Why Like That? - The Relentless Pursuit Of A Utopia
Disclaimer
The contents of this blog are nothing but personal opinions of this occasionally deranged individual. The contents of this blog are never meant to be cited as an irrefutable truth. Anything written here should be considered as subject to independent verification. Any comments represented in this blog is accredited to the respective commentator.

Entries for April, 2008

April 1st, 2008

Sufiah Yusof and the case of education

The sad story of Sufiah Yusof made me thought a bit on the state of our world's unfortunately shallow understanding education and what it means.

Sufiah Yusof; the math prodigy who once hit headlines for securing a placement at Oxford at a tender age of 13 has been revealed in an expose that she is currently working as a £130 per session prostitute. A one-time darling of the Malaysian mainstream media by virtue of her Johor born mother and to a certain extent, that she is a Muslim.

Beneath the image of a too picture perfect family painted by the media 10 years ago, is a seriously dysfunctional family. Her Pakistani born father Farooq considers himself a prodigy. He began to hit the headlines when he pioneered "hothousing" (whatever that means) - a concept of intensive personal tutoring of young children which he believes is able to tremendously accelerate a child's learning process. Farooq's 5 children are the subject of his experiment and he is all too keen to show off his results. Iskandar and Aisha were admitted to Warwick University before the age of 15. However despite his children's amazing academic feats, Farooq attributed all that to his tutoring techniques and was particularly adamant that his children were not gifted in any particular way.

Farooq's training regime would involve putting his children through a daily routine of morning prayers were followed by stretching and breathing exercises. The house's temperature is kept low to ensure their attention. Television, pop music and anything else that might lead to "shallow thinking" was banned. They would all then be expected to train for tennis with the same sort of intensity. Last week, Farooq was jailed for sexually assulting two 15-year-old girls while working as a personal their tutor.

Following her husband's guilty plea, Sufiah's Johor-born mother Halimahton has filed for divorce from her husband.

Prior to Sufiah's entry into Oxford, she had twice attempted suicide at 11, and at 15 she sparked a massive nationwide manhunt when she ran away from home. She was later found in an Internet cafe.

Read more here :
Sufiah Yusof - child genius revealed as prostitute - Safe for work version.
Genius on the game - Not Safe for Work (Contains mild nudity).

OTHER CHILD PRODIGIES - WHERE ARE THEY NOW?
Ruth Lawrence
Graduated aged 13 from St Hugh's College, Oxford, with a first-class degree in 1985. Now lives with husband and two children - whom she is determined to allow to "develop in a natural way" - in Jerusalem and teaches maths full-time at the Hebrew University.

John Nunn
Went to Oriel College, Oxford, in 1970 aged 15. Got a first in maths at 18, a doctorate at 20 and became a chess Grandmaster three years later. Lives with his wife in Surrey and makes a living writing books about chess.

Adam Dent
Started reading chemistry at St Hugh's College, Oxford in 1994 aged 14. Left the following year, having been accused and then acquitted of sexual assault on an older pupil. Did an Open University degree and got a job stacking shelves at Iceland. Later went back to Oxford (this time to St Catherine's) and graduated with a first in chemistry in 2002. Is now an IT consultant.

James Harries
Presented himself on television - most memorably on Terry Wogan's chat show in 1990 when he was 12 - as an entrepreneur and child prodigy with an encyclopaedic knowledge of antiques. Had a sex change operation in 2001. Now called Lauren, she is a counsellor and also teaches drama in Cardiff.

Terence Judd
Made his first appearance as a classical pianist with the London Philharmonic Orchestra aged 12. Won the British Liszt Piano Competition at 18. He committed suicide in 1979 at the age of 22 by throwing himself off Beachy Head.


I wouldn't call neither Farooq nor Sufiah as well educated individuals. I have come to the conclusion that being intellectually brilliant / gifted and being educated are two mutually exclusive matter. I have come across numerous First Class graduates but yet can still be amazingly clueless about life and make ridiculously less-than-wise decisions. I have worked with MBA holders who are suspiciously lacking of any business sense.

The story of the Farooqs is a classic example of how has the current generation of educators have completely lost the understanding of education. I am reminded of the best group of educators I have ever come across - the late Brother Ultan Paul and the followers of John Baptist De La Salle, I wonder what would they say about this. I was educated in a school planted by promising young men who gave up their comfortable lives in Europe to setup a school in South-East Asia providing free education at a time when reading and schooling are the preserve of the rich and privileged. The leaders of my school staunchly rejected the popular notion of streaming students according to their academic ability, because they believed every student, irrespective of their learning ability deserves equal attention. Adopting an elitist path to produce the maximum number of straight-A scorers was beside the point. On hindsight, I appreciated that. Because I believe characters of young boys are not moulded by keeping them within a cocoon of goody-two-shoes nerds.

The purpose of education is not to turn every young mind into an Ivy League school material, simply because the bell curve distribution of human intelligence will tell you that not everybody will be a rocket scientist. The purpose of education is to turn people into civilized, well-mannered contributors to society. A bus driver and even a humble street cleaner and garbage collector is still a contributor to society. But what we have today is express tutorials promissing to turn a 5-year old into the next music or math prodigy. Anything less than that and the child is deemed a failure. Remember that the Steve Jobs and Richard Bransons of our time would never have been produced under such a regime.

The result? We have schools of mass produced academic and sporting drones who lacked any sense of creativity nor having strong characters. In a few more decades, our universities will be filled by a generation of shallow character straight-A drones who think alike and lacking in principles. We live in a time of increasingly brilliant academicians who are worryingly lacking of ethics.

The measure of a person's education received is not by his academic papers, but the way one carries himself in public and the depth of one's character. Character, I just wished that word receive a bit more attention from parents and educators than the monosyllable 'A.' Character should be the target of education, not the 'A' grade. But as with all things human, we set ourselves against the easier target, which unfortunately is the later rather than the former.

Posted by whylikethat at 11:48 PM | Add a Comment

April 2nd, 2008

Save Sufiah Programme

A follow-up from my earlier entry.

Zahid Hamidi, Minister in the Prime Minister's department wants to start a Save Sufiah Programme. Have these BN politicians no self respect? Are they so desperate to have a Muslim poster child prodigy to appease their overly inflated egos and to keep their rhetorics of UMNO and glories of past Islamic civilization?

Sufiah is not a Malaysian, she will never pledge any allegiance to Malaysia, let alone UMNO! It just so happens that she has a Johor born mother. That's it!

Stop wasting public fund on a Pakistani-Malaysian descent British citizen! Have these people not learnt anything from their disasterous performance on 8th March election?

For every Sufiah there are many more brilliant so-called "kaum pendatang," a label perpetuated by UMNO Youth on non-Muslim Malaysians, perservering along in the archaic public education system.

And everyone knows the typical ending - a straight-A result, no placement nor scholarship from public universities, snapped up by Singapore or Europe or USA.

Food for thought : How many people realised that the CEO of SIA was a Malaysian? Think of how much public funds that could have been saved if he were to ran MAS all this while.

Posted by whylikethat at 11:22 AM | 1 comments

April 16th, 2008

The coming food supply crunch

Below are the news around the world that the local mainstream government controlled newspapers aren't publishing.

Haiti - The scenes in Haiti have been dramatic. Gunfire on the streets in the capital Port-au-Prince; thousands parading through the streets; and 9,000 United Nations peacekeepers powerless to stop the violence and the widespread looting. Five people have been killed in the violence since last Thursday, according to unofficial reports. Even an impassioned plea by the Caribbean country's President Rene Preval on Wednesday failed to restore order.

Egypt - Clashes have been breaking out among Egyptians waiting in long lines for subsidized bread and the president has ordered the army to start baking more to contain a political crisis.

The turmoil in the world's most populous Arab country is a stark sign of how rising world food prices are roiling poorer countries.

Government bakeries sell subsidized versions of the flat, round bread that is a staple of people's diets.

Acute shortages of subsidized bread, which is sold at less than one U.S. cent a loaf, have caused hours-long lines and violence at some sites in poor neighborhoods in recent weeks.

At least seven people have died, according to police. Two were stabbed in fights between customers in line, and the rest died of exhaustion or other medical problems aggravated by waiting in the spring heat.


Bangladesh - Government-run outlets selling subsidised rice and other basic commodities are now being besieged by members of the middle class as food prices continue to rise.

In Dhaka people are queing up for hours a day in the midday sun to buy 5kg of rice per head under the government’s Open Market Sale (OMS) scheme - established whenever a potential food crisis is perceived. The authorities have opened over 2,500 such outlets nationwide, with an additional 3,800 set to open in the coming days.


Philippines -- Philippine activists warn about possible riots. Aid agencies across Asia worry how they will feed the hungry. Governments dig deeper every day to fund subsidies.

A sharp rise in the price of rice is hitting consumer pocketbooks and raising fears of public turmoil in the many parts of Asia where rice is a staple.

Part of a surge in global food costs, rice prices on world markets have jumped 50 percent in the past two months and at least doubled since 2004. Experts blame rising fuel and fertilizer expenses as well as crops curtailed by disease, pests and climate change. There are concerns prices could rise a further 40 percent in coming months.


Top rice exporters curbing rice exports
Indonesia, the world's third-largest rice producer, may join China, India, Vietnam and Egypt in curbing exports as declining inventories threaten to spark unrest around Asia.

The country's rice production may exceed domestic consumption by 2 million metric tons this year, insufficient to allow for exports, Agriculture Minister Anton Apriyantono said today in a text message to Bloomberg News. Indonesians will consume about 36.2 million tons this year, the U.S. Department of Agriculture forecasts.

Rice, the staple food for about 3 billion worldwide, has almost doubled in the past year on rising imports by the Philippines, the biggest buyer, and as global food supplies lag behind demand led by China and India. Record prices for commodities including rice, wheat, soybeans and corn are stoking food inflation and contributed to strikes in Argentina, riots in Ivory Coast and crackdowns on illicit exports in Pakistan.




We have a very serious situation here people. Three decades ago, Marion King Hubbert revealed his Hubbert Peak Theory. Of course, in an age of cheap oil where teenagers emptying their loose change in their pockets could poll together enough money to fill up a tank of worth of petrol, nobody took him seriously and the mainstream geo-scientific community labelled him as some sort of a renegade researcher. Almost 4 decades later, in the oil wars of Iraq and the Middle East, crude oil prices were hitting new record highs almost every quarter, and thanks to the power of the Internet, more people began to sit up and listen about Peak Oil.

In short, The issue is not one of "running out" so much as it is not having enough to keep our economy running. In this regard, the ramifications of Peak Oil for our civilization are similar to the ramifications of dehydration for the human body. The human body is 70 percent water. The body of a 200 pound man thus holds 140 pounds of water. Because water is so crucial to everything the human body does, the man doesn't need to lose all 140 pounds of water weight before collapsing due to dehydration. A loss of as little as 10-15 pounds of water may be enough to kill him.

In a similar sense, an oil based economy such as ours doesn't need to deplete its entire reserve of oil before it begins to collapse. A shortfall between demand and supply as little as 10 to 15 percent is enough to wholly shatter an oil-dependent economy and reduce its citizenry to poverty.
Read more about Peak Oil and its rammifications here.

In 2006, Goldman Sachs predicted that crude oil prices will breach USD 100 per barrel by the end of 2006. They weren't too far off. It breached the magical 100 mark by early 2008. And as predicted, food prices will soar as a result of rising energy prices and the dependence of the world's agriculture on petroleum to formulate pesticides, power agricultural machineries, processing and transporting of food.

To make matters worse, bio-fuel has been targetted by many "experts" to be a temporary solution for our transportation energy needs. And as I have mentioned in my earlier entry on alternative energy vehicles, choosing a decision to use land for fuel production versus food production is not a wise choice to do. I would need to eat as much as I would need to travel!

The future looks bleak. After over 100 years of rapid plundering, I guess Mother Nature is getting back on us.
Economic ministers urge action on food shortages
The world's economic ministers declared that shortages and skyrocketing prices for food posed a potentially greater threat to economic and political stability than the turmoil in capital markets.

Biofuels getting blame for high food prices
The idea of turning farms into fuel plants seemed, for a time, like one of the answers to high global oil prices and supply worries. That strategy seemed to reach a high point last year when Congress mandated a fivefold increase in the use of biofuels.

But now a reaction is building against policies in the United States and Europe to promote ethanol and similar fuels, with political leaders from poor countries contending that these fuels are driving up food prices and starving poor people. Biofuels are fast becoming a new flash point in global diplomacy, putting pressure on Western politicians to reconsider their policies, even as they argue that biofuels are only one factor in food prices' seemingly inexorable rise.

Posted by whylikethat at 01:13 AM | 4 comments

site powered by tabulas | Back to Top - Home - Gallery - Friends - Friends Of - Favorites - Content - Archives - Links