Selangor Journal
Students of SK Shah Alam Seksyen 16 queuing as their body temperatures are checked before entering the school grounds on the first day of the 2022/2023 school session, Shah Alam, on March 21, 2022. — Picture by BERNAMA

No lessons on first week of new academic year 2023/2024 — Education Ministry D-G

PUTRAJAYA, March 15 — There will be no lessons in the first week of the new academic year 2023/2024 beginning March 19 and 20, Education Ministry (MoE) director-general Datuk Pkharuddin Ghazali said.

Instead, the first week will be filled with sessions that instil physical, emotional, spiritual, social and intellectual values, he said.

“The focus of the first day of school before was on academics but for the 2023/2024 session the MoE will implement fun education and simple project-based learning,” he said at a press conference, in conjunction with the opening of the 2023/2024 school session here today.

The new academic year will run from March 19, 2023, to March 9, 2024, for Group A states, and March 20, 2023, to March 10, 2024, for Group B states.

Group A involves Johor, Kedah, Kelantan and Terengganu, while Group B covers Melaka, Negeri Sembilan, Pahang, Perak, Perlis, Penang, Sabah, Sarawak, Selangor, Kuala Lumpur, Labuan and Putrajaya.

“In the past, the focus on the first day was to dive straight into the teaching of academic subjects, but this time we are asking schools to strengthen the relationship between teachers, students, parents and the community. All this will raise the spirit of supporting each other right from the beginning of the school year,” Pkharuddin said.

The ministry’s Circular No 5/2023 encourages schools to hold appropriate programmes or activities to prepare students socially and mentally for the new academic year.

“Physical, emotional, spiritual and social values ​​are prioritised because when students ready for education apply those values ​​in themselves, they will be well mannered, have morals and integrity,” he said.

Schools that have few students and have implemented curriculum programmes can still continue teaching and learning.

Pkharuddin, meanwhile, said any form of competition, celebrations or ceremonies with no major impact will be scrapped from the 2023/2024 academic year as one of the immediate initiatives to deal with the issue of teacher workload.

The frequency of revision of the Malaysian Education Quality Standard (SKPM) will be reduced to once a year from this session as well, compared to at least once every two years before.

The annual Teacher’s Day celebration will also be limited to the national and school levels compared to having it at state and district levels before this, he said.

Educators are also given autonomy in the planning and implementation of teaching and learning as well as classroom assessment by using the Standard Curriculum and Assessment Document as a reference.

To tackle the issue of heavy school bags, Pkharuddin said that in the new school year, school lockers will be provided, using activity books provided by the MoE, while workbooks can only be used as reference or revision material outside of teaching and learning hours.

The number of exercise books is also limited, with no more than two for each subject at one time and not exceeding 80 pages.

— Bernama

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