September 23, 2008
Tanaman Komersil dengan Teknik Tradisional
Lelaki Bonggi Terakhir
Bagaimana kehidupan asal ini?
Salah satunya ialah dengan berpakaian yang sekadar cukup untuk menutup kawasan yang perlu. Tapi saya percaya misteri kehidupan lelaki ini lebih banyak daripada sekadar sehelai kain.
Jambatan Gantung
Asrama Desa
Hantaran Kayu Api?
September 22, 2008
Have Fun
Perubahan Amalan Gotong Royong: Kajian Kes Di Kalangan Masyarakat Petani Pindah
diamalkan di kalangan masyarakat luar bandar. Dalam masyarakat petani pindah, gotong royong digunakan untuk meringankan beban kerja antara satu sama lain. Namun begitu makna gotong royong sebenarnya tidak terhad kepada peranan ekonomi sahaja. Gotong royong juga menguatkan institusi hidup bermasyarakat. Namun demikian, pendedahan masyarakat luar bandar kepada teknologi dan pasaran telah menyebabkan amalan bergotong royong semakin pudar. Kini tidak ada lagi tenaga yang diberikan secara percuma. Tenga manusia secara perlahan-lahan bertukar menjadi satu komoditi. Selain itu, penggunaan input lain seperti racun rumpai dan chain saw dalam amalan pertanian pindah. racun rumpai perlu dibeli, dan chain saw pula perlu di sewa atau dibekalkan dengan bahan api.
Apakah kesan pasaran dan teknologi keatas institusi gotong royong? Apa pula kesan terhakisnya amalan ini terhadap masyarakat?
Peranan Kanak-kanak dalam masyarakat petani
Apakah bentuk-bentuk tanggungjawab yang diserahkan kepada mereka? Bagaimana mereka menjalankan tanggungjawab tersebut? Adakah pengaruh gender mempunyai kesan ke atas penyerahan/penerimaan tanggungjawab ini?
Pemilikan dan Strategi Guna Tanah Pekebun Kecil
September 15, 2008
Research Issues for Sabah
I paste the article (with all the credit goes to this Doctor). I find this article very stimulating to conduct more research about Sabah Socioeconomic Conditions.
Don't neglect Sabah, please
Another Doctor Sep 8, 08 5:11pm
I refer to the Malaysiakini article Kota Marudu needs more than wireless InternetI read Dr Hams letter and cannot help but agree with many of his observations. I worked in Sabah for over seven years as a house officer and medical officer. After my housemanship, I was sent to Ranau to serve in the district hospital. What Dr Hams described in Kota Marudu is not something isolated to that district alone in Sabah. It is an often repeated story in the whole of Sabah.My first introduction to the poverty in Sabah came during my first months there, when a sweet 70- year-old lady from Kota Marudu was sent to the Queen Elizabeth Hospital with deep jaundice. She lived alone in a small village off Kota Marudu and noticed the jaundice about a month before. She had no money for the taxi fare and so waited a month to sell off her chickens to have enough money to pay RM50 for the transport to Kota Marudu Hospital. She had to walk two miles to get to the road to get to the taxi. Having been born, bred and educated in Peninsular Malaysia, I was shocked. When she arrived, she was septic and had a gallstone lodged in her common bile duct. The stone was duly removed but she was found to have a heart problem that required a pacemaker. We arranged for her to get a permanent pacemaker but she refused.When I pressed her for her reason, she told me that she couldn't afford to buy batteries for the pacemaker, having sold off her chickens. Once I explained to her that the batteries would last for years and we would provide them, she agreed to the pacemaker.Ranau town itself has roads and is on the main highway between Sandakan and Kota Kinabalu. It developed primarily as a result of the Mamut Copper Mines in the district. However, highway in this context means a two lane road with frequent landslides and potholes, with a two-hour drive to Kota Kinabalu. Outside Ranau, transportation becomes a problem as tarred roads disappear to become gravel or crudely marked logging trails. Anyone who has worked in Sabah would have the same stories to tell, of extreme poverty and poor transportation. During my 2 years in Ranau, I've heard and seen it all, patients with cerebral malaria, a condition unheard of in Peninsular Malaysia, coming in after 48 hours to the hospital from places like Kaingaran and Karagasan, with relatives having to push the 'pirate taxi' through the mud, spending RM50 on fare during the monsoon season, the equivalent of 2 months income, this too when petrol was only around RM1.20 a litre in Ranau. Patients having to delay treatment for life threatening conditions because a bridge washed away along the trail (I won't even call it a road) to Tambunan. Emergency surgery such as caesarian sections, appendectomies and even ectopic pregnancies had to be performed in our little district hospitals by Medical Officers with little more than 4 months housemanship experience.Medical emergencies such as myocardial infarctions, which in Peninsular Malaysia would be managed in a Coronary Care Unit setting, had to be managed in the district hospital level. I'm grateful however, that my staff in that hospital were the best I've ever had the pleasure of working with and were dedicated enough to want to make a difference in their patients' lives.But poor transportation does not only affect the access to healthcare. Having no roads to be able to transport their agricultural produce for sale means that these people are stuck in a never ending cycle of poverty. At most, some of them get RM20 to RM50 by selling their produce to middlemen to be sold at the monthly tamu or market at prices that are perhaps only 10 percent of the value of the goods. These innocent people are also preyed upon by traveling cloth merchants, mostly foreigners, who offer them 'easy payment schemes' to buy cloth for clothes, and when they cannot pay for the cloth and the interest accumulates, they end up having to marry their daughters to these men, who often have wives back home in Pakistan. One of the cases I could never forget was of the family who came to Ranau Hospital just as I was leaving, a family who had failed crops, were hungry and unable to get food. The father collected some toad eggs and fed them to the whole family in a desperate attempt to stave off hunger. When they arrived at our little emergency room, one of the children were dead and two passed away within 10 minutes of arrival in our casualty unit due to poisoning. Education is a problem in parts of Sabah outside major towns like Kota Kinabalu at the moment. Many children would be lucky to be able to get to a school or even afford to get to one. Most of my patients outside Ranau were lucky to even have a primary school education and a vast number of women marry in their teens. I've had 14 year olds delivering babies in Ranau, most of them have never ever stepped foot in a school. The education level is so poor that many women feed their children condensed milk thinking that it's better than breast milk.But at the heart of it all, these mothers want the best for their children but are not empowered with the knowledge to help them. Major towns in Sabah have electricity courtesy of the Sabah Electricity Board, but smaller villages have either diesel generators or rely on candles or lamps when night falls. How can children study in these conditions? Like many doctors in the districts, I had to learn Dusun to communicate better with these patients who could speak little else. Forty five years after the formation of Malaysia, the promise of a better life for these poor Dusun, Murut and Rungus patients in the districts of Sabah is a pipe dream at best. How can our politicians claim to have brought development to the state and have neglected these poor people, many of whom still wear the cheap t-shirts and caps given free by political parties from many elections ago. How can I claim to be proud of Putrajaya with it's beautiful bridges and lamp posts and the Petronas twin Towers when our fellow Malaysians in Sabah are so neglected? The cycle of poverty and illiteracy one sees in the districts in Sabah brings despair to the heart. Eradication of poverty must tackle the real issues of education and transport and not just handouts to poor people. By all means, declare Sept 16th a public holiday, but remember it in it's real context, where we made a promise to our brethren in Sabah and Sarawak to treat them as equals in Malaysia, and give them the development they've been long denied.
So, how to develop a research title?
1. Title not necessarily “big”, “grand” and “colourful”. Remember you want to a research- not to save the world!
2. No abstract words please. I you wish to add your “ideals” do it in your discussion…not in your title.
3. Choose title that technically easy to administer (to collect a data). Not too technical (unless its part of you are requirement…think about equipment (its price, fragility, sensitivity etc). think about transportations and communication. Any research emphasizes on analytical ability on difficult and complex variables NOT ability to fall in the trap of complicated difficulty.
4. Use your literature and so call the experienced and inexperience friends and contact around you to develop your title. No harm in asking people’s / friend’s opinion.
5. Ask around or anyone you know related to your chosen topic on areas that need for further research. This will be very helpful in rationalisation of your research in your research proposal.
6.Once you choose it, defend them. If you can’t defend them, take time to develop your title again until you can defend them. Your title should be an exclusive rights to you and supervisor only (unless your sponsor said otherwise). Use seminar, conference or get critical audience to assess your proposal. Pre-assessment is essential to determine the quality of your research proposal. Be ready for constructive and not so constructive criticism at this stage. That is part and parcel of developing your research.
Any other tips? anyone?
Who should determine your research title?
Choosing a title is the most critical part in doing a research as it will be your bread and butter for the next few years. Researcher in general choosing certain topics because combination of interest and career enhancement. Choosing a topics is quite easy as it only indicate the wider issue of your intended research. Choosing a title is lot more critical as it indicate what you’re going to contribute to the sea of knowledge.
Some researcher might be lucky or unlucky enough because other people ‘help’ them to determine the research topics or even their research title. The sponsors normally do this as a condition for their generous grant.
A supervisor might do this as condition for their supervision. If your sponsor’s and supervisor’s direction meets your interest, then you’re the luckiest person in the world because you’re given money to do something you like. If not than, it’s time for negotiation if there are any room for it.
Your research and findings will become the representation of your self in ocean of knowledge. It will become your symbols and foot print in literature in your chosen field. Therefore, the best person to determine your research title is YOU and no one else.
My First Post
Berapa kali anda mendengar orang berkata, "Isu ini menarik untuk dikaji?" atau "Ada kajiankah pernah dibuat tentang perkara ini?".
Tujuan Blog ini dibuat ialah untuk memberikan ruang kepada pengunjung-pengunjung mengemukakan cadangan atau isu-isu yang boleh menjawab kedua-dua pertanyaan ini. Saya sendiri akan mengemukakan beberapa isu yang pada pandangan saya menarik untuk dikaji dan terpulanglah kepada pengunjung untuk memberi respon sama ada menerima atau menghumbannya ke laut!
Apapun kesudahannya, saya berharap blog ini akan memberikan manfaat kepada mereka yang teringin untuk memenuhi rasa ingin tahu khususnya mereka yang sedang berkira-kira untuk menyerahkan proposal penyelidikan di semua peringkat pengajian.
'Post'kan tajuk kajian anda dan rasionalnya dan tunggulah respon dari pengunjung lain.
All the best!