Share to help stimulate good governance, ensure future of people & M’sia
No News Is Bad News
Brain drain, losing talent are Malaysia’s own doing
KUALA LUMPUR, Sept 13, 2025: A Malaysian STPM student with 4.0 CGPA, rejected by three public universities, has received scholarship offers from Singapore’s NTU and NUS.
Is it not crystal clear why Malaysia’s brain drain woes are worsening and losing talent to foreign countries, especially Singapore?
Public universities in Malaysia are producing half-baked graduates, with many unemployable, rending the country’s human capital less talented and productive.
Is it not the Malaysian governments (elected every five years)’s own doing that the country is not only losing out in quality talent and human capital, but also citizens who graduate and take up citizenship in the countries that accept them into tertiary education, many with scholarships.
The woes are compounded annually with discriminatory academic policies based on kulitfication (skin colour).
No News Is Bad News reproduces news reports posted by The Coverage:
M’sian STPM Student with 4.0 CGPA Rejected from 3 Local Unis, but Has Offers from Singapore’s NTU and NUS with a Scholarship
13 September, 2025
A student in Malaysia, who was rejected from three local universities despite having a perfect cumulative grade point average (CGPA), has reportedly been offered admission into both Nanyang Technological University (NTU) and National University of Singapore (NUS), along with a scholarship.
In a Facebook post on Sep. 10, Malaysian Member of Parliament Lee Chean Chung revealed that he has been helping six Sijil Tinggi Persekolahan Malaysia (STPM) graduates, all of whom have perfect CGPAs, in their appeals to get into their universities of choice.
STPM is the equivalent of a pre-university programme like junior college or polytechnic in Singapore.
It is 18 months long and leads up to A-level equivalent examinations.
One of the students accepted into NTU and NUS
On Sep. 12, Lee took to Facebook again to announce that one of his students had been accepted into Singapore universities instead.
“An STPM 4.0 student that I was helping, who is from Petaling Jaya (PJ), did not get into his first three choices of local universities but got into NTU, which was his dream, and also received a scholarship,” Lee stated.
In a Facebook reel posted later the same day, Lee revealed that the same student had also been offered admission into NUS.
“His first choice was a finance course at Universiti Malaya, his second choice was an accounting course at the same university and his third choice was an artificial intelligence (AI) course at Universiti Teknologi Malaysia (UTM),” Lee stated.
He revealed that the student was offered his fourth choice, but at the same time received admission offers from NTU and NUS, along with an ASEAN scholarship. He did not reveal which university offered the scholarship.
Mothership understands that both NUS and NTU have ASEAN undergraduate scholarships.
He said that the student eventually decided to stop his appeal into local universities.
Lee ended the video by saying that he is continuing to help the other five STPM graduates in their appeals and hopes that he will be able to help them.
Many STPM graduates in similar situation
In another Facebook post on Sep. 10, Lee revealed that after the university admissions list was released on Sep. 5, the Petaling Jaya Parliamentary Office received 80 appeals, 51 of which were from STPM graduates.
Shockingly, one graduate, who had a CGPA of 3.92, was not admitted into any university.
Another four students who had CGPAs of above 3.0 were also not offered admission into any universities.
Another STPM graduate previously shared situation on Facebook
Another STPM graduate, Edward Wong, also took to Facebook on Sep. 7 to share that he had been rejected from six local universities’ accounting courses.
Wong had also attained a CGPA of 4.0, a 9.9 out of 10 for his co-curricular activities (CCA), as well as a 99.90 per cent merit score, yet he was eventually placed in a management course at Universiti Sains Malaysia (USM).
“I was placed in Management at USM, my fifth choice, a course that is neither my passion, nor my dream, nor the result of my two years of struggle,” Wong stated.
Wong’s case has since drawn attention from political and student groups, sparking calls for reforms in university admissions.
However, some have pointed out that Wong’s subject combination might have been the reason why he was not accepted into his courses of choice.
Source : Mothership
Zaid Ibrahim: Flaws in Malaysia’s UPU – Many Less-Qualified Applicants Benefit Through Quota Allocations
13 September, 2025
The flaws in Malaysia’s UPU (Unit Pusat Universiti) central intake system is undeniable.Cases like Edward Wong’s are not isolated; they expose systemic weaknesses in selection The intake system is opaque. Applicants do not get a full breakdown of how their results, co-curricular activities, socioeconomic background, or quotas were weighed in the decision.
Without External audits (by an independent education bodies), and appeals processes with published criteria, it is impossible to verify that selection is based on merit and not arbitrary discretion. The government insists the process balances merit and affirmative action. But high achieving non Malays students are often left out of their chosen fields (medicine, dentistry, law, engineering).Many less-qualified applicants benefit through quota allocations.
This creates a perception , and often reality of discrimination against minorities. Objectivity would mean every candidate competes fairly under transparent weighting rules. Instead, the current approach feeds resentment and drives talent abroad. But non Malay political parties including DAP when in opposition would make noise about this unfairness but keeps mum when in government. MCA now are angry and making loud noises but will not leave this government .
So how do they expect the system will change?By remaining in government MCA (and other component parties) are complicit. The same could be said of UMNO and other Malay-based parties: rather than reforming the system to reward merit while still helping the disadvantaged, they prefer to keep selective privilege intact Why are Malaysians angry only in certain cases?
If a Malay top scorer is rejected, which is rare outrage floods social media.When a Chinese or Indian top scorer like Edward Wong is sidelined, the reaction is “ be grateful” .
This selective anger reflects how race and politics still dominate public life, instead of principle. True fairness cannot be selective; it must apply equally across communities. Families see the public university system as compromised, and those without financial means are forced to depend on it. We lose talent in science, medicine, law, and innovation that could strengthen Malaysia’s competitiveness.
The UPU system is not properly checked, not independently audited, and not objective. Thats why cases like Edward Wong will continue until political parties moved from race based system to one where selection is on merit plus-need model; one that rewards achievement but also helps disadvantaged students of all races.
Source : Zaid Ibrahim
Flaws in Malaysia’s UPU: Exposing Systemic Inequities in Public University Admissions
In the heart of Malaysia’s education system lies the Unit Pusat Universiti (UPU), a centralized platform designed to streamline admissions into public universities. Established in 1972, it processes applications from tens of thousands of STPM, matriculation, and foundation graduates each year, aiming to balance merit with social equity. Yet, as highlighted in a recent viral tweet by former Law Minister Zaid Ibrahim, the system’s opacity and reliance on quotas are fueling widespread discontent. Zaid’s post, which has garnered over 3,700 views, dissects these issues through the lens of Edward Wong Yi Xian’s case—a top STPM scorer denied his preferred accounting program at Universiti Malaya (UM)—and calls for a merit-plus-need model free from racial biases.
This article delves into the core flaws of the UPU, drawing on Zaid’s critique and recent controversies, while amplifying calls from MCA Youth for a Royal Commission of Inquiry (RCI). By examining quota allocations, transparency deficits, and their broader impacts, we uncover how the system disadvantages high-achievers and perpetuates inequality.
Quota Allocations: Merit Undermined by Hidden Priorities
At the UPU’s core is a quota system ostensibly abolished in 2002, but remnants persist through Bumiputera-heavy pathways like matriculation, which holds high quotas and releases results first, giving its graduates priority in UPU applications. STPM students, often from more rigorous streams, compete on an uneven field: a 3.5 CGPA in STPM is grueling, yet matriculation peers with sub-4.0 scores dominate placements.
Today, parallel channels like Satu exacerbate inequities: wealthier students bypass UPU’s merit grind via fee-paying routes, while low-income families are locked into subsidized but hyper-competitive spots. MCA warns this “commercialisation” drives talent abroad, with Singapore poaching Malaysia’s brightest.
Lack of Transparency: An Opaque Black Box
Zaid’s tweet nails the UPU’s Achilles’ heel: opacity. Applicants receive no “full breakdown” of how academics (90% weight), co-curriculars (10%), socioeconomic factors, or quotas factor in. Without independent audits or published appeal criteria, decisions appear arbitrary. As Zaid notes, “it is impossible to verify that selection is based on merit and not arbitrary discretion.”
Stakeholders echo this. A 2025 Architects of Diversity report highlights “unequal access to information” on processes, leaving rural or low-income students disadvantaged. UM’s Satu quotas and criteria remain undisclosed, fueling suspicions of favoritism. Student groups like Umany demand detailed data releases on rankings, allocations, and pathways to rebuild trust.Data underscores the disparity. Bumiputera students comprise 81.9% of public university enrollees—over four times non-Bumiputera at 18.1%—despite no explicit ethnic quotas today. In UM’s accounting program, UPU intake has plummeted from 150 to 85 seats over eight years, despite 2,291 qualified applicants and 1,127 perfect scorers, yielding a mere 3.7% admission chance for top candidates. Critics like Zaid point out that “many less-qualified applicants benefit through quota allocations,” eroding meritocracy.
Zaid critiques selective outrage: rare Malay top-scorer rejections spark fury, but non-Malay cases like Wong’s elicit “be grateful” shrugs, underscoring race’s dominance over principle.
Calls for Reform: RCI and Beyond
Enter MCA Youth, whose chief Ling Tian Soon demands an RCI to probe “commercialisation” and equity erosion. Earlier, MCA’s Wee called for an RCI on dual channels, urging suspensions of Satu intakes pending audits. Pointers for greater transparency include:
· Publish Detailed Admissions Data: Release annual stats on quotas, rankings, success rates by course, pathway, and demographics to dispel bias claims.
· Independent Audits and Appeals: Mandate external reviews by bodies like the Malaysian Qualifications Agency, with transparent, published criteria for reapplications.
· Equalize Pre-University Standards: Align matriculation rigor with STPM for fair UPU competition, as urged by Umany.
· Merit-Plus-Need Model: Shift to needs-based aid (e.g., socioeconomic weighting) over race, ensuring subsidies for disadvantaged students of all ethnicities.
· Holistic Reviews: Incorporate interviews and verified co-curriculars uniformly, with clear guidelines to prevent discretion.
These steps, per experts, could harmonize merit, need, and identity without compromising standards.
A Call to Meritocracy: Rebuilding Trust
The UPU’s flaws—quotas favoring the less-qualified, veiled processes, and political inertia—aren’t just bureaucratic glitches; they erode Malaysia’s human capital. As Zaid warns, families view public universities as “compromised,” forcing reliance on costly alternatives or emigration, stifling innovation in science, medicine, and beyond.
An RCI, backed by MCA Youth, offers a path forward: not to dismantle affirmative action, but to make it blind to race and open to scrutiny. Until then, cases like Edward Wong’s will persist, reminding us that true progress demands transparency over tradition. Malaysia’s future hinges on educating all talents, not just the privileged few. It’s time to audit the system—or watch it audit our competitiveness away.



No comments:
Post a Comment