A tale of two schools
Muslim private schools are flourishing and relatively new educational institutions. Their rapid rise though, masks the relative quality of their contribution. Two articles in today’s Herald on Malek Fahed and St. Ignatius highlight – perhaps starkly – the difference between high quality caring for young people and those characterised by more short term gains.
Muslim schools are varied in how and why they were established. Many are the natural addition to the institutionalisation of culture – establishing a community association based on country of origin, language, or religious minority group, acquiring land for a mosque, then adding a school. Most were established in response to a perceived need and not based on any philosophy of teaching or even an informed understanding of the long term and immediate needs of their students.
Schools have brought substantial wealth to the entities that established them through generous funding for land and recurrent costs. Malek Fahed (pictured above) in Sydney is a prime example but only one of a number of successful Muslim schools throughout Australia. Funding however, is tied to enrolments and in the competitive and aspirational society of migrant Sydney, enrolments are tied to HSC results. Successful ranking schools results in extensive building programs, impressive Assembly halls, libraries, computing labs and occasionally sporting facilities. More comprehensive schools are a temporary and secondary choice.
However beautiful buildings and the drive for continuing high marks are not always conducive to the actual needs of individual students. Children are emotional and vulnerable creatures who may excel in any number of areas according to the nurturing and care provided by highly qualified and supportive teachers. St. Ignatius employs creative artists and playwrights – including one of the writers of “Dusty, the original pop diva”, “Shout, the legend of the wild one” and the recent play ‘Her Holiness’ – with a policy of encouraging a wide range of sporting and artistic areas alongside academic scholarship, The number and variety of charitable projects in which this school’s current and former students are engaged are exemplified by the commitment to Aboriginal children reported by Miranda Devine “Schooled out of Aboriginal disadvantage“, even providing holiday care to cater for the disruption of returning to a dysfunctional family life.
In contrast Malek Fahed has gained a reputation for enrolling a large contingent in the earliest years and cherry picking only the best and brightest. With intense pressure to perform, students who do not make the required marks are required to repeat, enrol in hot house tutoring or leave the school, so that only the most capable remain in the final years. The emotional damage that is incurred by the ‘failures’ of this system are huge. Not only is there a wastage of traumatised students who have not met the required standard, there is also no support for giftedness in areas other than the traditional and basic subjects of Science, Maths and the essential Humanities. Even such survivors may be required to study at TAFE in order to avoid their lower marks compromising the school’s high ranking in HSC results (Private School’s Strugglers at TAFE).
Muslim schools must address the inequities of their school systems and look at the narrow agenda driving sometimes repressive procedures. Traditionally Muslim scholarship has emphasised acquiring knowledge for its own sake, not for the status of high marks alone. The Board of Studies must also ensure that tax payers funding is tied to an equitable and compassionate type of schooling that meets the individual needs of students not just the high reputation of the school.
Leave a Reply
Silma Ihram is a pioneer of Islamic schooling in Australia, a community activist and proud mother of six. Please click to read her full profile.
Links
A vision of K-12 Student Today How well does school education prepare our students for tomorrow
A vision of K-12 Student Today How well does school education prepare our students for tomorrow
Association of Muslim Schools (UK) Contact organisation for 129 Islamic Schools in England
Australian Islamic College – Perth Australia
Consultant – Edris Khamissa
Council of Islamic Schools of North America
Date Valley School London
Dawud Wharnsbury Music
International Board for Educational Research and Resources Organisation established by educators including Yusuf Islam, Sh. Idris Ali, Sh. Ali Adam
Islamia College South Africa
Islamic Shakhsiyah Foundation
Itqan – Tarbiyya education Malaysia
Khalifa Institute – Web link to articles, resources, project school etc
Madani High School Leicester UK
Mountain of Light – Yusuf Islam (formerly Cat Stevens) outlet
Muslim Village – Sydney Formerly the Islamic Sydney website
National Centre for Excellence in Islamic Studies New Consortium of 3 Australian Universities delivering Islamic Studies
Silma’s political commentary A regular commentary from the perspective of an active Australian Muslim
Recent Posts
- A tale of two schools
- ‘her holiness’
- The Slow Decline of Xenophobic Ghettoes
- Liberating the Hijab from Academia
- Media Attacks on Australian University Islamic Studies
- Khalifa Institute
- IBERR – International Educators for a Modern World
- Don’t Fence Us In!
- Muslim Schools and Accountability
- Accept Diversity and Make It Work
Documentary:
Comments
Salaams Silma
I know of one other Islamic school which is still in its formative years which concentrates solely on the essentials for reasons other than Malek Fahd’s.
It has impressive results in literacy and numeracy testing and some other forms of external testing such as math’s challenge.
When it was set up the executive was advised by a muslim teacher that if they wanted to achieve their real goal of turning out Qur’an hafiz then they would have to focus on those core elements that are looked at by the Board of Studies.
In other words so long as their students were demonstrably literate and numerate then they could do whatever else they wanted to in the way of education.
Mind you producing literate and numerate children these days is an achievement in its own right. From what I havbe seen and heard the students have derailed any attempt to turn them all into junior imams but they are at least getting solid religious instruction to go with a seculr program
We are recent migrants to Australia and I would like to comment on the selection policy of Malek Fahed Islamic School.
These days we are looking for a good school for our child and our search includes both Islamic as well as public schools in NSW. We found Malek Fahed to have a good reputation in terms of its academic results with a flavour of Islamic education delivered to children. Therefore we wished our child could get admission there.
We started contacting the admissions section of this school by mid this year. The only answer that we got until early september was, “We haven’t yet decided anything about the admissions”. Such a lack of planning from the governing body of a school of this level cannot be justified.
Then we found that the school has opened admissions for siblings only. On completion of siblings admissions, no seat was available for other candidates.
I consider this policy as unjust and non-transparent. This means the children whose brothers or sisters have already been enrolled there, will get selected regardless of their abilities, without even giving a chance to other competent children.
Institutions who care about their own reputation and wish to provide a transparent selection process for the benefit of the community must not adopt these kind of policies.
Admissions must be open for all applicants and must be subject to some sort of competition such as admission test or interview. Admissions on kinship basis must not exceed 5%-10% of the total intake each year.
By adopting this “Siblings Policy” the school has found an easy way of filling there seats and the committee do not want to take any pain in the admission process. As a result depriving the deserving candidates of their right of admission.
Being a former faculty member of a university, I can suggest that these kind of policies only result in declining the overall standard of the product of an educational institution.