Our greatest aspiration is learning in a truly wholesome environment
where teachers and students teach and learn and are assessed on their real
abilities. Leaders of the education sector would create auspicious conditions
to turn schools into homes where students really exercise their mastery.
There we would fully harness our independence, creativity
and self-control in our studies, and become dynamic, enterprising youths who
decide our own lives and are bursting with energy and ambitions to express
ourselves and carve out our fruitful career.
Creating a wholesome
educational environment
As a 12th grader who has experienced numerous reforms
conducted by the Ministry of Education and Training, I’ve realized that the
lack of a wholesome educational environment is behind inadequate renovations
and hindrance on our learning capacity and inventiveness.
Vietnam’s education sector lags behind their regional
counterparts due to its failure to implement reforms in the teaching and
learning of English at school.
With this entry, I really hope the education ministry,
school management and teachers will make more effective, focused adjustments.
In order to create and cherish a healthy, nourishing
educational environment and a liberating academic space which allows both
teachers and students to take their own initiatives, investment should be made
on infrastructure and equipment, while curricula should be redesigned. Changes
to teaching and learning methodology are necessary and equity between teachers
and learners should also be promoted.
Such changes include the construction of classrooms to trim
the number of students each class down to 20 so as to maximize interaction
between teachers and students. More laboratories, visual aids, and restrooms should
be added to better cater to demands. Three-fourths of the construction costs
should be taken from the State coffers, while the remaining one-fourth is
culled from the society.
If the government considers education a national priority,
it’s advisable that all efforts and resources be spent on the education sector,
which is a really wise choice. Regarding social campaigning, I believe that
everyone is willing to make concerted efforts as the cause is supposed to do
everyone good. I also hope that the education ministry, departments and school
management boards will be dedicated administrators who wisely and transparently
spend the funding without acting for their self- interest.
It’s crucial that the curricula be redesigned to boost
practicality and reduce academic features. For instance, regarding the highschool
Vietnamese Literature curricula, literature discourse should make up 40 per
cent of the program length. Among them, half would be dedicated to wartime
prose and verse, while the other half would focus on modern literature, with
highlights on young authors who delve into the contemporary world. The Medieval
section, which is appropriate only for university literature majors, should be
disposed of. Meanwhile, 40 per cent of the curricula should focus on social
discourse, which helps hone our argumentation and language skills. The
remaining 20 per cent of the program length should cover administrative
documentation, which guides us in how to write common administrative documents-
a task that is of practical significance to our everyday life.
Specialized knowledge which is applicable only to university
education should also be reduced, such as solution standard (12-grade
Chemistry), the velocity of a single pendulum on a train (12-grade Physics),
complex numbers and integrals (12-grade Maths). Instead, laboratory sessions
should be maximized for natural sciences, which boosts our precision and ability
to perform lab procedures with ease, adds to lessons’ visual appeal and thus
improves our mental retention.
In terms of teaching methodology, the education ministry
should make reforms that allow students to take their own initiatives, and
avoid imposing their wills on students. For instance, literature teachers are
advised to encourage students to share how they really feel about literary
works and authors, as the writing style tends to be affected by the authors’
personalities and outlooks.
It’s vital that history is comprehensible, authentic and
truthful. Teachers should only introduce and explain historical events and
allow students to present their own opinions. It’s also necessary that history
not be politicized to avoid undermining objectivity.
Reforms on how
English is taught and learned
Vietnamese students enjoy three major advantages to excel in
English: a neutral, expressive Vietnamese accent; the use of the Latin alphabet
which the English language also adopts; and their own aptitude and eagerness
for a brilliant command of English. So let’s just make the most of these
strengths to allow the country’s education sector to rival that of Singapore’s.
Regarding textbook content: The Ministry of Education and
Training should select and put into use appropriate textbooks compiled by
native speakers. Equal attention should be given to four skills: listening,
speaking, reading and writing, and ample practice of the skills should be made
a top priority. The teaching staff are thus supposed to be qualified and excel
in these skills to undertake their critical guiding role.
It’s recommended that the ministry and schools assess the
expertise in the four skills among English students across the country.
Qualified teachers are retained, while those failing to meet the criteria
should be suspended from work or be required to take complementary courses.
To offset the loss of unqualified teachers, schools should
publicly recruit teaching staff on the local media. Candidates are supposed to
have pedagogy certificates and meet requirements set by the Department of Testing
and Auditing Education Quality. Each school can employ four or five Filipino
teachers who boast satisfactory English command and demand acceptable salaries.
I think students’ parents would be willing to spend around VND300,000-400,000 a month to pay
foreign teachers. Only then that such problems in teaching and learning English
be radically resolved.
Designing lessons in
the form of workshops
That teachers reciting for students to jot down remains a
weakness of a 45-minute period. The ministry should offer more workshops, which
would do more good to students and teachers as the knowledge flow is not
disrupted and teachers are no longer under time pressure. Workshops also allow
students to actively contribute to the lessons, and engage in teamwork, thus
boosting their comprehension and retention of the presented knowledge.
Flexible timing would also help teachers properly arrange students’
presentations in which they are welcome to express themselves and be as innovative
as they could.
LUU VINH TRINH (18, Ho Chi Minh City)
Source: Tuoi Tre Newspaper