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Malaysia
This Week in AsiaLifestyle & Culture

Malaysia’s new university rules rekindle multilingualism debate

The decision to allow new admission pathways to public universities has triggered concern about the future of Malay-medium education

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Students sit the Malaysian Certificate of Education (SPM) examination. Photo: Shutterstock
Ushar Daniele
A revision to Malaysia’s public university admissions rules has reopened one of the multicultural country’s most sensitive political debates: how far its national education system should accommodate Chinese-language schooling.

Malaysia’s government on May 15 said students from Chinese independent secondary schools could apply to public universities through specified pathways using the Unified Examination Certificate (UEC), the school-leaving qualification used by those institutions.

The decision also covers students from other non-mainstream institutions that use the UEC, including Arabic schools, private institutes and tahfiz religious schools, provided they meet requirements, such as passes in Malay language and history in the national secondary school examination.

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Previously, UEC graduates were barred from entering public universities or the civil service, although their qualifications are widely accepted abroad and at private institutions.

The policy shift has sparked debate because supporters view it as a modest recognition of Malaysia’s multilingual education system, while Malay nationalist groups and politicians argue it could undermine the national curriculum and the primacy of the Malay language.

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In January, Pertubuhan Pribumi Perkasa Malaysia (Perkasa), a Malay NGO, said merely a pass in Malay and history was not enough and that allowing UEC to be recognised would go against the public’s interest.

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