to create a robust picture of the system today. As such, the Ministry conducted a number of online surveys, designed to be a representative sample of the population across states and urban/rural locations.
A-8
National student survey: to understand students perceptions of their education and classroom experience, as well as their language proficiency. Approximately 22,000 students responded to this survey; National teacher survey: to understand teachers perceptions of their working environment, teaching practices, teacher workload, support received, and issues faced. Around 15,000 teachers responded to this survey; and National principal survey: to understand principals perceptions of skills required, training received, and time allocation. 570 principals responded to this survey. Ministry focus groups and interviews: Officers from the Ministry at the Federal level were engaged to obtain a firsthand understanding of the critical elements of delivery. This process of gaining deep perspectives on the system was key to the development of the Blueprint. Focus groups were conducted across the Ministry, including with the following: Research and Evaluation Sector, EPRD: student participation and performance in international assessments including PISA and TIMSS;
Exhibit ii-2
Evaluation of states for selection for state visits
Key deciding factor
Selection criteria
Variability in 1 performance journey
Johor
Best performing state for primary and among the top for secondary Primary Secondary
Terengganu
Best performance at secondary level and strong at primary
Sabah
Lowest performing state at both secondary and primary levels
Selangor
Among the average at primary and among the top for secondary
Kedah
Average performance at primary level and poor at secondary
School performance Band 5-7 Band 3-4 Band 1-2 2 Mix of urbanrural
1% 58% 40%
1% 71% 27%
36% 60% 4%
78% 21% 1%
5% 71% 24%
47% 44% 9%
3% 82% 15%
Mixed urban, with a good mix of rural areas 66.2% Among the larger states
Substantial rural population, with almost equal distribution 51.2% Average in terms of state size
Substantial rural population, with almost equal distribution 49.3% Also among the larger states
Highly urbanised, with a small mix of rural areas 88.4% Largest state in terms of # of students
South
North
School types: With over 20 categories of schools in the Malaysian education system, the five states were also selected to represent the Public School Management Division: deployment of teachers diverse mix of school types. The different types of schools visited to national schools, both at primary and secondary level; include: Financial Assistance Unit, Finance Division: understanding National primary and secondary schools; the 22 financial assistance programmes available for schools Fully residential schools; and students, the allocation mechanism and challenges, and perspectives on effectiveness of financial aid handouts, especially Vocational schools; to students; Private schools including Independent Chinese Schools and Teacher Unit, Human Resource Division: understanding private religious schools; compensation schemes of teachers and average starting pay of Indigenous schools (for Orang Asli), in Selangor; graduate teachers; and Maintenance Unit, Development Division: conditions of infrastructure in schools and challenges in conducting maintenance and repair works. Sekolah Pondok in Kedah; and Ethnic minority schools in Sabah. Key research activities: The Ministry conducted extensive focus groups and interviews during their visits to the five states. The stakeholders engaged and interview objectives include: Teacher and principal interviews and focus groups: to understand practices in schools, in terms of experiences as well as challenges in implementation of key policies. These were attended by around 330 teachers and principals; Parent focus groups: to understand the extent of parents involvement and engagement in their childs education and what their main concerns are. These were attended by over 100 parents; JPN, PPD and Sector Head focus groups: to understand the roles and responsibilities of these middle layers as the buffer and linkage between policy makers and schools, in terms of the experiences and challenges in executing recent policies and initiatives such as LINUS and KSSR. These were attended by around 165 officers; and School visits: to observe the teaching and learning practices in schools, targeted at rapidly improving schools to identify good practices and key challenges, covering around 15 schools.
state visits
The Ministry undertook field research in schools and districts via five state visits. These visits were to Selangor, Sabah, Terengganu, Johor, and Kedah. Selection criteria: Target states were determined based on rigorous selection criteria to form a representative sample of the education system (Exhibit II-2) across dimensions of: Variability in performance journey; Mix of urban-rural settings; Size of state by number of schools and student population; and Geographical zone in Malaysia.
A-9
universiti malaya
Research focus: Impact of seven major education policies and 72 Research focus: Effectiveness of management and administration sub-policies implemented between 1957 to 2011. from Ministry down to schools. Primary focus of the research was on the perception of Ministry officials and the PIBG towards the Sources and methodology: A survey of teachers, school leaders, district management and administration of schools. and state officers, Ministry officers, and university lecturers across eight states was conducted. Of the 7,200 surveys distributed, nearly Sources and methodology: An opinion/perception survey was 5,500 responses were received. completed by multiple stakeholders including 105 Ministry officers, 60 JPN officers from six states, with equal representation from each state higher education leadership academy and across urban/rural regions, 660 school leaders and teachers from representative nationwide sample across different types of schools, and (aKePt), ministry of higher education 60 PIBG heads. Research focus: Quality of teaching and learning processes In total, 945 questionnaires were distributed, with a response rate of 86.5% (817 responses). in the classroom, particularly as they pertain to the development of higher-order thinking skills (for example, creativity and problemsolving). Sources and methodology: 125 lessons were observed in 41 schools across six states.
A-10
research, stakeholder interviews on the ground, and consolidated analysis. The Blueprint draws on findings from the final report published in April 2012.
Prof Teo Kok Seong, Deputy Director, Institute of The Malay World and Civilization Dr. Zahri Aziz, Ex-Deputy Director General of School Operations, Ministry of Education Dr. Zulwali Kifli Merawi, Deputy Director of Educational Services Bureau, Sarawak Islamic Council Agnes Maria Sam, General Manager of Policy Initiative, Talent Corporation Malaysia Bhd. Dzulhijah Sukarno (Secretariat) Dr. A Azmi Saahri (Secretariat) Feedback was collected from live verbal discussions and also through written exit survey forms. A total of 16 townhalls were held, with almost 12,000 people participating. The attendees were diverse in ethnicity (79% Bumiputeras, 15% Chinese and 6% Indians). Approximately 66% were teachers, 18% were PIBG members and 16% were members of the general public.
natIonal dIalogue
The National Dialogue was launched in April 2012, to gather feedback and input from the rakyat on the education system. Input was gathered in a variety of formats to ensure the feedback gathered was inclusive and robust, including through public townhalls, submitted in written form as memoranda, closed door roundtable discussions and online forums. Suggestions raised were carefully considered and incorporated into the initiatives developed for the Blueprint (refer to Appendix III for more details).
Date 29 April 2012 6 May 2012 12 May 2012 19 May 2012 19 May 2012 20 May 2012 26 May 2012 27 May 2012 3 June 2012 3 June 2012
Venue Putrajaya Taiping, Perak Alor Setar, Kedah Kota Kinabalu, Sabah Tawau, Sabah Labuan Kuching, Sarawak Miri, Sarawak Melaka, Melaka Seremban, Negeri Sembilan Shah Alam, Selangor Penang Kuantan, Pahang Kota Bahru, Kelantan Terengganu Johor Bahru, Johor
Attendance 1,868 558 725 625 765 879 524 812 527 426
townhall meetings
Townhall meetings were the primary mode for gathering open feedback on a large, broad scale. These were held across all fourteen states to ensure that people from all parts of Malaysia had the opportunity to raise their views. The Panel established for the dialogues and roundtable discussions comprised twelve experts in education and related fields. Panel members and secretariat included the following: Tan Sri Dato Dr. Wan Mohd. Zahid Mohd. Noordin, National Dialogue Panel Chair, Chairman of Universiti Teknologi MARA, Ex-Director General of the Ministry of Education Prof. Datuk Dr. Shamsul Amri Baharuddin, Founding Director, Institute of Ethnic Studies (KITA), UKM Tan Sri Alimuddin Mohd. Dom, Director of Malaysian Teachers Foundation, Ex-Director General of the Ministry of Education Tan Sri Dato Sulaiman Mahbob, Ex-Chairman of Malaysian Investment Development Authority (MIDA) Datuk Kamal D.E. Quadra, Director of the Sabah Foundation College Dato Dr. Asariah Mior Shaharudin, Ex-Deputy Director General of Teacher Professional Development, Ministry of Education Dato Dr. Sidek Baba, Education Professor, International Islamic University Malaysia Prof Dr. Sivamurugan Pandian, Deputy Dean of Research and Postgraduate, Universiti Sains Malaysia
9 June 2012 17 June 2012 23 June 2012 23 June 2012 30 June 2012 14 July 2012
A-11
roundtable discussions
These were closed-door sessions that aimed to gain more detailed perspectives on specific topics. This was done through engagement with specific stakeholders in greater depth. A total of 20 roundtable sessions were held, with participation from 325 people. They provided the Ministry with focused, in-depth input from a wide range of leaders and experts that included representatives from NGOs, political parties, civil service, youth organisations, womens groups, ethnic minority groups, and special needs groups. Date 23 April 2012 15 May 2012 19 May 2012 22 May 2012 26 May 212 30 May 2012 31 May 2012 2 June 2012 4 June 2012 11 June 2012 12 June 2012 16 June 2012 18 June 2012 Group Teachers Unions Media Leaders from Sabah Womens organisations Leaders from Sarawak NGOs and associations Youth groups Leaders from Melaka Retired Guru Cemerlang Ruling party representatives Private sector and industrialists Leaders from Penang Opposition party representatives from Kelantan, Penang Higher education representatives Former Ministers of Education and Chief Secretary of Government of Malaysia Leaders from Kelantan Special needs organisations Sports community Barisan Nasional representatives Leaders from Johor
school visits
The Ministry wanted to get to the heart of what makes a good education system by hearing the voices of the students themselves. Consequently, school visits to primary and secondary schools were conducted by members of the PMO. They sought students perspectives on what makes their schools and teachers exemplary, as well as ideas for changes they would want to see in their schools.
memoranda
The Ministry received over 150 detailed memoranda as of July 2012 from many individual Malaysians and a diverse range of stakeholder groups including NGOs, special interest groups, and Ministry officers.
online media
The Ministry received close to 100 responses through its three online channels. This included an online forum, Facebook and Twitter.
educatIon laBs
To develop detailed initiatives as part of the first wave of the Blueprint, a series of education labs were held over a period of six weeks from May to June 2012. These were conducted with the support of PEMANDU, as part of the GTP 2.0 effort. These labs covered the identified priority areas for improvement (for example, curriculum and assessments, teachers and principals, and Ministry transformation). Lab teams comprised of a team leader, a facilitator and team members with relevant expertise to solve the problem at hand. More than 90 members from the Ministry of Education, other related Ministries (such as the Ministry of Finance and the Ministry of Women, Family, and Community Development) and the private sector were involved on a full-time basis over six weeks. This included officers from the federal, state and district levels of the Ministry. Lab members worked to define initiatives for transformation, develop detailed delivery plans for the first wave of implementation (from 2013 to 2015) and set concrete targets. Ideas developed in the labs were syndicated extensively with practicing teachers, principals, district and state officers, as well as with stakeholder bodies such as the teacher unions, principal associations, and parent teacher associations. Certain critical and immediately implementable initiatives were also piloted during this duration (for example, testing of English proficiency levels of nearly 8,000 teachers). The team leaders selected to head these education labs will also be driving implementation of initiatives developed during the labs: Dr. Ranjit Singh Gill, Director, English Language Teaching Centre (ELTC) Dr. Azian T.S. Abdullah, Deputy Director, Curriculum Development Division Dr. Aliah Haji Ahmad Shah, Head, National Key Economic Area Unit Dr. Soon Seng Thah, Deputy Director, Educational Technology Division
23 June 2012 25 June 2012 25 June 2012 25 June 2012 13 July 2012
A-12
Dr. Mehander Singh Nahar Singh, Deputy Director, Raja Melewar Institute of Teacher Education
Hj. Aminuddin Adam, Deputy Director, Day School Management Division Dr. Hj. Abdul Kadir Hj. Rosline, Rector of Universiti Teknologi MARA Sabah Hj. Zainudin Abas, Deputy Director, Sports Division Since the formation of the Malaysian review panel in 2011, panel Hjh. Fatimah Othman, Deputy Director, Teacher Training members have convened eight times at the time of this preliminary Division Blueprint to review key diagnostic findings, provide ideas on priority Asiah Hamzah, District Education Officer, Pekan, Pahang themes for action, and to give advice on successful implementation for the future development of the Blueprint. Additional meetings with the Dr. Hj. Ahmad Rafee Che Kassim, Head of Technology panel will be convened to finalise the Blueprint. Management Center, IAB
Prof. Dr. Rajendran A/L Nagappan, Professor of Universiti Pendidikan Sultan Idris, Co-ordinator of the Action Plan for Future of Tamil Schools
A-13
Others 1
PIBG
15
51 23
Student learning: Respondents articulated a desire for a more relevant curriculum, and better language proficiency and communication abilities for our students, to lay the foundations for students success in the 21st century. The Ministry is committed to taking action on the feedback it has received. The tables that follow provide a clear mapping of that commitment. They illustrate some of the specific comments and suggestions raised, and provide a brief explanation of how the Ministry will address these issues. A deeper understanding of the context and specifics of the initiatives can be found by referring to the chapters listed in this Blueprint.
1 Other occupational profiles refer to students (1% of total respondents) and politicians (1% of total respondents) SOURCE: Project Management Office, Ministry of Education
The 20 roundtables engaged in greater detail with specific stakeholder and interest groups (refer to Appendix II for details on which groups were engaged with), and these sessions provided
Malaysia Education Blueprint 2013 - 2025 Appendix III: National Dialogue Feedback
A-14
aspirations
Subtopic Example topic raised in the National Dialogue The education system should produce competent students who can compete internationally. Ministry response/action Reference
Quality
The Ministry shares this aspiration and aims to move Malaysia from the bottom third of countries on international assessments to the top third. Many of the Blueprints initiatives are directly aimed at making this goal a reality, from improving teachers pedagogical skills to upgrading existing curriculum and assessments to international benchmarks. All Ministry policies will remain anchored to the National Education Philosophy. To that end, the Blueprint moves beyond a traditional focus on content knowledge and cognitive skills to include 21st century elements of leadership, ethics and spirituality, with a strong sense of national identity. For example, the Ministry will include a compulsory community service component to foster unity among students. The Ministry will also continue to require all students to participate in at least 1 sport, 1 club, and 1 uniformed body. The Ministry will continue to provide Islamic Education to all Muslim students and Moral Education to all other students. The Ministry will refine the curriculum for these two subjects to include a broader study of the main religions in Malaysia, while the pedagogy will be improved to encourage greater understanding and belief in the values taught in these classes. The Ministry will revise the existing curriculum and assessments to incorporate the 21st century skills required for todays job market. The Ministry is also upgrading the quality of its specialised education pathways (for example, technical and vocational education) to ensure that they are industry-relevant and recognised. The Ministry has already launched the Vocational Transformation Plan to increase the quality of vocational education and increase the number of seats offered (including at the lower secondary level).
Chapter 2 for aspirations, Chapter 5 for initiatives on teachers, Chapter 4 for initiatives on curriculum and assessments. Chapter 2 for aspirations, Chapter 4 for including holistic elements in student learning.
The education system should develop students holistically (in line with the National Education Philosophy).
Chapters 4 and 7
The education system should better prepare students for entry into the job market.
Chapter 7
The Ministry should enhance vocational education and increase the number of vocational education schools to improve student pathway options. The Ministry should give more attention to religious schools.
Chapter 7
The Ministry aims to provide a quality religious and secular education across all national religious schools such as SMKA, in line with the National Education Philosophy. The national religious curriculum is being continuously upgraded to provide quality instruction across all national schools. In order to ensure a high standard of religious education across all religious schools, the Ministry is also providing financial assistance to governmentaided religious schools and will continue to offer similar assistance to private religious schools (subject to conversion in status to government-aided religious schools). In the medium-term, the Ministry will also explore options to increase the number of places available at religious schools to meet growing demand.
Chapter 7
A-15
Subtopic
Example topic raised in the National Dialogue The Ministry should ensure that students from low-income families are able to meet basic literacy standards in primary school. The Ministry should have clear and committed policy directions for inclusive provisions for special education to ensure that students with special needs are not left behind. The Ministry should have a specific policy for Orang Asli and other minority group students that tailors educational experiences to suit their cultural norms and practices, and addresses their poor academic results and high dropout rates.
Ministry response/action
Reference
Equity
The Ministry will expand the LINUS programme to ensure that all students, regardless of socio-economic background, achieve basic literacy (in Bahasa Malaysia and English) and numeracy after three years of primary schooling. The Ministry is also expanding access to preschool education for students from low-income families including through the provision of targeted financial aid. The Ministry is committed to raising the quality of all special education programmes, and to expanding the proportion of students in inclusive education programmes in mainstream schools (versus those in separate classrooms or schools).
Chapter 4
The Ministry has launched a dedicated action plan for Orang Asli and other minority group students. The plan includes the introduction of an intensive literacy intervention programme for Orang Asli and other minority group students in Year 1 to catch at risk students early, the establishment of a research centre to develop curriculum and pedagogy specially tailored to Orang Asli and other minority communities, and the implementation of professional development courses to prepare teachers to teach in Orang Asli schools.
Chapter 4
Unity
The education system should cater to all Malaysians, and there should be unity in diversity.
The Ministry will continue to encourage appreciation for Malaysias diversity in all students. The Ministry will extend RIMUP to all schools. RIMUP pairs two different types of schools (for example, a National school with a National-type Chinese school) to conduct co-curricular activities together, such as sports, music, and community service. This is in line with international research findings that performing group-based, task-oriented activities together is one of the most effective ways of encouraging students to form inter-group friendships. The Ministry will embed a joint community service element for all students (both Muslims and non-Muslims) to encourage greater inter-group friendships and appreciation for the broader community.
Chapter 7
The education system should offer a combined Moral Education class for Muslims and nonMuslims.
Chapter 7
Malaysia Education Blueprint 2013 - 2025 Appendix III: National Dialogue Feedback
A-16
teachers
Subtopic Example topic raised in the National Dialogue The Ministry should raise the profile of the teaching profession to make it a profession of choice and ensure a high standard of quality. Ministry response/action Reference
Quality
The Ministry will revitalise the teaching profession by: (i) raising the bar for entry; (ii) increasing investment in continuous professional development and teacher support; (iii) enabling fast-track progression based on competency and performance, not tenure; (iv) enforcing redeployment to non-teaching roles or voluntary exit of consistently under-performing teachers; and (v) formalising different career tracks based on teachers skills and interests. The Ministry will reduce teachers administrative burden by streamlining existing data collection and integrating management information systems to eliminate duplicate requests and to simplify the data entry process. The Ministry will also gradually redeploy some teachers into dedicated support, data management and analyst roles.
Chapter 5
Focus
The Ministry should ensure that teachers spend more time on teaching activities and less time on non-teaching activities, and should employ non-teaching staff for administrative work. The Ministry should provide teachers with continuous professional development and inculcate a culture of continuous learning and improvement among teachers to attain world-class teaching standards. The Ministry should improve the teacher evaluation system, and link it to performance in order to raise the quality of our teachers.
Chapter 5
Training
As described above, the Ministry will enhance continuous professional development by developing its portfolio of training programmes to explicitly link training to competency requirements. The Ministry is also focusing on school-based training and coaching such as the deployment of full-time SISC+ for teachers in Band 5, 6, and 7 schools.
Chapter 5
Performance management
The Ministry is developing a single instrument that clearly articulates the competencies expected of teachers, particularly with regard to teaching and learning. This instrument will be used during the annual evaluation, replacing all existing instruments. The Ministry is also committed to moving to a competency- and performance-based progression system, instead of one based primarily on tenure. The Ministry is refining the existing career pathway and progression system, and will take into consideration the competencies yielded by higher qualifications.
Chapter 5
The Ministry should give teachers recognition for taking the time and effort to gain a higher qualification (such as a Masters or Ph.D.). The Ministry should base teacher allowances on their roles and responsibilities. The Ministry should improve residential facilities for teachers in rural areas.
Chapter 5
The Ministry will review salaries and allowances on an ongoing basis to ensure fair compensation corresponding to workload, competency levels and student outcomes achieved. The welfare of teachers is an important focus area for the Ministry. The Ministry will first upgrade basic infrastructure facilities for all schools such as water and electricity supply, and ensuring structural safety. Once this has been achieved, the Ministry will focus on baseline infrastructure improvements, which includes improvements to residential facilities.
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
A-17
school quality
Subtopic Example topic raised in the National Dialogue The Ministry should enforce smaller class sizes in schools to improve student outcomes. Ministry response/action Reference
Class size
Research shows that factors like class size have less impact on the quality of student outcomes versus factors like teacher quality. As such, the Ministry will be maintaining the current policy threshold of a maximum of 35 students per class. The focus for the Ministry will be on improving conditions in the 11% of schools with class sizes of more than 35 students. The new school, district, and state dashboards to be rolled out in 2013 include a metric on disciplinary performance, which will be a focus area for school performance management The Ministry is rolling out 1BestariNet, a 4G network and virtual learning environment to all 10,000 schools by mid2013. It will also look into increasing the number of computers in schools, and providing adequate training to teachers and schools to ensure that ICT can be embedded into day-to-day teaching and learning activities. The Ministry analysed performance of students in both singleand double-session schools and found student outcomes to be comparable on multiple dimensions: academic, co-curricular, and student discipline. A significant number of schools today are double-session schools, and there are significant cost implications on converting all these schools. As such, the Ministry will review school needs on a case-by-case basis to determine if concerns of overcrowding are best addressed by conversion, or if other measures such as the provision of additional classrooms may be more appropriate. The Ministry will continually review and provide an annual school maintenance budget moving forward.
Chapter 6
Student discipline
Chapter 4
ICT
Chapter 6
Infrastructure
The Ministry should convert all double-session schools to single-session schools to improve student outcomes.
Chapter 6
The Ministry should ensure schools have sufficient allocation for infrastructure maintenance. Performance management The Ministry should review KPIs to measure student performance. Current KPIs focus too much on academic results and examinations rather the more important issues of plummeting quality of education.
Chapter 6
The Ministry has developed a comprehensive set of KPIs that have an increased focus on critical inputs that affect student outcomes, like number of hours teachers spend on teaching and learning and participation in co-curricular activities. It will also continue to benchmark performance of the entire system against international standards such as TIMMS and PISA, to ensure comparability with other school systems.
Chapter 6 for revising Ministry KPIs, Chapter 4 for revising curriculum and examinations
Malaysia Education Blueprint 2013 - 2025 Appendix III: National Dialogue Feedback
A-18
Subtopic
Example topic raised in the National Dialogue The Ministry should set up an Independent Inspection Commission to evaluate key areas of overall quality of education in schools, e.g. (i) student achievement; (ii) quality of teaching; (iii) quality of leadership and school management; and (iv) student behaviour and their general safety. The Ministry should provide differentiated levels of funding to schools based on their needs.
Ministry response/action
Reference
Performance management
Within the Ministry, JNJK is responsible for evaluating school quality on a comprehensive set of dimensions (leadership, organisational management, curriculum management, cocurricular activities, sports and student affairs, teaching and learning, and holistic student development). The Ministry is also looking into strengthening the JNJK by streamlining its scope of responsibilities, enhancing capabilities and capacity, as well as increasing its independence.
Chapter 6
Funding
The Ministry is empowering states and districts to allocate discretionary funding (such as for maintenance) to schools as they deem fit. The Ministry is also investing additional resources in the lowest performing schools (for example, full-time teacher and principal coaches, travel allowances for students in rural schools). In line with the practices of other high-performing systems such as Singapore, the Ministry believes that the level of autonomy a school receives should be based on its current performance level and improvement trajectory. In the first wave of reform, only a small set of high-performing schools are expected to qualify for greater decision rights over budget and curriculum. Most schools will still require high levels of support and close monitoring from the Ministry to meet national standards. In the medium to long term, however, the Ministry expects that most schools will enjoy greater decision rights.
Chapter 4
School autonomy
The Ministry should offer schools greater autonomy in initiating school policy changes, appointing school heads and teachers, and tailoring subjects according to students needs.
Chapter 4
A-19
student learning
Subtopic Example topic raised in the National Dialogue The education system should develop students problemsolving skills and the school curriculum should be relevant to real-world experiences. Ministry response/action Reference
Curriculum
The Ministry is taking concrete steps to embed 21st century skills in the curriculum, and to ensure the curriculum is delivered as intended. This includes increasing the proportion of questions focused on higher-order thinking skills in the national examinations, paring down the curriculum to create more time in the classroom for group and project-based work, and improving pedagogical skills. The Ministry is expanding the LINUS programme to ensure 100% of students achieve basic English literacy standards by the end of three years of primary schooling. The Ministry is also investing in an intensive upskilling of all 70,000 English teachers to ensure that they meet international proficiency standards. Additionally, the Ministry will strengthen its MBMMBI initiatives on English including OPS English (to improve conversational English) and Set System (to tailor English teaching to student proficiency levels). The Ministry is introducing OPS English, a programme designed to refocus classroom teaching on developing conversational English skills.
Chapter 4
English
The education system should strengthen student learning of English and English literacy.
Chapter 4
The education system should strengthen students communication skills to improve their employability. The Ministry should retain PPSMI.
Chapter 4
The MBMMBI programme will be enhanced to deliver significant improvements in the English proficiency of all students, and to learn from shortcomings and implementation issues from previous programmes such as PPSMI. One critical pre-requisite is the rapid upgrading of the English proficiency levels of English teachers, which will be an important and immediate focus of the Ministry. The Ministry is introducing a range of initiatives to improve the quality of English language subject instruction, including the practice of grouping students by proficiency levels into sets and tailoring instruction accordingly.
Chapter 4
The Ministry should provide enhanced English teaching to students with aptitude for the language to allow them to use the language at advanced levels The Ministry should reintroduce English as the medium of instruction in schools
Chapter 4
Bahasa Malaysia will remain the main medium of instruction in National schools. The aspiration is for all Malaysian children to be proficient in both Bahasa Malaysia as the national language, and in English as the international language of commerce and diplomacy. The Ministry recognises that achieving significantly higher levels of English proficiency will require improving the quality of teaching and lesson delivery in English subject classes. In the medium-term, the Ministry will also consider introducing structural changes to support greater instructional time in English. The Ministry is committed to offering Mandarin and Tamil in all SKs when at least 15 children request it. Similarly with the new KSSR, students can elect to learn additional languages such as Mandarin, Tamil and Arabic subject to the availability of teachers. In the longer-term, as proficiency in Bahasa Malaysia and English improve across the system, the Ministry will also look into expanding the range of third languages options to include other major Asian and international languages such as Japanese and Spanish.
Chapter 4
Multilingual proficiency
The education system should improve multilingual proficiency amongst students and teach third languages such as Arabic, Mandarin, and Tamil.
Chapter 4
Malaysia Education Blueprint 2013 - 2025 Appendix IV: The Universal Scale
A-20
A-21
Exhibit iV-1
Multiple assessments
normalised
PISA
TIMSS
25 unique assessments Test Subject Year Level Normalised to a single scale1 New units are equivalent to 2000 PISA Tiered into Poor, Fair, Good, Great, and Excellent performance
-1 SD2 440
Avg 480
+1 SD +2 SD 520 560
1 Via method of Erik Hanushek & Ludger Woessmann 2 Standard deviation 3 School Year Equivalent (equal to 38 points on the PISA 2000 scale) SOURCE: TIMSS; PISA; PIRLS; Hanushek and Woessmann, The High Cost of Low Educational Performance 2010, McKinsey & Co.
Malaysia Education Blueprint 2013 - 2025 Appendix V: Sample questions from PISA
A-22
Exhibit V-1
assessment of mathematics
Assessment of Mathematics
Scale Lower % of students able to score score at each level Level limit or above (in OECD) Expected competencies 6 669 3.1
PISA
Advanced
607
12.7
545
31.6
3 Intermediate 2
482
56.0
420
78.0
358
92.0
Conceptualise, generalise and utilise information based on their modeling of complex problem situations Link different information sources and representations and flexibly translate between them Capable of advanced mathematical thinking and reasoning Provide accurate interpretations of their findings Develop and work with models for complex situations, identify constraints and specify assumptions Use broad, well-developed thinking and reasoning skills, appropriately linked representations, symbolic and formal characterisations, and insight pertaining to these situations Communicate their interpretations and reasoning Work effectively with explicit models for complex concrete situations that may involve constraints or call for making assumptions Select and integrate different representations, including symbolic representations, linking them directly to aspects of real-world situations Execute clearly described procedures Select and apply simple problem-solving strategies Interpret and use representations based on different information sources and reason directly from them Develop short communications reporting their interpretations, results and reasoning Interpret and recognise situations in simple contexts with direct inference Extract relevant information from a single source and make use of a single representational mode Direct reasoning and literal interpretations of the results Answer questions involving familiar contexts Identify information and carry out routine procedures according to direct instructions in explicit situations Perform obvious actions that follow immediately from the given stimuli
A-23
Exhibit V-2
PiSA PISA
a sample question from PIsa 2009: mathematics A sample question from PISA 2009+: Mathematics
Below min
% of 15-year old students with correct answer Finland Singapore Japan Korea Hong Kong Thailand Malaysia Indonesia
84 83 82 82 77 67 54 47
OECD = 79
Malaysia Education Blueprint 2013 - 2025 Appendix V: Sample questions from PISA
A-24
Exhibit V-3
PiSA PISA
a sample question from PIsa 2009: mathematics A sample question from PISA 2009+: Mathematics
Intermediate
% of 15-year old students with correct answer Singapore Hong Kong Korea Finland Japan Thailand Malaysia Indonesia
72 69 63 62 60 33 32 17
OECD = 52
A-25
Exhibit V-4
PiSA PISA
52 50 44 39 38 11 10
4
OECD = 27
Malaysia Education Blueprint 2013 - 2025 Appendix V: Sample questions from PISA
A-26
Exhibit V-5
PiSA PISA
assessment of science
Assessment of Science
Scale Lower % of students able to score score at each level Level limit or above (in OECD) Expected competencies 6 708 1.1
Apply scientific knowledge and knowledge about science in complex life situations Clearly and consistently demonstrate advanced scientific thinking and reasoning, Use scientific knowledge and develop arguments in support of recommendations and decisions that centre on personal, social or global situations. Identify the scientific components of many complex life situations Apply both scientific concepts and knowledge about science to these situations Compare, select and evaluate appropriate scientific evidence Bring critical insights to situations Work effectively with situations and issues that may involve explicit phenomena requiring them to make inferences about the role of science or technology Identify clearly described scientific issues in a range of contexts Select facts and knowledge to explain phenomena and apply simple models or inquiry strategies Adequate scientific knowledge to provide possible explanations in familiar contexts or draw conclusions based on simple investigations Direct reasoning and make literal interpretations of the results of scientific inquiry or technological problem solving Limited scientific knowledge that it can only be applied to a few, familiar situations Present obvious scientific explanations that follow explicitly from given evidence
Advanced
633
8.5
559
29.1
3 Intermediate 2
484
57.7
409
82.0
Below min
335
95.0
SOURCE: OECD
A-27
Exhibit V-6
PiSA PISA
a sample question from PIsa 2009: science A sample question from PISA 2009+: Science
Below min
% of 15-year old students with correct answer Finland Singapore Korea Hong Kong Japan Thailand Malaysia Indonesia
96 90 89 88 83 66 54 43
OECD = 89
Malaysia Education Blueprint 2013 - 2025 Appendix V: Sample questions from PISA
A-28
Exhibit V-7
PiSA PISA
aA sample question from PISA 2009+: Science sample question from PIsa 2009: science
Intermediate
% of 15-year old students with correct answer Singapore Japan Hong Kong Finland Korea Malaysia Thailand Indonesia
61 60 53 53 44 33 31 22
OECD = 38
A-29
Exhibit V-8
PiSA PISA
a sample question from PIsa 2009: science A sample question from PISA 2009+: Science
Advanced
% of 15-year old students with correct answer Singapore Finland Hong Kong Malaysia Thailand Korea Japan Indonesia
36 33 27 24 24 17 15 10
OECD = 31
Malaysia Education Blueprint 2013 - 2025 Appendix V: Sample questions from PISA
A-30
Exhibit V-9
PiSA PISA
assessment of reading
Assessment of Reading
Scale Lower % of students able to score score at each level Level limit or above (in OECD) Expected competencies 6 698 0.8
Highly skilled readers Comprehend both explicit and implicit information Reflect on and evaluate what they read at a more general level Find information in texts that are unfamiliar to either form or content, demonstrate detailed understanding, and infer which information is relevant to the task Evaluate critically and build hypotheses, draw on specialised knowledge and accommodate concepts that may be contrary to expectations Capable of difficult reading tasks, such as locating embedded information, construing meaning from nuances of language and critically evaluating a text Capable of reading tasks of moderate complexity, such as locating multiple pieces of information, making links between different parts of a text, and relating it to familiar everyday knowledge Locate information that meets several conditions Make comparisons or contrasts around a single feature Understand a well-defined text even when the information is not prominent Make connections between the text and personal experience Locate pieces of explicitly stated information that is rather prominent in the text Recognise a main idea in a text about a familiar topic and the connection between information in such a text and their everyday experience Find explicitly stated information in short, simple texts with a familiar style and content Make low-level inferences such as recognising a causal connection across two sentences even when it is not stated
Advanced
626
7.6
553
28.3
3 Intermediate 2
480
57.2
407
81.2
1a Below min
335
94.3
1b
262
98.9
SOURCE: OECD
A-31
Exhibit V-10
PiSA PISA
91 88 87 80 77 67 65 63
OECD = 82
Malaysia Education Blueprint 2013 - 2025 Appendix V: Sample questions from PISA
A-32
Exhibit V-11
PiSA PISA
85 83 74 70 62 47 34 17
OECD = 55
A-33
Exhibit V-12
PiSA PISA
30 26 20 19 18 18 14 13
OECD = 17
Malaysia Education Blueprint 2013 - 2025 Appendix VI: The Education Roadmap
A-34
A-35
LANGUAGE
TEACHERS
SCHOOL LEADERS
School leadership enhanced SiPartners+ introduced Succession planning started Residency and immersion programme Enhanced selection criteria and process for principals put in place Best principals given incentives to go to underperforming schools Pre-school and secondary enrolment increased Aggressive enrolment drive launched 11 years compulsory schooling introduced
SYSTEM STRUCTURE
Vocational education strengthened Enrolment increased using trained guidance counselors who produce student career profiles Quality of practicum improved through enhanced collaboration with private industry Improved standards in religious schools (public and private) through STAM promotion Form 6 rebranded National-type schools maintained and strengthened through initiatives targeting quality (see student learning)
ENHANCEMENT OF UNITY
Parental and community involvement increased Parental toolkit rolled-out Adjustments to financial aid based on need Private sector-funded scholarships for rural and poor children Ministry efficiency improved RM 1 bn annual cost savings reallocated to teacher training and upskilling All schools equipped with basic infrastructure Annual rationalisation of programmes at district, state and Ministry level 1BestariNet and school hardware rolled out and teachers trained in ICT usage JPN and PPD leadership and roles strengthened Top 150 leaders appointed as JPN / PPD heads Almost 2,500 more personnel deployed from MOE and JPNs to PPDs to support schools
MINISTRY TRANSFORMATION
DELIVERY CAPABILITIES
Malaysia Education Blueprint 2013 - 2025 Appendix VI: The Education Roadmap
A-36
Successful English exposure options scaled up Successful English exposure options rolled out based on parental demand English remedial class rolled out across all Secondary schools
Chinese, Tamil, Arabic and additional languages such as Spanish, French and Italian made available in all National primary and secondary schools Autonomy over curriculum and budgets increased for most schools
IOM, Gifted, Orang Asli and special needs programmes enhanced Tailored curricula introduced Infrastructure upgraded Differentiated teacher training in place Partnerships with private sector developed Accelerated pathway for high-achieving students introduced New teacher career package implemented Comprehensive CPD linked to competencies rolled out Fast tracking or redeployment based on performance implemented
Principals and teachers empowered and role professionalised Greater operational flexibility over professional issues Certification for teachers linked to competencies considered
Pre-service teacher training enhanced Curriculum reform New career pathways and progression mechanism for principals rolled out: Fast tracking or redeployment based on performance implemented Comprehensive CPD linked to competencies rolled out Strengthened middle layer of leaders in schools Increased school-based management for all schools that meet criteria
Matriculation upgraded to international standards Increased uptake of vocational education: Number of guidance counselors increased Off-take agreements with private vocational colleges scaled up Unity improved between schools Compulsory community service introduced RIMUP expanded Revamped Islamic Education and Moral Education syllabus rolled out Private religious schools voluntarily converted to National Religious schools or registered Feedback gathered from every PIBG on contextualisation of curriculum and teacher quality
Private sector partnerships at scale (e.g. trust schools, school adoption programme)
All schools have baseline infrastructure needed to deliver new curriculum Overcrowded primary schools with significant after-school remedial requirements converted to single session schools Outcome-based budgeting system of financial management in place ICT innovations piloted Key Ministry divisions strengthened JNJK independence increased BPK strengthened into a centre of excellence LP, BPPDP and BPG strengthened Organisation structure streamlined to align with new core functions
Successful models of ICT innovation scaled up Overcrowded secondary schools with significant after-school remedial requirements converted to single session schools
New career pathways and progressions for Ministry officers rolled out
A-37
The LINUS programme in GTP 1.0 successfully delivered significant improvements in Bahasa Malaysia literacy and numeracy. To build upon this success, GTP 2.0 will expand the programme to cover English language literacy. The structure of the programme will also be enhanced to ensure more comprehensive and consistent assessment of all Year 1 to Year 3 students. Correspondingly, the cohort of LINUS facilitators, the FASILinus, will be expanded.
The focus over the next three years will be on maintaining the high quality standards of all highperforming schools, namely that these HPS fully utilise their additional decision-making rights to continue to innovate and raise standards. In GTP 2.0, the target will continue to be on achieving 100 high-performing schools.
Malaysia Education Blueprint 2013 - 2025 Appendix III: National Dialogue Feedback
A-38
Focus Area School Improvement Programme (SIP) and District Transformation Programme
Enhancements and Initiatives The success of the SIP in GTP 1.0 confirmed the importance of targeting weaker schools and providing them with coordinated support to improve. This effort will continue under GTP2.0 through the District Transformation Programme with focus on greater empowerment and accountability of the State Education Department or JPN and District Education Offices or PPDs. These are at the frontline and closest to the schools and therefore best placed to support schools. Initiatives include: Revising the role of JPNs and PPDs to empower them and make them accountable for providing support to the schools; Creating standard KPIs at the school, district, state and national levels via new dashboards and rankings; and Targeting interventions towards schools that need it most. For example, deploying more full-time teachers coaches to district offices to support schools, regular performance dialogues at the level of states, districts and schools to instil discipline in monitoring, problem-solving and following through on actions, etc. PPDs will be supported with additional training and resources to fulfil their new roles and platforms will be established for PPDs to share best practices.
The New Deal initiative from GTP 1.0 that rewarded high-performing school principals and head teachers proved to be an effective mechanism to motivate and incentivise school leaders, and will be continued in GTP 2.0. Additional initiatives on principal succession planning and principal fast-tracking will be added, specifically: The selection process for principals will be optimised and shortened in order to identify successors for an outgoing principal, ideally six months before actual retirement date; Creation of a centralised system to recruit from a candidate pool whose readiness has been preassessed; Revision of incentives to attract quality candidates to rural schools; Providing support to help principals transition into a new school; and Clear competency-based criteria as basis for selection, evaluation, promotion and continuous professional development of principals will be established.
Better equipping and rewarding teachers for delivering high student outcomes remains a core objective. Additional initiatives have been added to GTP2.0 towards this goal, namely: New competency-based pathways to create exciting career opportunities for teachers, including fasttracking for high performers; Creation of a single unified evaluative instrument focusing on teaching and learning, combining best elements from the five existing evaluation instruments, and incorporating student outcomes; Continuous Professional Development (CPD) Masterplan to provide tailored support to each teacher; and New standards for CPD, new entry standards and monitoring mechanism for recruitment of new teachers , and career-long support and evaluation of teachers.
The objective of this focus area is to remedy the standard of English language proficiency of Malaysian students by improving the way the language is taught in schools and by raising the proficiency and skills of English language teachers. Consequently, all English language teachers will have their proficiency in English language assessed. Remedial programmes have been put in place to retrain English language teachers that do not meet international proficiency standards.