Sunday, October 18, 2009

The Failure of Nur Who Scored 17 A's!



The Failure of Nur Amalina (who scored 17A's)

I was really shocked and speechless to be informed about Nur Amalina Che Bakri.

Nur Amalina had held briefly the record of the most A's scored in the Sijil Pelajaran Malaysia. Upon the announcement of results of SPM 2004 on 26 March 2005, she received 17 1As - a record for number of A's received by a student in the history of Malaysian education back then. She was sponsored by Bank Negara Malaysia to study medicine in the United Kingdom, and did her A-levels at the Cheltenham Ladies College in the UK.

Now I am informed that she had failed her second year medical study at the University of Edinburgh. What went wrong?

Could English language be the problem? We are going back to Malay medium again and that means trouble.

Another article by Dr. Hsu

I was told that one of the girls with the most number of A's, 17 A1's, in SPM and who is currently on a scholarship in UK to study medicine failed in her second year examination.

While passing and failing examination is part and parcel of a student’s life, this case is particularly alarming, as this is supposed to be our cream of the cream. There may be other reasons why she failed , but this case typifies the trend of many of our so-called ‘top scholars’ failing in overseas universities.

I have mentioned before that among my daughter ’s year doing medicine in University of Auckland, there were many JPA's scholars (more than 10). Only one graduated with the class. The rest have failed along the way and have to repeat the year which they have failed. Some have failed one year, passed on second attempt and then failed again in another year. It is not uncommon to have someone who failed a few times along the way.

These scholars are supposed to represent the cream of our students, and yet they struggled to get through the course.

We must find out the reasons why so many of these scholars fail when they are supposed to be the our top students.

Granted that in an examination, even a good student can do badly sometimes, but to have a disproportional high failure rate among the so called top students is alarming and cannot be attributed to ‘luck’ or the lack of it. Compare this with those on their fathers’ scholarship, very few of the latter group failed.

Is it because our marking system is at fault? Is there any differential markings of papers? Is our education system at fault?

I think the time has come to have a thorough re-examination of the whole education as well as the examination system.

It really reflects badly on our country when scholarship holders fail in their examinations at an alarming rate.



P.S. When a scholarship holder fails and has to repeat a year, it would cost the Country a lot of money which can actually be used to finance more students for study. Scholarship holders also live a life of relative luxury, compared to self-fnanced students, and they normally stay in the best hostels and many of them have cars and so on… SO the whole system of awarding scholarship should be reviewed too…


If the students scores an exemplary number of distinctions (A's in Malaysia) in a public exam, they are considered the pinnacle of what the Country's education system is capable of producing. They are expected to go through tertiary education anywhere in the world with flushing success. So what could possibly have happened if they fail abroad?

Malaysia's education system has always been a laughing stock. Based purely on numeric superiority and mindless rote learning methods that even the British has long abandoned decades earlier, Malaysia continues to believe that the more A's the students attain, the better equipped they are. It doesn't matter how they get the A's so long as the aim is to get them and get as many in the process. So if the students were to labour over numerous past year exam papers in the library, memorise the answers and focus only on what the teacher 'suggests' are likely to come out for the exam, that's all right by everyone. The education system doesn't teach the students to UNDERSTAND the material. It doesn't encourage proactive teaching methods that encourage students to discover knowledge but to merely be taught.


When a student with 17 Distinctions fail in the real world, it is not a surprise. Perhaps it is to many Malaysians, but it's a system that is waiting to reward its students with spectacular failure when they leave the shores and compete overseas or when they enter the workforce. Many organisations in the private sector have continued to be horrified at the performance of such students during interviews. Communication skills are absent. Standard ethics are absent. Common courtesy codes are absent. Presentation skills as well as personal grooming are absent. What has the education system taught them?

If Malaysia continue to embark on the road of plain numeric superiority instead of to challenge the students to think, provoke them to create their own opinions and to communicate expressively, to eloquently define their standing in the world, there can never be an international leader in any field or industry emanating from Malaysia. It never produced one in the last 20 years. It never will for the next 100 years.

10 comments:

Jefferi Chang said...

this info not correct. click link to read

http://blog.thestar.com.my/permalink.asp?id=27427

handela said...

I can only said that, I was the SPM student in 2006 and I knew that the SPM marking system is very low quality today, since the education system is protecting "OUR" students, next generation. After I knew that the marking system is following the statistic of scoring in the year. Who else need to be study so hard. Even I myself also dun care much during the SPM exam. Coz I knew that even how worst I m , I will still pass the paper. Compare to international school? the passing mark is "60". Compare to Singapore "O" level? we are far behind. what is the problem of our education today? compare to 70's,80's and 90's, we still can compete with other country. now? I dare not to comment about it.

JPA Scholar 2008 said...

I have to refute what was stated in the P/S section. I scored straight 1As in SPM and was blessed with a JPA scholarship to study BPharm in Australia. I knew many JPA scholars, few MARA scholars and a lot more private students studying in different universities all around Australia.

Despite being sponsored students, we did NOT live a life of luxury due to the limited allowance provided. None of us neither had cars nor stayed in first-class accommodation. Travelling by feet, public transport, or (at the very best) bicycle was the only means of transport for us poor scholars.

In comparison, many private students drove MERCEDES, few bought Volkswagen, others with cars of their own, stayed in luxury high-rise condominiums with the best view in the city, went for drinks in pubs and bars every night and never came back until they went tipsy, and high-class restaurants were never off their list.

What about us JPA scholars? Most of us cooked our own meals, and only spent dining out once in a blue moon (and I mean that!). Bars and pubs were never our favourites, most probably because of the priciness. Some of us even decided to share rooms to save costs. All in all, we were able to spend more time revising and completing courseworks.

Needless to say, it was us JPA scholars who managed through to the end, without failing, while many private students had to repeat the year.

So, who are you to judge us? Do you ever know what we went through? Although it is true some sponsored students (not that I knew from my batch) went the wrong way once they entered university and hence taken a toll on their results, but this goes all the same for the private students.

So please, please widen your point of view before you start hurting people's pride.

Mimi Liana said...

The info on Amalina's paperwork is on the web. If you are smart enough, you will be able to find her excellent paperwork that has been published by her Uni.

Pauline said...

This is the latest update. She is now doing her PhD at Imperial College, London.
http://www.beritasemasa.com.my/nur-amalina-che-bakri-master-phd

Weekiong said...

So which is which?

Weekiong said...

So which is which?

Kimberry Lee said...

yeah why no KPI, if u dont maintain GPA 3 to 3.5, no scholarship. Why have to finance them for fail? Rediculous !

HotDogg said...

Your written English is simply atrocious with numerous grammatical errors. Please brush up on your English. It has been 4 years since, so I sincerely hope you have improved. Regards.

Unknown said...

Pls do not complain abt your quality of life as an overseas student. You were there to study, not there to enjoy yourself.