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Thai junta’s focus on school reforms raises eyebrows

Reashot Xigwin

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Practical job skills for middle class take back seat to nationalism
Reuters

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A young woman peers from the window of a train leaving Hua Lampong station, in Bangkok on Oct. 3. The Thai junta's focus on nationalistic education reforms over teaching useful job skills has alienated some youths. | BLOOMBERG

BANGKOK – Sixteen years old and studying 13 hours a day, high school pupil Worapot doesn’t have time to waste meeting a military-led government’s idea of what makes a good Thai.

The generals who led a coup in May have prioritized school reforms to inculcate a strong sense of national identity — or Thainess — in a country whose traditional values hinge on unquestioning respect for the monarchy, religion and elders.

For Worapot, the son of junior civil servants who together earn $1,800 a month, a more practical goal would be creating an education system that commands respect in the job market.

“Now the system might get even worse,” said Worapot, as he sat on the steps of a language school in a bustling Bangkok shopping district where he is taking extra lessons in English.

Still to lift martial law, the junta has given education the biggest slice of the 2015 budget, raising teachers’ pay and redrawing the national curriculum with the aim to introduce it at the start of the next school year in May.

Aside from giving Thai history and culture more emphasis, classes in “moral soundness and virtues” will be introduced.

Worapot’s frustration with the new policies is magnified by the prospect that the job market will become tougher once a trade pact, due to start next year, brings together 600 million people in Southeast Asia.

He wants to be able to compete with better-off Singaporeans and Malaysians rather than be patronized for quaint moral codes or nationalist sentiments.

“I want to be their equal or better. Not to be ridiculed,” he said, while using a Thai-to-English app on his iPad.

For years, education in Thailand has been handicapped by a reliance on rote-learning and stress on skills that support basic jobs but just do not cut it for a booming middle class that aspires to better jobs and better pay.

Technocrats have long called for changes to put more stress on developing critical thinking skills rather than conformity, whereas Thais often shy away from showing individuality for fear of “losing face,” or causing embarrassment.

The reforms envisaged by the junta — including civic duty and morality classes to promote “a sense of pride in being a Thai” — do not appear to be the answer.

“The way the government promotes certain values may not fit well with the development of 21st century skills,” said May Sripatananskul, education initiative project manager at the Thailand Development and Research Institute (TDRI), a Bangkok-based independent think tank.

Multinationals based in the kingdom already complain of a shortage of skilled and professional labor.

“Most graduates may not have basic skills adequate to the needs of the company — for example, practical command of the English language, communication, time management and behavioral skills,” said Krisda Utamote, director of corporate communications at BMW Group Thailand.

Thailand’s education system is routinely ranked as one of the worst in Southeast Asia.

Attempts by previous governments to bring students up to speed with their Asian peers — from free, “Made in China” computer tablets for primary schoolchildren to foreign exchange programs — have proved ineffective or disastrous.

In the U.N. Development Program’s 2014 human development index, Thailand ranks 89th out of 187 countries for education.

Taking over an economy laid low by months of political unrest and martial law, Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha, the former army chief, has said he will do “everything” to ensure Thailand remains a hub for foreign investors.

The policymakers chosen to oversee the school reforms have raised some eyebrows, however.

Prayuth’s education minister, Narong Pipathanasai, was chief of Thailand’s navy until September. And Art-ong Jumsai Na Ayudhya, the aristocrat tasked by the Office of Basic Education Commission with re-drafting the curriculum, believes in UFOs and the paranormal powers of ancient Egyptian pyramids.

A petition calling for his removal has gathered over 3,000 signatures. Art-ong did not reply to a request for an interview, while OBEC said it was “under orders from the highest level not to comment on education policy.”

As a percentage of gross domestic product, Thailand already spends more on education than Germany, but that has not brought success.

TDRI’s May bemoaned the amount wasted through inefficiency, and the failure of higher pay to translate to better quality teachers. The largest chunk of the budget is spent on the primary and pre-primary segments.

Yet, Thailand ranked 90th out of 144 countries for the quality of primary education, the latest World Economic Forum Global Competitiveness Report showed. Neighboring Malaysia, whose per capita GDP is double Thailand’s $5,779, ranked 17th.

Past studies by U.N. agencies have noted that while access to primary education is fairly equal across Thai society, more should be invested in secondary and tertiary levels, where both access and quality need improvement.

Better-off families avoid public schools if they can. The well-heeled, living in Bangkok, have the choice of sending their children to international schools where annual fees average 400,000 baht ($12,300), according to a 2013 survey.

“I can do without patriotism and morality classes,” said businessman Krissada Pornweroj, while waiting for his son outside a British school in the capital.

“We want him to get in to a good English boarding school.”

The negative economic implications of the country’s weak classroom performance will be compounded by a shift in Thailand’s demographics.

While most of Southeast Asia will enjoy relatively young populations decades from now, Thailand bucks the trend. It currently has a population of around 66 million people.

Once the working-age population starts to decline in 2020, according to U.N. estimates, economic growth could suffer.

“Thailand does run the risk of losing competitiveness,” said Rahul Bajoria, an economist in Singapore at Barclays PLC.

“Historically, the Thai labor force has been more productive than Singapore, Malaysia and Indonesia but without sustained focus, that productivity gap can narrow.”

Thai junta's focus on school reforms raises eyebrows | The Japan Times
 
As the same monarch country like Japan...

Japan Times should not write article like that.


“I can do without patriotism and morality classes,” said businessman Krissada Pornweroj, while waiting for his son outside a British school in the capital.

“We want him to get in to a good English boarding school.”

I found the same narrative in China articles too.

China is ugly, draconian, pollution, etc...

We want to immigrate to USA, send our children to US school, etc.


I can understand if the article written by US media, well, nationalism.

But Japan Times??? C'mon!
 
The article reflects real situation. As a father,.Thai education system sucks. It drains too much energy with very little adventage becsuse rote learning. It was because the creation of teacher university. These teachers from teacher universities are from the lowest rank of entrance exam. Then because too many of these teachers are out, they create a kind od law.to.protect themsellf from competition. For example, instead using Math graduates to teach high school math, Thai law ask the teachers to be graduated from teaching university, ensuring math graduates cannot compete with these lowest entrance score teachers from teaching universities. There are more problem, as we have the lowest entrance exam score controlling Thai education. I haate to say thisbut stupid people manage thing stupidly.

That is why I think in long run, Vietnam education will be better than Thai.
Current Math olimpiad, VN scores like east asia countries, got 10th. All those that have money pay for international schools to avoid these thing. As current priminister, who was not from democratic.process, said, the hope for Thai education looks so slim. People sent their children to.education for their childrens ability to work.on highly skill job, not for.patriotic. Patriortic is important, but you are not fixing the problem. Current Thai grad level research is hopeless. I myself sent a child to international school even I want them to be Thai. If to be Thai means to be shy, afraid of answer the problem, lack of problem solving skills, passive, no work disipline, then I would rather have my children less Thai.

Do you hear me? Prayuth.
 
The article reflects real situation. As a father,.Thai education system sucks. It drains too much energy with very little adventage becsuse rote learning. It was because the creation of teacher university. These teachers from teacher universities are from the lowest rank of entrance exam. Then because too many of these teachers are out, they create a kind od law.to.protect themsellf from competition. For example, instead using Math graduates to teach high school math, Thai law ask the teachers to be graduated from teaching university, ensuring math graduates cannot compete with these lowest entrance score teachers from teaching universities. There are more problem, as we have the lowest entrance exam score controlling Thai education. I haate to say thisbut stupid people manage thing stupidly.

That is why I think in long run, Vietnam education will be better than Thai.
Current Math olimpiad, VN scores like east asia countries, got 10th. All those that have money pay for international schools to avoid these thing. As current priminister, who was not from democratic.process, said, the hope for Thai education looks so slim. People sent their children to.education for their childrens ability to work.on highly skill job, not for.patriotic. Patriortic is important, but you are not fixing the problem. Current Thai grad level research is hopeless. I myself sent a child to international school even I want them to be Thai. If to be Thai means to be shy, afraid of answer the problem, lack of problem solving skills, passive, no work disipline, then I would rather have my children less Thai.

Do you hear me? Prayuth.

There's only one solution to this, buddy. It is the Only solution...
 
Somsak, do students go for after school private tuition?
 
I do say in Malaysia, its a problem of student discipline. Some points brought out in PISA is true, but that is mostly problems from good school. 90% is student discipline.
 
I do say in Malaysia, its a problem of student discipline. Some points brought out in PISA is true, but that is mostly problems from good school. 90% is student discipline.
Example?
 
Truancy, traids/gangmembers, no respect for teachers, entire class talking while teacher is teaching(to the point that teacher doesn't care anymore but the paycheck), not doing homework. Teachers don't dare discipline the student or you will find you car tires cut\parents threatening the teacher. In short, serious discipline problem. Teacher are too being attacked by students.

I still wonder why the government still promote student to high school when they can't even do plus and minus.
 
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Truancy, traids/gangmembers, no respect for teachers, entire class talking while teacher is teaching(to the point that teacher doesn't care anymore but the paycheck), not doing homework. Teachers don't dare discipline the student or you will find you car tires cut\parents threatening the teacher. In short, serious discipline problem. Teacher are too being attacked by students.

I still wonder why the government still promote student to high school when they can't even do plus and minus.

Sometime that sounds like me when I was young. hahaha. I just talk too much. Not that gangster.
Yes. Thailand has serious student gang problem. They are not to be robbers. They just hate their rival schools. Rival school students kill each others etc. Also pragnant during high schools, and drugs.

That's why parents in Bangkok pays hefty money to good school to avoid these problems.
 
Sometime that sounds like me when I was young. hahaha. I just talk too much. Not that gangster.
Yes. Thailand has serious student gang problem. They are not to be robbers. They just hate their rival schools. Rival school students kill each others etc. Also pragnant during high schools, and drugs.

That's why parents in Bangkok pays hefty money to good school to avoid these problems.

I think that's the problem in SEA education system ( except singapore, they have excellent system)
The govt not invest enough to education system and there's no reform from this sector..
Also the teacher quality suck big time, and the school lack of punishment for a gang member... For example, in Indonesia , student from grade 5-6 can involved on brawling fight (we called it Tawuran ) You can easily found chain, knife, or even samurai on their bag instead of book or pencil ..
Well, I hope the school have a strict law and the teacher have a balls to punish the students...

Anyway, how thai Pisa test results?
 

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