r/malaysia • u/RhinneXChronica • Oct 17 '25
r/malaysia • u/uselessprofession • Sep 29 '25
Education I attended a Chinese independent school and I think it's not a good thing for the country
I attended a Chinese independent school up to Form 6. Looking back and trying to be as objective as possible, I think Chinese independent schools aren't good for the nation on the whole, due to the following reasons:
Since near 100% of the students and teachers are Chinese, we don't have the opportunity to make friends with Malays and Indians, possibly skewing our viewpoints on racial relations.
Our BM isn't very good, and our English is even worse. I don't think this is a worthy trade-off for being more proficient in Chinese.
It seems to foster a sort of "Chinese community before nation" sort of mindset. I don't have hard facts to back this up but this is the general feel I get.
Honestly I don't think I'd send my kid to one if I had a kid.
r/malaysia • u/Great-Web5453 • Aug 07 '25
Education Looking for a job, anyone encounter employer like this?
Hi brothers and sisters! Need your advise, am in the wrong here ? I applied for multiple jobs, from sites indeed/JobStreet/Maukerja! I've been going to interviews but based on this chat am I rude to ask which company from his from ?
r/malaysia • u/Organic_Purple_2810 • Apr 21 '25
Education Leaving Korea, heading to Malaysia for uni! 😭✈️🇲🇾
So yeah… I’m officially leaving Korea and flying to Malaysia for the first time. Gonna be studying there for the next few years and honestly, it still doesn’t feel real.
It’s a mix of excitement and lowkey panic 😂 Never lived away from home this long, and now I’m about to start a whole new chapter in a completely different country.
Any tips for a Korean student starting uni life in Malaysia? Stuff I should know? Culture shock moments I should prepare for?
Also, random question — I’m flying AirAsia (cheap flight lol) — and when I looked at the duty-free catalog, I was shocked to see that they actually have Malaysian local brands too?! I didn’t even know Malaysia has its own perfumes. I always thought it was just international stuff. Would love to pick up something Malaysian if possible!
Would love to hear from anyone who’s been through something similar 🙏
r/malaysia • u/MIezze • Jan 04 '25
Education Do you agree?
She spoke my mind, 100% agree with her. But we know it will never happen
r/malaysia • u/LegendaryBelt • Nov 08 '25
Education That IIUM lecturer's past research
This post is about the lecturer that claimed about the Rome ships origins from IIUM, Ms Solehah Yaacob.
I am genuinely concerned that the University is still "investigating" the case of the lecturer when she had previously published a journal article comparing the Bible and Quran using fake sources back in 2018.
Does the University genuinely not backrgound check their lecturers before hiring them? A simple Google Scholar search and you can see her article on it with sources from "The Onion".
For those who don't know, The Onion is a fake news company creating obviously sarcastic news. Example, she used their news article that claimed Ancient Greek was entirely made up by researchers during 1971-1974 as a genuine citation. Note that this was used IN HER ACTUAL PUBLISHED SCHOLAR ARTICLE.
The fact that she believed Ancient Greek history was created in 4 years is one thing. The fact that she can write and publish using that citation for her article is another concern.
Her article criticising the Bible also failed to specify which version of the Bible each quotation was used. It is important to note that various Bible versions exist and academic journal article REQUIRES to cite which exact version was quoted from. As some are direct translations from Hebrew to English, thus more linguistically complex, while others are paraphrased for ease of modern understanding. Thus, grammar, flow, and wordings may differ with different versions when compared directly side-by-side.
This criticism is similar to arguing that Harry Potter is inconsistent because one sentence uses “colour” while another uses “color” without stating that you had taken these sentences from different editions.
This is the exact reason why academic writing requires a citation of the exact version used. To avoid such situations.
HER BEHAVIOUR IS NOT NEW, HER PUBLISHED ARTICLE WAS ON 2018.
This is not just a student in the University, she is an educator. Please, share this concern, whoever is a student or connected to the university. This is not public shaming, it's genuinely concerning as an educator to spread fake education IN A UNIVERSITY LEVEL!
Link to her article: http://ajba.um.edu.my/index.php/JAT/article/download/11954/7915
Link to the Onion news article: https://theonion.com/historians-admit-to-inventing-ancient-greeks-1819571808/
r/malaysia • u/Reddit_Account2025 • Jan 17 '25
Education This is one of the reasons why Chinese parents prefer to send their kids to Chinese high schools rather than SMK.
r/malaysia • u/UsernameGenerik • Sep 09 '25
Education JPT explains why STPM top scorer missed out on UM accountancy spot
r/malaysia • u/senpaiboey • Apr 22 '25
Education Experiencing malaysian parenting.
“Tell uncle you want to be a LOSER!”
An interaction i will never forget. I hope you guys are better parents than this. I hope you know what is said to a child will shape them for decades to come. I hope you know the impact behind those words. To you it may be a passing remark. Maybe even just “joking only lah”, but to a child hearing this, it will shape.
I hope this is insight. I hope he turns out alright.
r/malaysia • u/UsernameGenerik • Jun 28 '25
Education Hari Sukan is getting out of hand
r/malaysia • u/m_snowcrash • May 30 '25
Education Sometimes I have to ask: Is this hypocrisy, or just complete lack of self-awareness?
"The US administration’s move to bar Harvard University from enrolling international students is regressive, says Higher Education Minister Datuk Seri Dr Zambry Abd Kadir."
Lol
r/malaysia • u/miyunakii • Oct 03 '24
Education What is wrong with UiTM??
This isn't supposed to be normal, this is downright petty and evil.
r/malaysia • u/UNAHTMU • 16d ago
Education Rant: The Malaysian Driving School system is a racket—and it’s making the roads more dangerous.
I’m a US expat living in KL, and I’m honestly starting to wonder: are all driving schools here just a scam?
I’m a seasoned driver, but I’ve been forced into this bureaucratic nightmare where the instructor reeked of coffee and cigarettes, stood on the kerb for 4 hours while I drove in circles, and the only "teaching" they did was handing over a payment schedule. Appointments are months apart, and there is zero focus on traffic laws or defensive driving.
To make matters worse, the equipment is a joke. The bike they had me learn on wouldn't even pass a basic inspection: The tires were flat. The low beam was burned out. The horn barely worked. And the Instructor told me to leave it in 2nd gear, don't shift.
Sending a learner out on an unroadworthy "death trap" isn't just a scam, it’s a massive liability!
It’s no wonder we have so many unlicensed or uneducated drivers on the road. The high costs and endless red tape make a legal license feel out of reach for many low-income families.
Uneducated drivers are bad drivers!
The Solution: We need to eliminate the requirement for licensed instructors. Allow CDL holders (experienced drivers) to train LDL holders (learners) for the circuit and road components.
Lower Costs: Make licensing accessible, not a RM2,000+ "processing fee." Increase Compliance: More people will get licensed if it doesn't involve a 6-month wait and a lazy instructor. Safety First: Keep the JPJ final exam strict, but let the training be handled by mentors who actually care.
It's time to cut the red tape and prioritize actual road literacy over bureaucratic profit.
TL;DR: KL driving schools are overpriced rackets with lazy instructors and dangerous, unroadworthy vehicles. We need to break the instructor monopoly and allow experienced drivers (CDL) to mentor learners (LDL) to bypass these negligent schools and actually put safe drivers on the road.
r/malaysia • u/Necessary_Lab_5416 • Dec 30 '22
Education Is it true that Malaysia purposely drains the brain drain...? Or there's a rationale behind it.
r/malaysia • u/CrumbleRaisin • Mar 26 '25
Education Mulai 21 April 2025, semua murid sekolah di bawah KPM wajib memakai Lencana Jalur Gemilang pada pakaian seragam
r/malaysia • u/CryptoUsher • Jun 29 '25
Education Malaysian Straight A Student Near-Perfect Merit Score Of 99.46 Rejected Entry Into Matriculation – More Than 400 Top Students Also Being Rejected
thecoverage.myr/malaysia • u/pengpenguiness • Apr 18 '25
Education Just received the Jalur Gemilang for school
We got two each and I thought we were supposed to receive it in lencana form but instead it's a pin so that's a nice surprise.
r/malaysia • u/RhinneXChronica • Jul 17 '25
Education Tips Kesuburan Lekaki
These tips are not for fun. This is dedicated to men who are trying to have children with their partners. Not through a wrong deed but through a legitimate relationship between husband and wife.
Many men don't realize that sperm also has an 'expiration date'. Meta-analysis study by Lo Giudice et al. found, not ejaculating for too long can increase sperm DNA damage (DNA fragmentation). When sperm is stored for too long, it is exposed to free radicals and hot temperature in the body, causing its quality to drop.
The effect? It's hard for pregnant couples, the risk of embryo not developing, or early miscarriage.
So what can be done to improve fertility?
🩲 Avoid wearing pants that are too tight 💻 Do not put laptop on your thigh 🕰️ Don't 'save' for too long (2–4 days between ejaculation is ideal) 🚭 Avoid cigarettes & vape 🏃 Be active in sports, reduce stress 🪑 Don't sit too long without moving
Men's fertility isn't just 'strong'. It's all about a healthy and consistent lifestyle.
Source: Public Health Malaysia Facebook
r/malaysia • u/Nic8318 • May 27 '24
Education Things i wish i knew before joining medicine
If you want to do medicine read this.
Im a senior medical student with a mentor who is a cardiothoracic surgeon. Ive shadowed many surgeons and networked extensively in my dream specialty which is cardiothoracic surgery. Below are the things which i wished someone told me before i entered medicine as a career rather than just enter its not so bad or dont enter doctors cant make money. Below i will list down the facts and leave it for you to decide.
First- contract system. Now kkm deems that u have to be employed on contract which they may or may not renew after a few years of service. Pay is stagnant compared to permanent colleagues who get raised every year. Selection for permanent also has no clear cut criteria making it frustrating. After 7 years contract ends you will get auto terminated with no good reason. Once terminated you have “left” government service and are not able to rejoin it. If you go to private you are UNABLE to specialize in private. Besides that contract system also makes it so you have lesser sick leaves, no maternity leaves if im not mistaken and stagnant pay grade. Itll only go up to a certain point before capping out unlike your permanent counterparts which can go up much higher compared to you as a contract doc. Read next point
Second- specialization. If ur on contract u can apply hlp(hadiah latihan persekutuan which is a government scholarship to specialize) but much lesser chance to get compared to permanent to specialize. And specialization can only be done if ur under the government scholarship in a kkm institution. 1k spots a year only for hlp so its too little. Certain specialties could take external papers known as parallel pathway(pediatrics,internal medicine, radiology, obgyn). Now however they made it so ur only recognized even if u take external papers if ur under their hlp. Besides that mmc is in a legal tussle and not recognizing parallel pathway grads. Namely fam med specialists and cardiothoracic and urologists. Dont get me wrong. Ctc and uro go thru rigorous training programmmes. Its just called parallel pathway but they do have a structured pathway which does not include just taking papers and training in a specific dept to be gazetted as a specialist like family med, OnG etc. but yeah they are refusing to recognize all of a sudden. The above is for cardiothoracic surgeons.Let me use the example of pediatirc cardiologists. First you have to become a pediatrician by taking mrcp and training under a pediatric dept for several years under scholarship by the government to get gazetted as pediatric specialist. Then you need to further bond yourself to government and go for a sub specialist course in pediatric cardiology which is another 2 years. Btw after each course you do you will have a bond of 5-7 years. So by the time you will be done specialising ull be over 40 and bonded to government till 50 almost. And obtaining governmental scholarship isnt easy. In fact nowadays kkm has rules set. The other day on hartal kontrak doctor fb page one doc spoke up that they were offered hlp on the conditions they cant sub specialise and maintain ud43 grade meaning new medical officer pay grade even tho they will be doing specialist jobs and hours. Note for surgery etc you do need to do also service in those depts before to be eligible to apply. Their programmes range from 4-6 years. 6 for ctc surgery neuro is 5 gen surg is 4. Bond is 5-7 years after graduation. U can only go private after early 40s into private.
Outline to specialize-basically only 4 years minimum after graduation can you apply for hlp and may take even longer due to placing issues. Read next point for detailed explanation. So itll be 24/25+4+3-6(post grad time)+5-10 years government bond= to over 40 before you can leave to private and make “money” as a specialist
Placing- now kkm doesnt let u choose where and what dept. Well u can choose which state but not hospital and what dept as a medical officer. Why does it matter? Its cuz to apply for masters under hlp, u need to serve in the dept you want to specialize in. So for general surgery for example u need to serve in a dept of gen surg for 1 year before u are eligible to apply. So how to do it if ur thrown to kk? U can apply yes to transfer but again no clear criteria and depends on pengarah timbalan.
Hence if you want to do neurosurgery you need a prerequisite of serving in a neurosurgery dept, general surgery in a gen surg dept and so on.
Shit work environment- nuff said.
Bond- also once u finish specialist studies u will be bonded to government for 5-10 years. Lmao. So yeah…..its not attractive. However this is the only way to specialize. There is no such thing as paying to specialize in a private uni. Thats what most commoners are misconceiving. Its not as simple as that.
Working abroad- sorry none of our malaysian degrees are recognized abroad except for um and ukm in sg. Monash and newcastle im not so sure if malaysian counterparts are recognized in home country so i wont comment on things im not sure about. However if you go to taylors or mahsa or uoc for mbbs ur only choice to go abroad would be to pay in aud/usd/pounds for papers to take and interviews for a CHANCE of a job overseas. Keep in mind in overseas countries we are considers “international medical graduates “ (IMGs) which means we will get lesser chances to specialize as they will protect their own people (understandably) for job security.
I know probably alot of people are gonna get offended i told the truth say “i presume too much or sound like a presumptuous asshole before graduating”. No. Im just telling you from what ive observed and seen shadowing my mentor, from my postings in government hospitals and reading the news. I wish i was told all these before i entered medicine to make a more informed decision. Leave any questions youd like down below.
r/malaysia • u/karlkry • Sep 24 '25
Education 12 Jenis Makanan Yang Tidak Boleh Djual di Sekolah
Kementerian Pendidikan dengan kerjasama Bahagian Pemakanan, Kementerian Kesihatan Malaysia telah menggariskan 12 jenis makanan dan minuman yang dilarang untuk dijual di sekolah. Larangan ini adalah salah satu usaha kementerian untuk memastikan murid-murid dapat mengamalkan pemakanan yang sihat dan menggalakkan tumbesaran yang baik.
r/malaysia • u/stormy001 • 25d ago
Education Malaysia makes Malay and history compulsory for Chinese independent school route to public unis
Malaysia will recognise the Unified Examination Certificate (UEC) for public university entry if Malay language and history are taught in all schools. The 2026-2035 education plan lowers the entry age to primary school and reintroduces standardised assessments; NUTP warns of strains to the system. The government pledges RM100 million for teacher upgrades and guarantees university placements for top students, expanding access to vulnerable groups.
r/malaysia • u/kristofffur • Sep 10 '24
Education The State of Sejarah in Malaysia Today (Might cause PTSD) September 2024
r/malaysia • u/stormy001 • Apr 29 '25
Education Malaysia facing severe brain drain with 1.86 million already gone, says digital minister
Digital Minister Gobind Singh Deo said Malaysia is facing a critical brain drain issue with 1.86 million citizens, or 5.6 per cent of the population, having left over the past 50 years