MALAYSIA, 29 June 2000 - You may not find the Dindings
High School, located in the
hinterland of Malaysia's northern state of Perak, on any map, and may
pass it by without a second thought.
But located within its wooden walls and under zinc roofs
are budding entrepreneurs of the new dot-com world.
The 800 students of the school, ranging in ages between
13 and 17, surf the Internet, learn Web design, digital art, networking, and programming in C, Visual Basic, Linux
and Unix as part of their daily curriculum.
In their most recent school project, a group
of 20 students received hands-on experience in laying a one-km 6 cores Multimode fiber-optic cable to inter-link the school
with a nearby primary school and kindergarten. The campus-wide high-band network was probably
the first of its kind in the country that was commissioned and maintained by teenagers. The new
link-up will enable students and teachers to experiment with classroom-to-classroom video-conferencing
and other multimedia applications.
"By the time these students leave school,
they will have enough technical know-how and skills to
configure and use switches and hubs and manage networks," said principal
Tiong Ting Ming who
is the driving force behind the rural school's transformation.
Eight years ago, the radical 48-year-old principal was
assigned to the Dindings school located
near the beachfront town of Lumut, where the community's lives are mostly
centered around
trading, fishing and agriculture.
Tiong had come with the belief that the textbook-reliant,
exam-oriented education system the
school was governed by was not enough to equip his students to participate
in a globalized
economy. Added to that the less-motivated students were dropping out and
he needed to stem the
tide.
An Apple Macintosh fan, Tiong was switched on by the
opportunities that computing technology
could give his young charges. "One of the hardest things was convincing
some of the more
skeptical parents and technophobic teachers that computers are necessary
to give the kids skills
they could use in the real world," he said.
When the Internet came along, it served to reinforce
Tiong's belief that he needed to arm his
students for the future knowledge workplace. "The Internet is their
future. I was convinced
educating them to be responsible Net citizens and giving them the right
skill sets had to start in
school," he said.
Persistence pays
A chemistry graduate, Tiong set about teaching himself to repair and upgrade
old PCs and cajoled
teachers and students to embrace the Internet. Only partially supported
by government and
without the cash-rich opportunities of urban schools, Tiong knocked on
doors of corporations and
benefactors to win them over.
"I visited one company in Kuala Lumpur
seven times before they finally relented and gave me the
first set of PCs and Macs to get us started," said Tiong.
He also traveled personally on 800-km bus journeys to-and-fro
Singapore to purchase spare
parts to refurbish second-hand computers for his students. "Computer
parts are expensive in
Malaysia and are much cheaper from bargain hardware purveyors at Sim Lim
Square in
downtown Singapore," he said.
With the aid of former-students, some generous individual
donors, various companies, and the
Ministry of Education, the school has since raised over 1.8 million ringgit
(US$470,000), in cash
and kind, to fund its efforts to build up a networked environment from
scratch.
Wedged between a palm oil estate and a coconut
plantation, the school now boasts a brand new
three-storey block that is a hive of computing activity. Tiong's office
is more akin to a computer
retail shop's back-office, and is packed with an assortment of PCs, servers,
peripherals, cables
and an over-laden shelf filled with phonebook-sized technical manuals
and books.
His open-door policy, during this interview, saw busy
students come in armed with some
component or another, then skitter off spouting geekspeak. Amid the clutter
in the room there is
even a bed to get some shut-eye and a fridge for snacks when his students
are working on
late-night "projects".
One of those projects, administered by Tiong, was the
wiring of the entire school including the
classrooms, the library, the staff room, the administration office and
computer labs.
The school now has over 100 PCs - 486s, Pentium 75s and
Pentium MMX 166s - that give
students and teachers instant access to the Internet via a 64Kbps leased
line.
A cadre of trained students upkeep the PCs and administer
the Dell 553MHz dual -processor
main server, and a self-configured secondary and backup server.
The Red Hat Linux 6.1 powered-server houses their mail
server, Apache Web server, proxy
server, newsgroups, Internet Relay Chat, and file, print and backup server.
'I chose Linux because the system cost me only 200 ringgit
and was useful for my students to learn
and configure," he said.
Sowing the Net generation
Early last year, Tiong yanked biology as a subject from
the curriculum for his Form Four
(16-year-old) students and replaced it with information technology. "Better
to know the innards of
a computer than human or animal anatomy," he thought.
He has since extended the subject school-wide, and all
students have their own individual e-mail
and attend varied courses ranging from basic software to hardware troubleshooting
and
maintenance, programming, local area networking, and structured cabling
and certification.
Students are also assigned projects by teachers to encourage
them to do research on the Internet
to complement their traditional subjects.
This year, a pioneer batch of 120 students will be taking
Information Technology as an exam
subject for the year-end compulsory government examinations, that is a
prerequisite for university
entrance.
Networking giant 3Com Corp adopted Dindings as the first
of 11 schools in the country for its
global NetPrep program to provide students with network management skills.
The first batch of 20 students are currently undergoing
160-hours of the intensive program and will
be certified by the International Association of Communication Systems
Engineers upon
completion.
Tiong believes the hard work has begun to pay off. "I
used to have to persuade parents to keep
their children in school. Now I get queries from far and wide to have
their children sent here," he
said. The student population has grown steadily, in tandem with the school's
computing firepower,
from 320 to the present 800.
He discloses that the school's passing rate in year-end
exams, a government barometer for a
school's success, is still only around 50 percent. "But their environment
is sheltered. Introducing
the Internet to the students has opened their minds tremendously and given
them insights and the
motivation to be discerning and analyze information," he said.
Tiong said his ultimate goal is to provide an environment
where the "Net culture" can thrive. He
hopes students can be imprinted with a self - and life-long learning trait
that they could retain
beyond school walls.
He added that teachers in the country need to bone up
to adapt to the rapidly shifting educational
needs of students. "Teachers are at risk of becoming obsolete if
they do not understand or accept
that they no longer hold a monopoly over the input their students receive.
They must become as
Net-savvy as their students. You can ignore the technology, but not the
information," he said.
Tiong is convinced the information technology skills
his students acquire will equip them for life in
the real working environment and help them be more responsible with the
use of the technology. It
may even inspire some to become entrepreneurs.
As Tiong puts it, "You can either be a paddy planter
or rice eater. I am teaching my kids to be
planters because that's their future ricebowls."