: Every student is required to participate in at least one sport, one club, and one "uniformed body" (such as Scouts or St. John Ambulance) to build leadership and teamwork.
By working together, we can ensure that every student in Malaysia has access to quality education and the opportunity to succeed in an increasingly complex and interconnected world.
Academics are only half the story. Malaysian students are required to participate in three pillars:
KP2027 introduces an interdisciplinary approach called , which brings together music, health, arts, science, TVET, and digital elements. Students learn through real-world projects—planting chilli, observing its growth, drawing, singing about it, and sharing findings—rather than relying on memorisation.
Children enter primary school at age seven and spend six years completing this stage. Primary schools are broadly split into two categories:
spans five years, divided into Lower Secondary (Forms 1 to 3) and Upper Secondary (Forms 4 and 5). During these years, students follow the Standard Secondary School Curriculum (KSSM). At the end of Form 5, they sit for the Sijil Pelajaran Malaysia (SPM) , the most important school-leaving qualification in the country. Education Minister Fadhlina Sidek has firmly dismissed speculation about abolishing SPM, stating that it remains Malaysia's highest school certification.
: Every student is required to participate in at least one sport, one club, and one "uniformed body" (such as Scouts or St. John Ambulance) to build leadership and teamwork.
By working together, we can ensure that every student in Malaysia has access to quality education and the opportunity to succeed in an increasingly complex and interconnected world. : Every student is required to participate in
Academics are only half the story. Malaysian students are required to participate in three pillars: Academics are only half the story
KP2027 introduces an interdisciplinary approach called , which brings together music, health, arts, science, TVET, and digital elements. Students learn through real-world projects—planting chilli, observing its growth, drawing, singing about it, and sharing findings—rather than relying on memorisation. Children enter primary school at age seven and
Children enter primary school at age seven and spend six years completing this stage. Primary schools are broadly split into two categories:
spans five years, divided into Lower Secondary (Forms 1 to 3) and Upper Secondary (Forms 4 and 5). During these years, students follow the Standard Secondary School Curriculum (KSSM). At the end of Form 5, they sit for the Sijil Pelajaran Malaysia (SPM) , the most important school-leaving qualification in the country. Education Minister Fadhlina Sidek has firmly dismissed speculation about abolishing SPM, stating that it remains Malaysia's highest school certification.