29 September 2019

LACK OF CREATIVITY AMONGST MALAYSIAN STUDENTS DUE TO OUR BRITISH COLONIAL LEGACY ?????

What do you think of the cause of Malaysia' poor education system according to Microsoft Malaysia's national technology officer Dr Dzaharudin Mansor?


Whilst it's true that British colonial education systems in their various colonies were geared towards producing civil servants, police and military officers who would follow orders of their colonial master, however being a Microsoft man, his views are quite likely favourable to the American education system.

However, do American school students perform better, when other aspects such as discipline, study ethic and so forth are taken into account?

For instance, in Malaysia, students of Chinese-language vernacular schools are often regarded as being better than students in Malaysia's national schools.

Also, students of mission schools such as the Lasallian schools believe that they are a cut above students from other mission schools, secular-oriented schools and national schools, even though the curriculum and teaching methods in these schools are largely based on the British colonial education system, with an Irish and French touch.

However, whilst the American education system and teaching methods may have enabled U.S. leadership and dominance in computing and information technology, however Britain and the rest of Europe were responsible for major inventions and innovations which came out of the industrial revolution, whilst today, Germany and Europe are leading in developing technologies and systems for the Fourth Industrial Revolution or Industry 4.0, whilst the Japanese, whose education system is said to be very much based upon rote learning and memorising facts, yet produces some of the most economical, yet quality and reliable cars, as well as consumer electronics and some professional electronic and optical equipment.

China today is leading the world in the number of patents in the Fifth-Generation (5G) cellular communications technology and in high-speed trains, whilst students in Singapore, which shares an almost identical British colonial legacy as Malaysia regularly come tops in PISA test scores.

So how true is Dr. Dzaharudin Mansor's assertion that Malaysia's education system and methods inherited from the British colonialists is responsible for the "lack of creativity" in our students compared to American school students in general?

Or have our education standards declined due to Malaysia having embraced some of the American teaching philosophies and methods in our school system?

Whilst I generally agree with Dr. Dzaharudin Mansor that Malaysians, and South-East Asians in general lack creativity and imagination, however there are other reasons for this as well besides our British colonial legacy.

I believe that these other reasons include legacies of our culture, traditions, lack of availability of funds to finance research & development activities, lack of domestic market demand for Malaysian-made products, and the dominance of hardware, software, systems and solutions by giant foreign multinationals upon the mindset of Malaysians.

The Free Malaysia Today article follows below:-

Education system doesn’t inspire creative thinking, says Microsoft man

FMT Reporters - September 28, 2019 11:46 PM

PETALING JAYA: A national technology officer with Microsoft Malaysia has lamented that the education system does not inspire creative thinking and stifles innovation.

Dr Dzaharudin Mansor said Malaysia’s education system followed the “300-year old colonial British system”, which he said had the aim of producing officers to obey orders so that these officers could be sent to countries controlled centrally from England.

However the United Kingdom had since moved away from such a system and had introduced relevant courses which were more suitable for the current work demand.

“However, Malaysia still continues the colonial British education system which does not inspire creative and critical thinking.

“We are not taught to challenge the status quo and this is one of the reasons why our culture of innovation is not maturing,” he said at the “Asian Tiger 4th Talk” organised by Akademi Harimau Asia yesterday.

Also present was Dr Azree Shahrel Ahmad Nazri, the president of Artificial Intelligence Malaysia.

Dzaharudin said the future of learning lay in “flipped classrooms” whereby students will be taught with the help of computers. He explained that in a “flipped classroom”, students watch lectures and take part in discussions online.

Students would come to classes only to focus on higher order thinking and more complex aspects of learning guided by teachers.

“Teachers, on the other hand, ascend from teaching to engaging with students on more sophisticated learning. This is when teachers can challenge students to be more critical thinking and creative.”

Dzaharudin said the job market, especially in the technology industry, was being disrupted by smaller and agile companies.

“We need to change our mindset to stay ahead of disruption.”
END

Taught with help of computers!!!!

Hee hee, ha ha, ho ho! Perhaps you may first want to donate some PCs to my old school's ICT learning lab, which is short of enough working computers for the ICT students, before proposing such hifalutin stuff such as "flipped classrooms".

I've had to suffer the psychological torture of having to cover too many of such conferences, seminars and presentations since I began writing about ICT in Malaysia 25 years ago and more often than not, most grandiose proposals on stage remained within the four walls of the splendid and opulent conference and seminar halls.

Going by what I was told about e-learning and computers in education during the early days of Malaysia's Multimedia Super Corridor (MSC Malaysia) initiative, every schools student would have a computer on their desk by now.

However, having visited my old alma mater each year since 2010, I have seen no computers on desks in the classrooms, which look just as they were when I was there, whilst the science lab looked exactly the same as it was 50 years when I was a student there, except for the addition of an overhead projector.

C'mon guys! Give me a break. I wasn't born yesterday.

Yours truly

IT.Scheiss


WHAT! NO MORE NEED FOR STEM GRADUATES?

Not too long ago, we were repeatedly told that Malaysia needs more STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) graduates but the Director General of the Department of Higher Education now tells us that electrical and electronic telecommunication engineering courses at Malaysia's 19 public universities are "irrelevant" and will be dropped.


Also, courses in animation and creative technology are "irrelevant" and will be dropped as well,along with courses in entrepreneurship and commerce.



Heck! As recent as 27 August 2018 - i.e. just over a year ago, we were still being told that creative multimedia was a major industry cluster within Malaysia's Multimedia Super Corridor initiative or MSC Malaysia, when the New Straits Times reported about efforts to turn Malaysia into a "creative powerhouse".






So what will happen to that objective now - the Multimedia Super Corridor - Tun Dr. Mahathir's baby - becomes the Moribund Super Corridor ????



Unfortunately, the article below by The Star which is an excerpt from a Malay language Berita Harian article does not mention what courses are deemed relevant.



Irrelevant varsity subjects dropped

Tuesday, 24 Sep 2019

  Compiled by DEREK YONG, OH ING YEEN and R. ARAVINTHAN


As many as 38 university programmes, mostly in science and engineering, have been cancelled due to their decreased relevance to the current and future progress of Malaysian industries, reported Berita Harian.



The programmes were offered by 19 public universities which were also assessing other subjects.

Higher Education Department director-general Datin Paduka Dr Siti Hamisah Tapsir (pic) said the move was in line with efforts to ensure graduates could find jobs that were related to their qualifications.


Among the programmes dropped are those related to sports psychology, entrepreneurship and commerce, animation and creative technology, and electric and electronic telecommunication engineering.


Siti Hamisah said the programmes needed to be replaced with new ones to meet the needs of industries.

CLICK HERE FOR ORIGINAL ARTICLE               

24 September 2019

SO AT THE END OF THE DAY, HUMANS ARE THE WEAKEST LINK

So the personal details of 46 million Malindo Air and Thai Lion Air passengers were leaked by two former employees of its e-commerce contractor, budget airline Malindo Air claims.



So people who have traveled Malindo Air should be wary of telephone calls they may receive from strangers claiming to from be the police, the bank, insurance company, income tax department and so forth which could very well soon follow, even though Malindo Air said that the payment details of its passengers were not compromised.

Many of such calls have turned out to have been scams, with many good people being made to panic and deposit large sums of their hard earned money into a bank account provided by the scammer, such as in this recent case reported by the Sun Daily of 20 August 2019.

Asst manager loses RM130,000 in Macau Scam

20 Aug 2019 / 09:39 H.

ALOR STAR: A 40-year-old woman lost RM129,290 after being duped by a Macau Scam syndicate on Aug 7.

Kedah Commercial Crime Investigation Department head, Supt Annuar Amri Abd Muluf said the victim, an assistant manager of a steel mill in Kulim, had received a phone call from the suspect who identified himself as ‘Sergeant Chew’.

“The victim was informed by the suspect that she had been involved in money laundering and would be arrested.

“However, the suspect told the victim that the matter could be resolved and asked the victim to list her bank accounts and asked the victim to transfer all her money to another account provided by the suspect,“ he said in a statement here today.

According to Annuar Amri, the suspect also threatened the victim not to report the matter or she would be arrested and the case could not be resolved.

He said the panicked victim followed the instructions given by the suspect in which she made five transactions worth RM50,670, RM64,800, RM3,520, RM3,700 and RM6,600 into two accounts provided by the suspect between Aug 7 and 10.

“All of the money was the victim’s savings for having worked in several factories. After the money was transferred, the suspect promised to return the money within three days of the ‘investigation’. However, after the three days, the suspect could not be reached,” he said.

Sensing that she had been duped, the victim lodged a police report at the Kulim District Police Headquarters yesterday and the case was being investigated under Section 420 of the Penal Code for fraud.

Annuar Amri advised the public not to be deceived by calls from individuals who claimed to be the police or any law enforcement agency as the authorities do not conduct investigations by telephone and would not ask members of the public to transfer money to any account.


Annuar Amri said from Jan to July this year, 113 investigative papers involving the same modus operandi were opened in the state involving losses of RM2.9 million. — Bernama

CLICK HERE TO READ ARTICLE

A neighbour of mine was similarly conned into parting with close to RM500,000 of her savings sometime in late 2017 and whilst she lodged a police report and managed to have the three accounts into which she deposited her money frozen, however until today, her lawyer she has not been able to obtain a court order for the bank to release her money back to her.

Also, when a company outsources the management of customer data to a third party, it distances itself from control over people who handle its data, even though the data still could have been compromised by unscrupulous staff of the company, if it had chosen to host and manage the data in-house. 

Welcome to the information and services economy, folks, where your personal details are at risk from insider human opportunists entrusted with your data, despite whatever gee whiz computer security was in place.

The Reuters article carried by Free Malaysia Today article of 23 September 2019 follows below:-

Ex-staffers at contractor firm caused data breach, says Malindo Air

Reuters - September 23, 2019 9:08 PM

KUALA LUMPUR: Malindo Air, the Malaysian subsidiary of Indonesia’s Lion Group, said today that two former employees of its e-commerce contractor were responsible for its passenger data breach.

Malindo Air confirmed the breach last week after Moscow-based cybersecurity firm Kaspersky alerted users in Malaysia and Thailand.

Kaspersky told Reuters in an email that it had sent out an alert on Sept 13, two days after the data breach was made public.

Kaspersky said in its alert that the personal details of almost 46 million passengers of Malindo and Thai Lion Air, another Lion Group subsidiary, were posted online. Kaspersky said parts of the leaked databases were offered for sale.

Malindo Air said in a statement that two former employees of e-commerce services provider GoQuo (M) Sdn Bhd in their development centre in India “improperly accessed and stole the personal data of our customers”.

Reuters could not immediately reach GoQuo for comment. Malindo did not name the two former GoQuo employees.

The airline said the data breach had been contained and the matter reported to the police in Malaysia and India.

Malindo Air also said the breach was not related to the security of cloud service provider Amazon Web Services’ data architecture, and none of the payment details of customers was compromised.

CLICK HERE TO READ

Moreover, since the two former employees leaked the passenger data in India, they are beyond the jurisdiction of the Malaysian police, so Malaysia will have to rely on India's police to arrest with them.

Malaysia ask India to extradite them !!!! Well India may say "OK! We'll hand over these guys to you if you hand over Dr. Zakir Naik to us".

My advice to anyone who receives such scam calls telling you that you are under investigation, owe a large areas in payment, etc., is for you to tell the caller that you will check with the police, the court, the Inland Revenue Department, your bank, your credit card company, your telephone service provider or whatever they claim to be from and hang up.

As for me, now I just hang up the moment I receive such calls from a strange number and don't bother to listen any more.

As productive industries, including manufacturing leave our shores for our lower wage and lower cost neighbours, more information and services industries such as scamming will be behind for the unscrupulous to engage in and cheat good people who worked hard in productive industries all their working lives much poorer.

WELCOME TO THE INFORMATION AND SERVICES ECONOMY!

The marketers, futurists, boosters, CON-sultants and journo-prostitutes of the information and services industry may hate me for this but screw them.

Yours truly

IT.Scheiss
http://itsheiss.blogspot.com/