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Malaysian students are easily identifiable by their standardized, colonial-era inspired uniforms:

As they waited for their buses, a group of boys played sepak takraw in the courtyard, their bare feet smacking the rattan ball with a satisfying thwock . A little girl, a Form 1 student, sat alone on a bench, crying.

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They walked past the SJK(C) primary school, where Mei Ling had studied for six years, learning Science and Maths in Mandarin. Now, at SMK Taman Kenanga, they were in the same “Remove Class” stream for Bahasa Malaysia. That was the beauty—and the complexity—of Malaysian education. You start in your vernacular stream, but by secondary school, you all converge into a single national system, united by the national language, Bahasa Malaysia.

The Head Prefect, a tall Malay boy named Faiz, bellowed into the crackling PA system: “Perhatian! Baris, sedia!”

Primary education in Malaysia is compulsory and free for all citizens. The primary school curriculum includes core subjects such as Malay Language, English Language, Mathematics, Science, and Social Studies. Students also learn Islamic Education (for Muslim students) and moral education. The primary education cycle is divided into two stages: Year 1-3 (lower primary) and Year 4-6 (upper primary).

First period: Sejarah (History). Cikgu Hamid was a legend. He didn't just teach the Melaka Sultanate; he became Parameswara. He would re-enact the founding of Malacca, using a broom as a spear.

Ranging from track and field to popular national sports like badminton, football, and netball.