Archive for the ‘BornInMalaysia’ category

Malaysians work longer

November 12th, 2011
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 So, we work about longer, and also nearly half of us bring back work home often. Working longer doesn’t necessarily relate to better pay or productivity, but it can be one of the indicator for wages. Not sure what kind professions the survey covered though. If talk to security guards, workers at shopping complexes, factory operators etc., 8 t0 12 hours shift is normal.

I guess the economic conditions may force some (or many) to work longer or work few jobs.

Are you one of those who work long hours, more than 40 hours a week?

As for bringing work home, its partly due to the availability of ICT tools and infrastructure. We can work from anywhere nowadays. Also, some “bring back work” is for reading or sorting out stuff.

My policy – work stays at office. Leaving office at 5 or 6 or 7pm means leaving work behind.

Anyway, this would be good news for employers to push more employees to work longer.

 

Malaysians are clocking in more hours at work and bringing their office load back home, too.

“Some 47% of workers in Malaysia take tasks home to finish at the end of the day for more than three times a week, compared to 43% globally,” statistics in a global survey by workplace provider Regus showed.

Another 15% of Malaysian employees regularly work for more than 11 hours a day, compared to 10% globally.

The survey also showed 32% of Malaysian workers usually worked between nine and 11 hours every day.

Some 12,000 business people in 85 countries participated in the survey.

William Willems, regional vice-president for Regus Australia, New Zealand and South-East Asia said the study found “a clear blurring” of the line separating work and home.

“The long-term effects of such over-work could be damaging to both workers’ health and overall productivity.

“This is because workers may drive themselves too hard and become disaffected, depressed and even physically ill,” he said.

Willems said businesses that enabled employees to work from locations closer to home and manage their time more independently could offset the stress of a poor work-life balance.

On a global scale, the survey revealed that women were less likely to take work home compared to men, with 32% of women bringing tasks to finish at home more than three times a week compared to 48% of men.

“Workers in smaller companies globally were more likely to take work home than those working in large firms,” the study said.

 

source: http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2011/11/9/nation/9866319&sec=nation

52 aspirants for one state seat?

November 9th, 2011
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52??? Can’t believe so many people interested to stand for election in one state seat. It  means either:

1. plenty of candidates whom think they have the support from locals (maybe PKR presence is strong until got so many “qualified” candidates) OR

2. they think voters will vote for party instead of candidate and they want to try their luck.

I would like to believe its 1, but I think reality is 2.

 

Fifty-two PKR members have indicated their interest in contesting the Bukit Melawati state seat in the next general election.

The rush for the seat started about six months ago after a rumour was circulated within party circles that incumbent assemblyman Muthiah Maria Pillay, 63, would not stand.

Out of the 52 aspirants, it is believed that about 30 have sent formal letters to PKR headquarters offering themselves as candidates.

Party insiders say a senior party leader is also believed to be eyeing the seat for his daughter.

Although Bukit Melawati was regarded as an “Indian seat”, those who had shown interest were from all races, said the party insider.

He said the rumour could have been started to oust Muthiah as some felt that it would be easy to grab his seat as the assemblyman was not the confrontational type.

Muthiah said he had not indicated that he would not be contesting in the next general election.

“But I will not ask for the seat as it is against my principles to demand to contest because I feel it’s the party leadership’s decision,” he said.

Muthiah said there was even talk that he was gravely ill.

“Some people called to ask me if it was true that I was very ill and I jokingly told them that I was already dead,” Muthiah said.

Muthiah, who is an engineer by profession, said he had also not lobbied to contest in the 1995 general election where he won the Pasir Panjang state seat in Lumut under the Barisan Nasional ticket.

“Even then, I never asked to contest but was selected by the MIC,” said Muthiah, who was the MIC Youth chief between 1996 to 1999.

He left the MIC to join PKR in 2006.

source: http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2011/11/8/nation/9855589&sec=nation

Media Statement on PPSMI Soft Landing

November 8th, 2011
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I have a feeling that the “soft landing” from PPSMI to MBMMBI will be an arduous, bumpy and costly journey. So for the record, below is the media statement by Education Minister, in case we need to refer to it in near future.

 

 KENYATAAN AKHBAR

YAB TAN SRI DATO’ HJ MUHYIDDIN HJ MOHD YASSIN

TIMBALAN PERDANA MENTERI MALAYSIA

DAN MENTERI PELAJARAN

MENGENAI PELAKSANAAN SOFT-LANDING PPSMI

 

Kerajaan pada tahun 2009 telah mengambil keputusan untuk memansuhkan Dasar Pengajaran dan Pembelajaran Sains dan Matematik dalam Bahasa Inggeris (PPSMI) dan menggantikannya dengan Dasar Memartabatkan Bahasa Malaysia dan Memperkukuhkan Bahasa Inggeris (MBMMBI).

Dengan pemansuhan PPSMI, murid di sekolah rendah akan mengikuti pengajaran Matematik dan Sains dalam bahasa Malaysia di Sekolah Kebangsaan, Bahasa Cina di SJKC dan Bahasa Tamil di SJKT. Manakala di sekolah menengah, Bahasa Malaysia akan digunakan sepenuhnya dalam pengajaran Matematik dan Sains.

Untuk membolehkan murid menyesuaikan diri dengan perubahan bahasa dalam tempoh peralihan dasar, Mesyuarat Jemaah Menteri pada bulan Julai 2009 juga telah membenarkan Kementerian Pelajaran melaksanakan pendekatan soft-landing.

Berdasarkan keputusan tersebut, Kementerian Pelajaran pada tahun 2010 telah menetapkan dasar MBMMBI dimulakan pada tahun 2011 di mana murid Tahun 1 pada tahun ini mengikuti pengajaran dan pembelajaran Matematik dan Sains dalam bahasa Malaysia sepenuhnya. Sebagai langkah intervensi untuk mempercepatkan proses peralihan daripada bahasa Inggeris ke bahasa Malaysia di semua peringkat persekolahan, Kementerian juga memutuskan bermula tahun 2012, murid Tingkatan 1 akan mengikuti pengajaran dan pembelajaran matematik dan sains dalam bahasa Malaysia sepenuhnya.

Walaubagaimanapun, peralihan kepada bahasa Malaysia pada Tingkatan 1 bermula tahun hadapan telah menimbulkan kerisauan ibubapa kerana dibimbangi anak-anak mereka yang telah mengikuti pengajaran dan pembelajaran dalam bahasa Inggeris selama enam tahun di sekolah rendah tidak dapat menyesuaikan diri dengan peralihan bahasa secara mendadak.

Setelah mengambil kira pandangan ibu bapa, kabinet pada hari ini memutuskan untuk membenarkan murid sekolah rendah kohort PPSMI untuk meneruskan pengajaran dan pembelajaran Matematik dan Sains dalam bahasa Inggeris sepenuhnya, bahasa Malaysia sepenuhnya atau dalam kedua-dua bahasa apabila mereka memasuki Tingkatan 1 bermula tahun hadapan.

Ini bermakna semua murid kohort PPSMI yang mengikuti pengajaran dan pembelajaran Matematik dan Sains dalam bahasa Inggeris dibenar untuk meneruskan pengajaran dan pembelajaran dalam bahasa Inggeris sehingga tamat Tingkatan 5.

Perlu diperjelaskan di sini juga, murid Tahun 3 hingga Tahun 6 2012 dibenarkan untuk meneruskan pengajaran dan pembelajaran Matematik dan Sains dalam bahasa Inggeris, bahasa Malaysia atau kedua-dua bahasa di sekolah kebangsaan ; bahasa Inggeris, bahasa Cina atau kedua-dua bahasa di SJKC; dan bahasa Inggeris, bahasa Tamil atau kedua-dua bahasa di SJKT seperti yang diputuskan oleh jemaah Menteri pada bulan Julai 2009.

Bagi murid yang telah mengikuti pengajaran dan pembelajaran Matematik dan Sains dalam bahasa Malaysia atau dalam kedua-dua bahasa, mereka dibenar mengikuti pengajaran dan pembelajaran dalam bahasa Malaysia sepenuhnya.

Dengan keputusan ini, pemansuhan PPSMI adalah kekal. Kerajaan tidak bercadang untuk melaksanakan semula PPSMI seperti yang dituntut oleh sesetengah pihak.

Bagaimanapun, kerajaan berharap keputusan yang membenarkan murid kohort PPSMI, iaitu murid Tahun 2 hingga Tingkatan 5 tahun ini untuk meneruskan pembelajaran dalam BI sehingga tamat tingkatan 5 dapat melegakan hati ibubapa. Kerajaan yakin dengan keputusan ini pencapaian murid kohort PPSMI dalam peperiksaan UPSR, PMR dan SPM tidak akan terjejas.

Dengan pendekatan soft-landing ini, pengajaran dan pembelajaran matematik dan sains di sekolah rendah akan dilaksanakan dalam bahasa Malaysia sepenuhnya pada tahun 2016. Manakala di sekolah menengah, penggunaan bahasa Malaysia sepenuhnya bagi kedua-dua matapelajaran ini adalah pada tahun 2021.

Kajian Kementerian Pelajaran ke atas semua sekolah di bawah Kementerian menunjukkan bahawa kebanyakan sekolah telah melaksanakan pengajaran dan pembelajaran sains dan matematik dalam bahasa Malaysia.

Dapatan kajian menunjukkan, kurang 5 peratus daripada jumlah kelas di 7,495 buah sekolah rendah menggunakan bahasa Inggeris sepenuhnya dalam pengajaran dan pembelajaran matematik dan sains. Manakala di peringkat sekolah menengah, kurang 9 peratus daripada jumlah kelas di 2,192 buah sekolah menggunakan bahasa Inggeris dalam pengajaran dan pembelajaran matematik dan sains. Berdasarkan dapatan ini, kebanyakan murid mengikuti pengajaran dan pembelajaran matematik dan sains dalam bahasa Malaysia.Dapatan kajian ini membuktikan bahawa PPSMI tidak dapat dilaksanakan sepertimana yang dihasratkan.

Hasil kajian lapangan yang dijalankan oleh Kementerian dengan mengumpulkan maklumat melalui pemerhatian di dalam kelas, pengalaman guru dan amalan di bilik darjah serta temubual murid-murid mendapati murid sukar memahami matapelajaran matematik dan sains dalam bahasa Inggeris. Murid mengambil masa yang lama untuk memahami konsep matematik dan sains kerana mereka tidak faham bahasa Inggeris. Ini memaksa guru-guru untuk mengajar dalam bahasa Malaysia supaya murid dapat memahami kedua-dua matapelajaran tersebut. Masalah seperti ini bukan sahaja dialami oleh sekolah-sekolah di luar bandar, tetapi juga di bandar. Oleh yang demikian, sekiranya PPSMI diteruskan, sebahagian besar murid di negara kita tidak akan dapat menguasai ilmu matematik dan sains dengan baik dan mereka akan terus ketinggalan.

Pemansuhan PPSMI tidak bermakna kerajaan mengabaikan kepentingan penguasaan bahasa Inggeris. Di bawah dasar MBMMBI, Kementerian sedang melaksanakan pelbagai inisiatif baru yang lebih efektif untuk meningkatkan penguasaan bahasa Inggeris dalam kalangan murid.

Antara inisiatif tersebut ialah penambahan masa pengajaran dan pembelajaran bahasa Inggeris, penambahbaikan kurikulum bahasa Inggeris di bawah pelaksanaan Kurikulum Standard Sekolah Rendah (KSSR), penyediaan guru, pengambilan penutur jati bagi meningkatkan kapasiti pensyarah dan guru Bahasa Inggeris, penyediaan bahan sokongan yang berkualiti seperti bahan bacaan tambahan dan bahan digital bagi menyokong pelaksanaan pengajaran dan pembelajaran di bilik darjah.

Kementerian Pelajaran juga sedang mengkaji beberapa inisatif baru untuk dilaksanakan seperti program Oracy Skills (OPS-ENG) yang bertujuan untuk meningkatkan penguasaan lisan dalam kalangan murid, kelas berdasarkan Sistem Set, peningkatan kualiti dan kepelbagaian bahan pengajaran, pembangunan profesionalisme guru dan kecekapan pengurusan panitia bahasa Inggeris di sekolah.

Kerajaan berharap pemansuhan PPSMI dan pelaksanaan dasar MBMMBI dapat meningkatkan penguasaan bahasa Inggeris, ilmu sains dan matematik di kalangan pelajar serta mendaulatkan bahasa kebangsaan.

Pejabat YAB Timbalan Perdana Menteri

4 November 2011

source: https://www.facebook.com/note.php?note_id=306975049312877

Who caused failure of PPSMI?

November 6th, 2011
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This is what the DPM said:

Tan Sri Muhyiddin (picture), who is also the Education Minister informed the press that the decision taken to implement the Upholding Bahasa Malaysia, Strengthening the Command of English policy, (BMMBI), which would have replaced PPSMI was supported by all members of parliament, including those from the Opposition.

Tan Sri Muhyiddin pointed out that s study conducted by the Education Ministry shows that a total of 5 – 7 per cent of schools under the Ministry had implemented the PPSMI when the policy was introduced in 2003, while the majority resorted to a mixed-language medium, and some had even conducted full lessons in Bahasa Malaysia.

Question now is who caused the failure of PPSMI? Who is going to take responsibility for the failure of its implementation? For the wastage of millions of Ringgits? Who jeopardized the education of students for last 8 years? Teachers? Students? HMs? PTAs/PIBGs? Ministers? Senior officials? Some junior officers?

If I’m not mistaken in 2003, the Education Minister was Musa Muhammad (1999 – 2004), followed by Hishamuddin Hussein Onn (2004 – 2009), and now Muhyiddin Yassin (2009 till present).

Next question: What is the guarantee that MBMMBI would be successfully implemented? Would it cost wastage of millions before we make up another complicated acronym of a policy?

 

Nambikai

October 29th, 2011
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As mentioned by Senator Ramakrishnan, its probably a first time a Prime Minister attended so many Deepavali open house on the day. Makkal Osai, Hindu Sangam and MIC open house, after arriving from Riyadh (Saudi prince funeral) and flying off to Australia (for CHOGM). That’s shows some extra commitment from PM.

“Nambikai” would be a common word now for the politicians and likes to woo Indian voters.

While there are changes being made to overcome the neglect in last 4 decades, I think the community has to evaluate if the changes (or transformation) are holistic, permanent, appropriate, on par with those for other communities, impactful and swift.  No point if you get RM1 million if others get 10 times more than that. Can’t be no budget for you but got for others right?

Nambikai works both ways, you know. Its not easy to earn it. We don’t to want to have the case where “nambinor kai vidda pattar”. That applies to any coalition who is wooing the voters.

 

What matters now to Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak are the Indian voters who had sided with Pakatan Rakyat out of anger for Barisan Nasional. It is their trust, confidence or hope’ that he seeks at the next general election.

NAMBIKAI. It’s a frequently-used Tamil word by Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak during his Deepavali rounds.

Warm reception: Well-wishers flocking to shake hands with Najib at the MIC Deepavali open house in Batu Caves on Wednesday.

Variedly translated as “trust, confidence or hope” the word, as used by him, refers to the high level of confidence the Indian community had in the MIC, Barisan Nasional and Najib’s predecessors prior to the 2008 political tsunami.

He wants the community to return to that level, saying that the Government was doing much to help the Indians overcome their issues by providing them with government jobs, blue identity cards, birth certificates and, above all, attention from the Government.

Soon after he flew home from Saudi Arabia, where he had attended a royal funeral, Najib criss-crossed the capital to attend Deepavali open houses. He then left for Perth to attend the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting.

Nambikai featured prominently in his messages, suggesting he wants the community to believe in what he is doing and to have confidence in the Government, especially in what it can do for them.

Before 2008, nearly 80% of the Indians in the country had backed the ruling party and their votes were considered a “fixed deposit”.

Right up to the Ijok by-election in Selangor in April 2007, the Indian voters still believed in the Government although, by that time, the urban Chinese votes had already swung to Pakatan Rakyat.

It all changed with the Hindraf protest seven months after the Ijok polls.

The Indians gathered in their thousands in the capital and protested against marginalisation, discrimination and loss of jobs.

They lost their nambikai in the Government. In its place was disenchantment, disillusionment and disbelief in anything that the Government did or said.

The MIC and especially then president Datuk Seri S. Samy Vellu came under heavy shelling.

Barisan was punished over policies that allegedly included breaking temples, demolishing squatter homes and denying jobs even low-skilled jobs for Indians in the Government.

Pakatan gained tremendously from the Indian revolt but since Najib took over as Prime Minister, they have begun to lose out to Barisan’s charm, campaign and the transformation plans.

The Indians who voted for the Barisan in 2008 remain hardcore supporters of the coalition.

What matters now are the rest of the voters, who had sided with Pakatan Rakyat out of anger at Barisan.

It is their nambikai that Najib seeks as the drum beats of a coming general election grow louder.

On his campaign trail in the 2008 polls, Opposition Leader Datuk Seri Anwar Ibrahim wore dark glasses and self-styled himself as Sivaji, after a character in a Tamil movie. He was a hit.

But after winning the Indian voters, almost by default because they were angry with the Barisan, Anwar has virtually forgotten them.

Najib, on the other hand, is working hard to earn the community’s trust.

He set up a special implementation task force and proceeded to redress some of the most glaring wrongs that the Indian underclass had suffered from.

Gradually, he worked his way through meetings with various ethnic groups living under the “Indian community” label, i.e. the Sikhs, Telegus, Jaffa Tamils, Malayalees and the Tamils.

He met and embraced their leaders and offered vital financial help to their organisations.

For example, the Sri Murugan Centre, which helps poor Indian children in education, got an injection of funds. Likewise, the Temple of Fine Arts.

Four years after 2008, the winds of change have begun to blow in the community and the Indians are warming once again to Barisan and the MIC, as believed by the party.

More than just his policies to repair damages, Najib has gone to the ground to mingle with the ordinary people.

The challenge is to translate his popularity into votes for Barisan.

How Najib will do it is yet to be seen but for now, he is asking the Indians to have nambikai in the Government, and they are beginning to respond.

Losing nambikai is easy but winning it back is hard, as Najib knows.

source: http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2011/10/29/nation/9797384&sec=nation