KUALA LUMPUR, Oct 4 — As an environmental consultant, Dr Mohamed Yunus Yasin could have stayed back in the UK where opportunities were aplenty. However, the words of his father and his passion to make a change led to his organising science fairs for Tamil schools instead.
The Science Fair for Young Children (SFYC), which is organised by Association of Science, Technology and Innovation (ASTI), has been active for the past nine years. It involves over 350 Tamil primary schools every year and has over 80,000 children participating in it.
Some have even succeeded on an international level; most recently at the 35th Beijing Youth Science Creation Competition where three students who were SFYC participants bagged the first prize.
Last year, two other Tamil school students participated at the British Invention Show and won the Double Gold Award.
Grades for science and maths in UPSR at Tamil schools have also been improving thanks to their participation in SFYC. It was reported that a Tamil school in Johore was named the top school for UPSR last year with 43 pupils scoring 7As while others scored 7Bs.
Dr Yunus, who is ASTI’s president, however refuses to take credit for the success of Tamil schools in this field and instead wants to be known as an “enabler” who has helped these children unlock their potential.
In his own words:
- We want to get the teachers to think beyond science fairs. We see science fairs as more of an empowerment mechanism. We see ourselves (ASTI) as enablers.To give these kids, teachers and schools confidence. One of the most important things in learning is confidence. You have science but you have no confidence in science, you would consider it to be difficult and then it would be difficult. Same thing goes for maths. It is all in your mind, it is human knowledge created by humans to think about the world.
- We can complain about the government but it should not stop us from making change ourselves. It all comes down to teaching. 70 per cent depends on the teaching and teachers. If you get good teachers, even if the curriculum is rubbish, the teacher can turn it around into an amazing learning experience. We all realise there are a few teachers we still remember and who have made a big difference in our lives. That is important to us.
- I was active in volunteer work at Cambridge University which is regarded as one of the best unis in the world. Ironically, a 20-minute bicycle ride away there is another village, which was the worst performing school district in the whole of UK at the time in 1998. A few of us students decided, why don’t we do community work and teach these kids, A levels Science and Maths. This thing kind of grew and is still going on now. Currently, the district is one of the best performing districts in the whole of UK.
- When I came back from the UK, just barely two months... I got into a bad accident and was in a coma. After the accident I had the drive to make my life meaningful.
- My father always taught me to help those who are in need. Don’t look at race and religion. My father died when I was 14 but this has always been ingrained in me. This has been my driving force all this while. I decided I wanted to do something with Tamil schools. I wanted to be involved and make a transformation. Be the change.
- One day my mother complained about the store room. While I was cleaning it, I found a book. This book was given to me when I was in upper primary. It is about backyard science. It is simple science experiments that you can do with household stuff. So, this was the idea that hit me.
- We built SYFC from scratch, all of the ideas were ours. We also wanted to prove something. For some weird reason, we always think that foreigners will come to help us. We want to prove the fact that we don’t need foreigners. We have Malaysians who can help to change our education system and our future.
- We have been keeping low-key all this while. There are two reasons. One, we are very shy people. Shy of the media. Second reason is the crab theory. Once you come out too early, the other crabs will grab you. We did not want to be seen as a threat to anyone.So we just worked below the radar and tried our best. The problem now is that we are growing so fast but our finances is not growing on par. We received half a million ringgit from the government in the last elections but that was about it. After that, very little from the government but we get from foundations.
- We are doing this now, to create awareness in the community. Now we want the community to take ownership of the programme for sustainability. This programme
- might have gone on for the past nine years but you don’t know if it will last another nine. The community needs to take ownership so that it doesn’t disappear. That’s why we are coming out of our shell. More out of necessity, and we want the community to know about the success of this programme..
- Our long term game plan is not to change the education system. That is not within our capacity but we want to make a difference in the children and the teachers. Those are our two main stakeholders.
- MALAY MAIL ONLINE
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