National-type Chinese secondary school


A national-type Chinese secondary school is an institution in Malaysia that provides secondary education. Such school is government-assisted and uses Malay as the primary medium of instructions. Such schools originated from privately established Chinese-medium secondary schools.
Between 1956 and 1962, many of these schools accepted a government-led restructuring proposal and were incorporated into the national education system. As a result, they became distinct from Chinese independent secondary schools, which chose to remain outside the national system.
Privately run Chinese secondary schools that declined restructuring remained unsubsidised, retained full autonomy, and were not administered by the Ministry of Education. As a result of the restructuring process, a number of independent schools bearing identical or similar names were later established to accommodate students who did not enter the restructured schools. These institutions subsequently became collectively known as Chinese independent secondary schools.
National-type Chinese secondary schools receive annual operational grants from the Ministry of Education, excluding development funding. School administration, including curriculum implementation, staffing, and student intake, is overseen by the Ministry of Education of Malaysia. School boards are constituted in accordance with ministerial requirements, although ownership of school land generally remains with the original trustees or community organisations.
A defining feature of SMJK is the inclusion of Chinese language as a core subject within the formal curriculum. Chinese is also a compulsory and examinable subject in the Sijil Pelajaran Malaysia, reflecting assurances provided by the government during the restructuring process. To preserve their historical Chinese-school character, student intake at SMJK primarily consists of graduates from national-type Chinese primary schools. Many schools continue pre-restructuring traditions of Chinese schools such as school mottos, anthems, and emblems.

History

Background to restructuring

After 1920s, colonial authorities in British Malaya required schools of all streams to register in order to qualify for partial subsidies. Chinese-medium schools gradually developed within this regulatory framework. Prior to World War II, government funding was primarily directed toward English-medium schools that trained civil servants, while schools of other language streams were established and financed by ethnic communities.
The Japanese occupation of Malaya in 1942 led to the closure of most Chinese schools. After the war, schools gradually resumed operations and expanded from primary-level institutions to include secondary education. During the 1930s and 1940s, most Chinese secondary schools offered only lower secondary education. By the time of Malayan independence in 1957, more than 60 Chinese secondary schools were in operation nationwide.
Following political developments in China after 1949 and amid Cold War concerns, the colonial government declared a state of emergency in 1948 and restricted the recruitment of teachers from China. Educational standardisation became a policy priority. The Barnes Report of 1950 promoted English-medium education and recommended altering the character of vernacular schools. In 1952, the government introduced a salary-based funding scheme that provided financial assistance while increasing administrative oversight.
The 1954 Education White Paper proposed converting Chinese schools into national schools and further implementing the Education Ordinance of 1952. These proposals were opposed by Chinese education leaders, notably the United Chinese School Teachers’ Association led by Lim Lian Geok. On 7 December 1956, the government issued directives requiring Chinese secondary schools to adopt English as the medium of instruction.
Schools that accepted restructuring were referred to in English as “Conforming Schools”, a term later translated as “national-type Secondary schools” to distinguish them from independent schools and fully government-run national secondary schools. This designation was also officially rendered as “National-Type School”, as opposed to “National School”, which referred to standard government schools.

Financial incentives and implementation

In the post-war period, economic hardship placed significant strain on privately funded Chinese secondary schools. The government promoted restructuring by offering financial assistance and assuming responsibility for staff salaries and administrative costs. In 1956, Penang Chung Ling High School became the first Chinese secondary school to accept government aid, followed by Chan Wa High School in Negeri Sembilan in 1957 and Segamat Chinese High School in Johor in 1958. The restructuring process attracted criticism from segments of the Chinese community, while the government relied on financial incentives and political advocacy to accelerate implementation.
The Rahman Talib Report of 1960 recommended converting all vernacular schools into national schools. The Education Act 1961 institutionalised this policy. The government promoted the perceived advantages of restructuring through media and political channels, including reduced school fees, teacher welfare provisions, and assurances that Chinese language instruction would be retained for part of the curriculum.
From 1962 onwards, Chinese secondary education in Malaysia became divided into two main streams:
  1. Chinese independent secondary schools, which rejected restructuring and retained Chinese as the medium of instruction.
  2. National-type Chinese secondary schools , which adopted English as the medium of instruction while retaining Chinese-language subjects and community-based school boards.
By 1962, 57 Chinese secondary schools had completed restructuring. Following the formation of Malaysia in 1963 and the inclusion of Sabah and Sarawak, the total number of SMJK increased to 78.

Academic structure after restructuring

Restructured schools adopted a five-year secondary system. Lower secondary comprised Forms One to Three, followed by upper secondary Forms Four and Five. Graduates of Chinese primary schools were required to complete a preparatory year to transition from Chinese-medium instruction to English, and later Malay. Students sat for the Lower Certificate of Education and the Malaysian Certificate of Education. Chinese-language examinations continued to be conducted in Chinese.
Following language policy changes in the 1980s, Malay became the principal medium of instruction, except for Chinese and English subjects. Examination systems were later revised, with lower secondary students sitting for the Penilaian Menengah Rendah and upper secondary students for the Sijil Pelajaran Malaysia.

Developments since the 1990s

The Education Act 1961 classified schools into four categories, including National-Type secondary schools. However, the Education Act 1996 removed the “National-Type secondary school” category, reclassifying all government secondary schools as national secondary schools. Despite this, SMJK continued to use their designation administratively.
From the 1990s onwards, SMJK faced challenges related to staffing and administration. In some cases, principals without Chinese-language proficiency were appointed, prompting concern among school communities. In 1994, principals of SMJK established the Malaysian Council of Principals of SMJK, which was later recognized by the Ministry of Education. The council aimed to safeguard the interests of SMJK and ensure Chinese-language competence among administrators and teachers.

Development

From the 1960s, SMJK initially used English as the medium of instruction, with Chinese and Malay taught as compulsory subjects. Beginning in 1972, the Ministry of Education gradually replaced English with Malay as the medium of instruction, a process completed by 1978. Throughout these changes, Chinese remained a compulsory and examinable subject.
In 2003, the ministry introduced a policy to teach science and mathematics in English. This policy was later replaced in 2012 by the Dual Language Programme. Initially, many SMJK were excluded from the programme. Following advocacy by SMJK organisations, the ministry expanded the program to include more national-type Chinese secondary schools.
Under the Education Act 1996, all government secondary schools are officially classified as national secondary schools. Following negotiations by the Council of Principals, the Ministry of Education agreed that SMJK could continue to use the designation “Sekolah Menengah Jenis Kebangsaan ” for administrative purposes.

Characteristics

According to statistical data from 2010, approximately 20% of graduates from national-type Chinese primary schools continued their secondary education at national-type Chinese secondary schools . At the same time, a combined total of 65 Chinese independent secondary schools and 81 national-type Chinese secondary schools enrolled about 30% of Chinese primary school graduates nationwide, while the remaining students primarily entered national secondary schools or international schools. These figures have been cited in discussions of the role of SMJK within Malaysia’s Chinese-language education landscape.
While implementing the national curriculum prescribed by the Ministry of Education, national-type Chinese secondary schools retain Chinese-language-related subjects within their formal curriculum. Due to their student intake patterns, SMJK attract students from different ethnic backgrounds and have developed an educational environment in which Mandarin and Malay are commonly used in parallel on campus.

Language policy

Under "Malaysia Education Blueprint 2013-2025", Malay is the official medium of instruction in national-type Chinese secondary schools, consistent with the classification of all government secondary schools as national secondary schools. Mandarin and English are taught as subjects within the formal curriculum, with Chinese commonly designated as a core subject in SMJK.
Chinese language instruction in SMJK typically involves more instructional periods than in national secondary schools, reflecting historical assurances made during the restructuring of Chinese secondary schools in the late 1950s and early 1960s. Chinese is an examinable subject in the Sijil Pelajaran Malaysia, and most SMJK make it as compulsory and require every students to register for the subject.