Career paths opted by Malaysian parents

Career paths opted by Malaysian parents

Top 10 Career Paths of 2016

Malaysian parents picked out for their kid

Afterschool.my website has published their top 10 list of courses most viewed by families in Malaysia. (Source: Afterschool.my)

#10. Aviation

Despite recent plane crashes, the urge for human to travel or fly remains strong.

Didn’t make the chart in 2014 (because you know why). But quickly making a comeback in 2015 and 2016.

#9. Pharmacy

Job mobility, stability, flexibility. Need I say more?

Pharmacy has always been close to the top 10 chart in recent years. But this year, students interest in the field had improved.

#8. Computer Science

The dream to insanely make a lot of money online lives on.

In 2014, the field wasn’t as popular on Aftrerschool.my. However, in 2015 it picked up significant steam; and in 2016 it is in the top 10 list.

#7. Actuarial Science

Top paid jobs with high demand in the marketplace.

Actuarial science was one of the most researched courses on Afterschool.my in 2014. But this course didn’t make it to the top 10 last year. This year, actuarial science picked up steam because prospects are looking better again.

#6. Business & Marketing

Who wouldn't want to see their son all grown up in a suit?

Not even in the top 10 in 2014, this course has suddenly jumped to #5 last year. This year, you guys – our cool students – have shown slightly less interests.

#5. Biomedical Sciences

Give back to the people. Give back to the environment.

Students are opened to the opportunities in various fields like medicine, pharmacology, lab technologies, information technology in healthcare, communicating and educating the public, law, and environmental impacts. Therefore, the interest is understandably higher than before.

#4. Psychology

No monkey business. New jobs are created for workplace psychology everyday.

Students are smarter and capable of understanding the importance of psychology in the marketplace. Institutions that provide studies in this field are helping parents and students understand even better.

#3. Medicine

What parents wouldn't want their child to be a doctor, right?

Health is one of the most important aspects that contributes to the longevity of human and directly impacts productivity. Traditional and Veterinary Medicine are also on the rise.

#2. Accounting & Finance

There are worse job than counting money.

Tons of scholarships dedicated to increase the talent pool in this field. Competition also gets greater every year.

Top 1

#1. Chemical Engineering

Does your eyes sparkle when someone tells you he works in the Oil and Gas industry?

Oil and Gas industry isn’t the only field closely related to Chemical Engineering. But the riches in this industry (in dollar signs) is certainly a compelling reason for many.

Do you agree with the choices your parents made for you? Or did you make your own choices? Tell us your story.

Tranquility of the night at Kuala Sepetang

Tranquility of the night at Kuala Sepetang

Tranquility of the night at Kuala Sepetang

In the past, it was only Pulau Ketam, but in recent years, both Sekinchan and Tanjung Sepat have emerged as attractive local tourist destinations to Malaysians.

Kuala Sepetang in Taiping, Perak is hardly known to most people, including people living in Perak. Although some bloggers have written about it, it is only in recent years that, along with the Matang Mangrove Reserve, the fishing village has become an interesting tourist spot, especially for its dolphins and eagle sighting.

There are also the beautiful fireflies which decorate the plants by the riverside at night that would mesmerise both adults and children alike.

And, of course, the fresh seafood and the fried porridge, besides also learning how the charcoal is produced locally in Sepetang. Frankly, before this visit, I never knew that charcoal was man-made.

Staying overnight in Sepetang

Although it was pricey, we stayed overnight in Kuala Sepetang because we wanted to experience living in a fishing village.

There are currently not many hotels in the fishing village. Happy Eight, for example, charges between RM200 to RM400 a room, and each room has its own theme. By the end of the year, I was told another hotel would be up, and maybe by then, the prices would be more competitive.

The beauty of the experience of living in the fishing village was the tranquility of the night. Instead of birds chirping early in the morning or the engine noise from the early rush hours, over here at Sepetang Fishing Village, there were only the trawlers returning to the jetty from the sea. But, that is fine, when you know you are on holiday here.

One downside, however, is that the local council has not paid enough attention to cleaning up the river here. It is not the kind of place that you would bring foreign tourists to visit. The fishermen, the majority of whom are not locals, do not care about the environment.

One fisherman, for example, threw his plastic bottle into the river after filling up the motor engine. When I told him to look after the river, he merely shrugged his shoulders. I wish that the local council would just pay some attention to giving the fishing village a facelift.

Apart from that, there was the smell of salted fish and the fresh breeze coming from the sea. For the dolphin sighting, the cruise starts as early as 7am, but according to Rachel Ho of Eagle Sight Seeing Tour, dolphin sighting is seasonal.

“We can never guarantee that we will be able to see the dolphins,”

she said. However, if there are 15 persons, the boat can go further out into the sea where the dolphins are more likely to be sighted.

Although the local fishermen were willing to take us out into the sea supposedly to look for the dolphins, Ho refused to bring us out because she knew that the dolphins would not be easily sighted.

It is also possible for people to stay overnight in Ipoh or even in Taiping, and take an early drive to the fishing village for the dolphin sighting tour. The drive from Ipoh to Kuala Sepetang is only slightly more than an hour, but it is still possible to do budget homestay in Kuala Sepetang.

The dolphins sighted here are mainly the beautiful pink Indo-Pacific humpback dolphins. According to the Hong Kong Dolphin Conservation Society, these pink dolphins are nearly extinct, with their numbers declining from 158 in 2003 to 61 in 2014.

One no longer has to travel all the way to Hong Kong to see the beautiful sea creature when it is available in Kuala Sepetang. After all, to the local people, the name Sepetang came from the idea that it takes only one evening to cycle from Taiping.

Lots to do in Ipoh

Although Ipoh may be a smaller city compared to Kuala Lumpur, there are really a lot of places to eat some of the best of Ipoh street food and buy biscuits.

The most popular place now is around Jalan Theatre, where we bought as many as eight packets of salted baked chicken from Aun Kheng Lim’s shop on behalf of family and friends! Although there are several other stalls selling the salted chicken selling at almost the same prices, Aun Kheng Lim happens to be the one on The Star’s Street Food Guide.

There is also the famous Ipoh chicken and taugeh at either Lou Wong restaurant, which could be quite pricey, too as well as the dim sum at Foh San Restaurant at Jalan Leong Sin Nam. There are in fact several other dim sum restaurants in the same area.

The Funny Mountain Soya Bean at No 49 Jalan Theatre is so far the best, but it is better to eat there on the spot for only RM1.50 instead of packing it, costing an additional 90 sen.

Over in Ipoh, we also managed to catch up with some old friends whom we had not met for at least 25 years. Thanks to the online application Waze, it is now easy and possible for anyone to find any location and this, along with the currency depreciation, is a boost for local tourism.

Tomorrow, I will introduce you where and what to eat around Desa Aman Puri, where the prices are still reasonable, especially if you are living in the Klang Valley.

Gout: More common in men than in women?

Gout: More common in men than in women?

Gout: More common in men than in women?

According to statistics by the National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases (NIAMS) of the United States, 275 in every 100,000 people suffer from gout. It is predicted that in the year 2021, there would be 17.7 million people suffer from gout globally. This alarming figure truly warrants a call for increased health awareness!

When it comes to gout, we should remember the Chinese idiom: “illness enters by the mouth”. One of the main culprits is excessive eating and drinking habits. Excessive consumption of foods high in purines such as seafood, meat, alcohol and beans, significantly increase the density of uric acid in the body. Making it worse, lack of exercise also causes uric acid remain in the body instead of being properly excreted. Over a long period of time, excessive uric acid build-up can lead to the formation of uric acid crystal deposits, which are the “culprits” of gout.

You may not be aware that gout, obesity, hypertension (high blood pressure), hyperlipidemia, coronary heart disease and diabetes are all closely related. For example, patients with hypertension commonly use diuretics to control their blood pressure levels, but which leads to extracellular fluid loss. This in turn increases the reabsorption of urates by kidney tubules. Chronic hypertension triggers atherosclerosis (hardening of the arteries), which results in renal function deterioration (kidney failure) and decreases uric acid excretion. This simply translates into the increase of uric acid concentration, which leading to gout attacks.

For overweight people, the major culprit is overeating, which leads to the accumulation excess fats in the subcutaneous, abdominal and visceral parts of the body. When the body is tired or hungry, it burns the stored fat to generate energy (calories) to support the body movement. The problem is that whenever the body burns fat for energy, it also produces ketones which prevents the excretion of uric acid. This causes the hyperuricemia levels that triggers gout attacks.

Statistically speaking, Malaysia is the most obese country in Southeast Asia. Out of 30.3 million Malaysians, 12 million people (40%) are overweight, with more than 5.1 million (17% to 18%) suffering from human obesity. This obviously makes Malaysia the fattest country in Southeast Asia. This number increases yearly, meaning that more and more people are becoming vulnerable to metabolic problems such as gout.

Most gout patients are men over the age of 30. However, due to unhealthy lifestyles and bad eating habits, gout victims are getting younger and younger, with clinical studies showing that there are now gout patients as young as 20. The proportion of men and women suffering from gout is around 9: 1, though postmenopausal women are more vulnerable. In any case, the risk of gout occurring will increase with higher uric acid concentration, which is something that affects both men and women.

In order to prevent gout, according to doctor’s health tips, we should do our best to have a healthy lifestyle and diet. Avoid food that is high in purine (organ meats, beer, etc.), drink plenty of water daily, and exercise regularly to maintain a healthy weight.

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Increase the starting salary for graduates ASAP!

Increase the starting salary for graduates ASAP!

EDUCATION

Increase the starting salary for graduates ASAP!

Zan Azlee, Writer, Malaysia

20 December 2016

I started working as a journalist 16 years ago. It was my first ever job and it was at The Sun newspaper. I remember my starting salary. It was RM2,100 per month and naturally, it wasn’t enough. It never is enough, right? But it was okay for me as a fresh graduate.

I was able to pay my bills. Of course, there weren’t many since I was only 22 years old and I was still single and living with my parents. I could even save up to buy a car and also a medium-cost apartment slightly outside of the city.

During those days, the issue of low starting salaries for fresh graduates entering the workforce wasn’t something that was a problem. 16 years later today, it is a problem. Fresh graduates now are complaining that their starting salaries are not enough.

Today, the starting salary for most jobs in Malaysia is approximately around RM2,000, depending on the industry.

This means that after 16 years since I started working, the starting salary has not increased. In fact, in some industries, it seems to have even decreased.

So many people I talk to have said that the expectations by graduates these days are unrealistic and that all they want is a high salary to feed their spoilt lifestyle. Some of them even say that if they could survive on their starting salary, then these new graduates should, too.

But I have to disagree. I would not expect a graduate starting to work today to survive on the starting salary that I received almost two decades ago. Economically speaking, wouldn’t it be natural for us to actually equate inflation into it?

My parents, who are both university graduates, used to tell me that their starting salary when they first started working in a bank in the 1970s was around RM800 per month. This was more than 40 years ago.

If according to the logic of these people who say that the graduates are being unreasonable, then everyone today should be able to survive on a starting salary that my parents received more than four decades ago.

When I started working, an affordable car (in my case, it was a Proton Satria) cost me roughly RM40,000. I needed to save up 10 percent of that (RM4,000) for a downpayment and the monthly installment was about RM200.

A medium-cost apartment (I found an affordable one in Sunway) cost RM90,000. Again, I just needed to save up 10 percent for the down payment and legal fees, which came up to about RM12,000. The monthly installment worked out to around RM450.

On a starting salary of RM2,100, these two initial but essential commitments were affordable. I managed to save up and also pay off the installments (which didn’t come to more than 30 percent of my monthly income).

Making a comparison

Now, let’s take a look at the cost of living today. To keep things simple, let’s just take the two costs that I have mentioned, a vehicle and residential property, to make a comparison with what I had to go through years ago.

What is a cheap car these days? A Perodua Axia would be one of the cheapest and currently, it is running at an on-the-road price of roughly RM40,000. It is almost the same price as my Proton Satria way back then.

But an Axia is not equivalent to a Proton Satria. A current equivalent to a Satria would probably be a Proton Persona and that is currently selling for close to RM50,000. So clearly, there has been an increase in cost, if not slightly.

Now we take a look at residential property. Now here is where the significant increase in cost can clearly be seen. A medium-cost apartment like mine (which cost me RM90,000) would now cost about RM400,000 to purchase.

Saving up for the downpayment would take forever for someone who has just started working.

And then there are the monthly installments to worry about. A 90 percent loan over a 30-year tenure would roughly be RM1,300. A little too high for a monthly salary of RM2,100.

Realistically, there are so much more increases in costs in our lives these days than just property and vehicles. How many of us have mentioned to others or ourselves that a packet of nasi lemak used to cost only RM0.50 whereas it now costs RM2?

It is impacting everyone and I think to improve this situation, employers need to think really hard to provide proper wages for their employees. Of course, the authorities also play a very key role because they have the responsibility of forming policies.

If cost is really the problem, then employers probably need to make sure that their revenue stream is stronger. And if the economy is the problem, then those in the government need to ensure that is stronger. Those are their responsibilities.

And those who are already in the workforce should stop sabotaging the younger generation by saying that they are spoilt and have delusional expectations.

We need to make sure that our society develops and progresses into a high-income nation.

When my parents entered the workforce in the 1970s, they could buy a terrace house for RM30,000 and the loan tenure in those days were rarely even over 10 years. A decent car cost RM10,000. So their starting salary of RM800 to RM1,000 was adequate.

It’s simple logic, really.

ZAN AZLEE is a writer, documentary filmmaker, journalist and academic. He continues to work hard to provide for his family and realises that nothing comes easy in life. Luckily, he really enjoys his job. Visit FATBIDIN.COM to view his work.

8 Superhero Movies in 2017 that you don’t want to miss!

8 Superhero Movies in 2017 that you don’t want to miss!

8 Superhero Movies

in 2017 that you don’t want to miss!
As 2016 draws to a close, we can’t help but look forward to the new year. 2017 is already shaping up to be a great year for comic fans, with a number of new films and sequels being released. Join us now as we look at some of the best superhero movies that are coming out in 2017.

#1

The Lego Batman Movie

Release on February 2017

Set in a world made of Lego, this movie parody of the Batman series shows Bruce Wayne as he tries to deal with the villains plaguing Gotham City while raising the orphaned boy he adopted.

#2

Power Rangers

Release On March 2017

Those of us who grew up in the 90s may still remember watching the original series on our TV screens. Now, Lionsgate and Saban Brands are aiming to bring it to the big screen for the first time. The new film will take the series back to its roots by re-envisioning the Mighty Morphing Power Rangers as a group of high school kids who are given unique super powers which they must use to save the world.

#3

Logan

Release on March 2017

Set in a future in which nearly all mutants have been wiped out, an aging Wolverine must once again team up with the dying Charles Xavier in order to save his female clone from being captured by an evil organisation.

#4

Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2

Release on May 2017

The sequel to the 2014 film Guardians of the Galaxy, this movie once again brings us back to Peter Quill (aka Starlord) and his band of misfits as they once again attempt to save the galaxy and uncover a secret that could change everything forever.

#5

Wonder Woman

Release on June 2017

This movie will look at the titular Wonder Woman’s origins, following the amazon warrior Diana’s journey beyond the sacred island of Themyscira into the world of men and the roles she played in the events of the First World War.

#6

Spider-Man: Homecoming

Release on July 2017

The newest reboot of the wall-crawler’s series, Spider-Man: Homecoming once again brings us back to Spider-Man’s origin as Peter Parker, but this time he’s not alone. Tony Stark and the other Avengers are hinted to appear at some point in the movie, though details are still scarce.

#7

Justice League

Release on November 2017

Batman seeks to gather a team of metahumans to fight against a new threat. With heroes such as Wonder Woman, the Flash and Aquaman at his side, they must work together to save the planet from destruction.

#8

Thor: Ragnarok

Release on November 2017

The third movie in the series, Thor: Ragnarok brings us back to the god’s homeworld of Asgard as it is threatened by the apocalypse known as Ragnarok.

Zameen Datta, Intern, Malaysiakini
28 December 2016