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Students fall behind due to financial strain, says minister

Students fall behind due to financial strain, says minister

The Star16-05-2025

PUTRAJAYA: Many students from lower income families are sacrificing study time to support their families financially, forcing them to fall behind in their studies, says Datuk Seri Dr Zaliha Mustafa (pic).
The Minister in the Prime Minister's Department (Federal Territories) said this has caused a widening gap between them and students with access to education.
'In today's rapidly changing world, the education gap is widening. We must implement and sustain targeted interventions that address the root causes,' she told reporters after launching the 2025 Putrajaya Tuition Mission programme yesterday.
Dr Zaliha raised concerns over the more than 10,000 students absent from the Sijil Pelajaran Malaysia (SPM) examination in 2023, many due to financial strain at home.
'Some students have been forced to work as food delivery riders after school to cover their families' daily expenses, which impacts their ability to prepare for exams,' she said.
Dr Zaliha emphasised that the issue is not a lack of desire to learn but that students with potential are hindered by life's hardships, Bernama reported.
'These realities cannot be ignored and a clear link between poverty and school dropout rates is evident,' she added.
Earlier, the minister launched the initiative under the Usaha Jaya Insan Programme (Puji), which aims to reduce student dropouts with a RM120,000 fund for learning materials, seminars, motivational sessions and tuition for 100 selected Putrajaya students.
Describing the programme as a long-term investment, Dr Zaliha said it would help break the cycle of social and economic hardship and believes it should be expanded to reach more needy children.

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