Tuesday 20 March 2012

Communication skills among Malaysian University students


 Communication skills among Malaysian University students
 
 Waning communication skills among fresh university graduates are among some of the unspoken concerns employers have brought up in recent years. "We have encountered many graduates who cannot speak nor write proper English. Many are not able to transfer their academic knowledge or articulate their thoughts during interviews due to poor command of English and this have cost them jobs in the corporate sector.” says Melissa Norman, Managing Director of Kelly Services , one of the top head-hunter agencies in Malaysia.



English and the importance of communication skills took a shift from the British colonisation era when the national language Bahasa Malaysia was implemented as the common language medium in lower and higher tertiary education sometime in the 1980’s.  It apparently used to be easier for Malaysian students in Britain to get a part-time job or internship there. An Engineering lecturer at a local public university who only wants to be known as Mar recalls how it was back then. “Mention you are Malaysian and you will get one foot in the door. In fact, we spoke better English then than most Europeans. But, of course, that was in the1980s.”



Steady Decline of Communication skills
The declining standards of English among the young in Malaysia is  mainly attributed to policies that have not emphasized this importance. According to former Human Resource Minister Tan Sri Dr Fong Chan Onn, who related his experience as an external examiner “In the 1980s, the standard of English in most of the answer scripts was still good but in the 1990s, there was a marked decline, so much so the examiners agreed to only assess the facts and leave the writing style and grammar alone. If they had marked the language as well, many of the students would have had low marks.” 


A stern measure or solution has to be design and implemented to salvage the current status quo. Multiple teaching aids are already in place especially for countries who practices English as second language.

What are your thoughts on this ? Do you think communication skills among Malaysian students today has taken a hit ?

- article written in support of International Universities Debating Tournament MMU UADC 2012  (http://www.mmuuadc2012.org/)

A breech of privacy or pure brilliance?

"Recently Read Articles" on Facebook is a growing debate on user privacy.

As one may argue that that what they read at their own time is their own business, it has actually increased readers in 'The Guardian' to 2.25million active monthly readers from none, 'The Washington' has a Sunday morning spike from 50,000 readers to 250,000 readers. 

The concept is simple, the faces of friends create an powerful social recommendation to click through to an article and install its reader app if necessary. What do you think of this app?  Is it an excellent innovative technique to Facebook App or simply a breech of privacy ? 

http://www.insidefacebook.com/2011/10/14/recently-read-articles/