LINUS Programme for Early Learning

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    LINUS programme for early learning

    BYKANG SOON CHEN

    Teaching aids: Flash cards are used to teach Bahasa Malaysia vocabulary to primary schoolchildren.

    LITERACY and numeracy lay the foundation for learning in primary educationand beyond.

    Reading, writing, arithmetic are implicit in the basic right to education.

    Without these abilities, it is nearly impossible for students to attain higher

    education and function in the modern society. However, statistics showed that

    a sizeable student population in Malaysia are still ill-equipped with basic

    literacy and numeracy skills.

    In 2008, 54,000 Year One pupils identified with low literary skills were enrolled

    in the Early Intervention Reading and Writing Class (KIA2M) while 117,000

    Year Four pupils without basic numeracy skills were on the 3R Remedial

    Programme (Protim).

    Under the Government Transformation Programme, the Education National

    Key Results Area (NKRA) aims to eradicate the dropout problem caused by

    students inability to cope with mainstream education.

    In 2008 alone, 31,939 students dropped out from school at both the primary

    and secondary levels.

    http://www.thestar.com.my/Authors?q=%22Kang+Soon+Chen%22http://www.thestar.com.my/Authors?q=%22Kang+Soon+Chen%22http://www.thestar.com.my/Authors?q=%22Kang+Soon+Chen%22http://www.thestar.com.my/Authors?q=%22Kang+Soon+Chen%22
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    The Literacy and Numeracy Screening (LINUS) programme is aimed at

    ensuring that all Malaysian children acquire basic literacy and numeracy skills

    after three years of mainstream primary education.

    The Education NKRA has set a 100% literacy and numeracy target for all Year

    Three pupils in Malaysia.

    By basic literacy skills, the children are expected to have the ability to read,

    write and understand words, simple and complex sentences (using

    conjunctions) in Bahasa Malaysia and apply such knowledge in learning and

    everyday communication.

    For basic numeracy, the children must be able to read, write, count andarrange (in order) whole numbers from one till 1,000 by Year Three.

    They are also expected to demonstrate the ability to solve basic mathematical

    operations, apply mathematical skills and knowledge in everyday activities

    involving time, currencies and measurements.

    Unlike previous efforts to address the numeracy and literacy problems, LINUS

    focuses on early intervention in the early primary years before the pupils enterYear Four.

    Previous programmes either only focused on literacy skills (KIA2M) or

    conducted much later between Year Four to Six (Protim).

    LINUS is different from special education in that it is a remedial programme

    which conducts screenings of Year One pupil in March every year to identify

    pupils who are weak in literacy and numeracy skills.

    Literacy and numeracy screenings are conducted by the school teachers in

    March, June and September every year. The instruments with 12 constructs

    are prepared by the Malaysian Examinations Syndicate and passed on to the

    district education offices to be distributed to schools.

    There are two parts to the screeningwritten and oral.

    The screening can be conducted in class by the teacher any time within thestipulated timeframe.

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    As this is a screening as opposed to a test, teachers are allowed to provide

    guidance to the students by rewording the questions and giving examples.

    Pupils who fail the screening test will be enrolled in remedial classes with 10

    periods per week for literacy remedial and seven periods per week for

    numeracy remedial.

    Pupils who do not pass the construct 1 and 2 are classified as LINUS Tegar

    (hardcore) and required to attend remedial classes.

    The performance of the pupils enrolled in the LINUS program so far has been

    encouraging.

    The first cohort of 446,332 pupils who were enrolled in the programme in 2010

    achieved 99% in their reading and writing test for their eighth screening

    conducted in June this year, compared to the average score of below 50% in

    the first screening test.

    The pupils who are in Year Three now recorded the average score of 99.5% in

    their screening test for numeracy skills.

    Besides the earlier intervention factor, LINUS aims to reduce pupil-remedial

    teacher ratio from one teacher per school to one teacher for 15 pupils.

    There is no doubt that pupils with learning difficulties such as dyslexia need

    individual attention from teachers.

    By reducing the pupil-teacher ratio, teachers can effectively monitor the

    progress of each pupil.

    Given the shortage of teachers who are experienced in teaching remedial

    classes, close to 17,000 teachers were trained between November 2009 and

    February 2010 to deliver the new literacy and numeracy modules under the

    LINUS programme.

    Also, initiatives are put in place to upskill remedial teachers including the

    collaboration with the Singapore-based College of Allied Educators to train

    300 remedial teachers in a year-long programme starting from this November.

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    The public-private partnership in the upskilling of remedial teachers is a step

    forward in the objectives of the LINUS programme.

    The remedial teachers are given a challenging task to ensure that pupils in the

    LINUS programme master the required skills within three years.

    It is important that they keep themselves updated to the new methods in

    handling children with learning difficulties.

    The main aim of the training programme is to introduce the teachers to the

    differentiated pedagogical skills for pupils with learning disabilities and

    techniques to identify pupils with special needs and learning difficulties.

    For the first phase of training, teachers are selected from states with a high

    number of LINUS Tegar pupils, primarily Sabah, Terengganu, Kelantan,

    Sarawak, Perak, Kuala Lumpur, Putrajaya, Labuan and Negri Sembilan.