Conversations
with Louis Rozario Doss.
Interviewed
by Atan Mustafa (Ipoh,2016)
Mr
Louis and the
Starians side by side,
conquering the world.
I can safely say that the teacher who had the most impact on me was Mr.
Louis Rozario Doss, who taught me English in Form 5 and who was also in charge
of the English debate team. I say this because as a lawyer, my most important
tool of the trade is the English language and I owe my proficiency today to
him. I’m sure that the foundation he laid when he prepared us for our 1119
English paper carried us through in our careers until today.
Starting in S.T.A.R.
We started off the
interview by talking about how he came to STAR. After graduating from
University of Malaya in 1974, he was posted to STAR. When he received his
appointment letter , he did not observe the envelope properly and only realized
that it was addressed to “Cik Louis”. He opened the letter in front of the
HeadMaster, Tuan Haji Yahya who said , “ You’re very lucky . If they knew you were male they would have posted you to
Sarawak.” So that was how Mr. Louis was posted to STAR.
Mr. Louis is an Ipoh boy through and through. He attended St. Michael’s
Primary School and completed his secondary education at St. Michael’s
Institution. He didn’t know this at the time but he would once again return to
SMI as headmaster.
But did he always want to be a teacher?
Actually it was a choice between becoming a Catholic priest, a lawyer and a
teacher. In fact he received an offer from the National University of Singapore
to read law, but two weeks before he was supposed to leave for Singapore, he
received a government scholarship to read English in University Malaya. He said
it wasn’t easy to get scholarships and as there were eight in the family , his
father’s burden would be lessened if he took the scholarship.
He then continued with a postgraduate
Diploma in Education and joined STAR before the results came out. One early
morning, Mr. Michael Johnson, an expatriate teacher congratulated him although
he didn’t know what for. It turned out that the diploma results were published
in the newspaper and his name was in the top two out of 600 in the cohort. Tuan
Haji Yahya then told him that the ministry knew how to choose people very well
for STAR. “ I was a young teacher so these gestures were a great boost for me
and I knew I didn’t join the wrong profession” he said . “ I was convinced that I was meant to be a
teacher at the right school .”
Leading the English
Department.
Not many of us were aware of the hierarchy of STAR’s teaching staff.
However, it was quite obvious that when we were there, Mr. Louis led the
English team. In fact he was the Head of the English Department. What we
probably didn’t know was his rise to the top was quite meteoric, having been
promoted to the position at the age of 26 after a little more than three years
in STAR. According to him ,when he arrived in STAR, Ms. Chiang was the Head of
the English Department. He started by teaching the Form 4 classes but after
three months he was given the challenging task of teaching the language ( essay
and comprehension) part of the six Form General Paper. “ I was given the direct
plunge into Form 6. That was a great expression of confidence in me and I’m
happy that I contributed to the school’s general paper programme . So the
training was very good. It was by immersion,” he said.
After about three years, Ms . Chiang was
promoted and posted out and a vacancy was created. The Pengetua, Tuan Haji
Yahya could have taken the safer option of appointing an expatriate teacher in
the post as the Head of Department but instead promoted Mr. Louis to the
position. “ It was another great opportunity for me .I mean, we recognize the
merit of having an expatriate officer serving in our school, but I was among
the few Malaysians in our residential schools who were in that post. There were
Australian and British teachers who could be posted, but Tuan Haji Yahya
clearly told the ministry that he had full confidence in his teachers .” The
rest as they say, is history.
Teaching the boys
Something that is rarely appreciated is
how STAR students, many from the kampungs, leave school with a respectable
command of English . This was even so in the late 1970’s and 1980’s, when the
medium of instruction in school was no longer in English. When conversing in
English naturally with some of my batchmates, it’s easy to for me to forget
that they were from the lower sets and once had difficulties even to ask
permission to go to the toilet!
We might think that there is a
confidential formula of Mr. Louis at work.
It turns out that the secret is a simple reading programme that more of
us were not even aware of .Remember that while we were in Form 1, each of us
was given a book to read every now and then? Mr. Louis explained that this was
actually part of an official reading programme for residential schools
implemented by the Education Ministry. It involved reading lists and library
boxes which came to the the classrooms.
“ That was meant to be a booster programme to give greater exposure to English.
Among the 22 residential schools, STAR had the most successful implementation
and the improvement was very substantial,” he said. He continued, “Actually for
weaker students, the most important thing is reading. Make sure that they
complete 25 short books by the end of the year. That was my target for weaker
students.”
It was a happy outcome personally for the
Head of English Department. Our reading programme was rated as best among all
the residential schools. “ So this was a plus point for the school and then
later they gave me a scholarship to go to England to join a Masters in
Education programme in the University of Manchester. That was under the
Ministry of Education and the British Council. It was kind of a reward,” he
beamed . So off he went on a year’s break from teaching in 1978. A well
deserved one . for sure.
So there you go. We achieved results
not by e-learning, PPSMI or other new fangled programmes that our government
comes up with every few years. Just get
the students to read and we should be all right.
The PPM debates
In 1986, I had the privilege of being in
the Pesta Piala Perdana Menteri English debate team, albeit only as a reserve
speaker. Although we didn’t get very far that year, what impressed me was the
PPM English debate team was a very well oiled machine which had already won
three titles by then and at the heart of it was Mr. Louis, who was the teacher
in charge.
L-R Suhaimi Anuar ,Godwin Ramesh Kumar, Mr Louis,Mr Harbans,Ahmad Zuhri Wahab,Paska Mia |
How did he first take charge of the debating team and later lead us to glory? The year he joined STAR in 1974 was the first year of the PPM debates held at MCKK. He wasn’t involved in the training initially as the Pengetua didn’t know about his interest. However, every night the boys came back to school and sought his help. The boys didn’t do so well in 1974 so they went to see the Pengetua to send Mr. Louis in the next PPM tournament. The Pengetua told me, “ Next PPM don’t forget, whether I tell you or not, you’re going.” The second year in Sekolah Shah Alam, STAR reached the quarter-finals and in the following year in Sekolah Tun Fatimah, STAR reached the semi-final. In the ‘80s STAR started winning. ( Author’s Note : STAR was champion in 1982, 1983 and 1984 under MR. Louis ).
So why were we stronger in the 1980’s
compared to the ‘70s? According to Mr. Louis, debating became a tradition in
our school. STAR had a strong force of debators who were getting ready. “ Like
that one year when we lost in our first finals in Angkasapuri. We lost to Tunku
Kurshiah in the finals. In the bus when we were coming back, there was a form 2
boy who cried. Later on he became the champion debater, Ghazali Anuar. That
means we already have got boys in Form 1 and Form 2. The succession plan was
there already. By the ‘80s we were already succeeding because the boys from
Form 1 and Form 2 already had a lot of experience. “
Mr. Louis went on to explain how the
team prepared for the tournament. Before they went to the PPM every class in
the school debated against them. At the same time the Form 1 and Form 2 boys
were indirectly trained on the PPM topics. So about five Saturdays before the
PPM, our boys would have gone through every topic.
The English debate team went on to win
the PPM once again in 1988 after MR. Louis left STAR. Since then, the trophy
has been elusive. However, a lesson to be learnt from the experience in the
1980’s is that champions are not made overnight. The groundwork for any winning
team must be done years before , when the boys first come to STAR in Form 1.
This applies not to just debaters but to any competitive endeavours.
On the boys
What did he think about the boys? He
feels that although the boys are playful and mischievous, they have very good
hearts. Even though there might have been some misunderstanding with the
teachers, they would still come around. The relationship is important and that
they would take the punishment. In life there will always be incidents and
different opinions , but relationships are very important. He said ,” One of
the beautiful moments in STAR was when I was standing during assembly and I saw
the boys’ spirit when they sang the Negaraku and our school song. Before I came
to STAR, I never sensed that spirit. I could feel the semangat of our boys. I
saw the power of a song and the spirit of loyalty to a school, nationalism and
the Malaysian spirit. As a teacher, I learned a lot from the assemblies. Every
Monday, I look forward just to see how they sang.”
Rouse Up
On the topic of uplifting songs, we also owe a debt of gratitude to Mr.
Louis for composing Rouse Up. Regarded as our unofficial English school anthem,
it is usually sung by Starians before sports matches to rouse up their spirits,
so to speak. While Mr. Louis is generally known as the composer of the song,
not much is known to how it came to be. He explained that composing has been a
hobby but for Rouse Up, it was based on a French tune. It was composed around
1981 and the lyrics were based on what he observed in STAR. Tuanku Abdul
Rahman’s call means the call of our country. That is the song which embodies
the spirit of Starians. Stand steadfast Starians for your rights. Your teachers
ever by your side. Behold the golden age of STAR,” he explains.
Rouse Up can still be
heard it its original form, sung by Mr. Louis himself on YouTube.
After STAR
Mr Louis left STAR in 1989 on a promotion, 18 years after first
arriving. Many felt this was overdue, considering the excellent job he did in
STAR after only a very short time.
Actually he revealed that he was offered a
promotion even much earlier, in 1981, to take up the position of Senior
Assistant in at SMK Ahmad Boestaman, Sitiawan . He and his beloved wife Julianna had their first baby at that time
and if he had accepted the promotion this would mean that his wife would be
alone with the baby in the house. So the offer was declined and he stayed on.
It’s hard to imagine what our PPM fortunes would been like without Mr.Louis in
the mid ‘80s.
Opportunity knocked again in 1989. Our
former Pengetua and old boy, Haji Hussein Salleh was in the education
department and was in charge of promotions. Through the efforts of Haji Hussain
and Datuk Abdul Aziz Ismail, a former STAR Pengetua and the Timbalan Ketua
Pengarah Pelajaran in Kuala Lumpur, a promotion and posting was arranged for
Mr.Louis to take up the Senior Assistant position in SMK Iskandar Shah in
Parit. After two years in Iskandar , he was posted to a Chinese school is
Sungai Siput as a Penyelia Petang for two years, then back again in Ipoh, in
SMK Jalan Pasir Putih, also as a Penyelia Petang.
Another promotion came along not long
after. Mr. Louis was appointed as a Pengetua in SMK. St. Anthony, Teluk Intan.
It was a happy coincidence as he attended Form 1 and Form 2 there and he was
the first old boy to come back as the Pengetua. Later, he was transferred to
another school he attended, St. Michael’s Institution , Ipoh and retired from
government service there in 2005.
So how has the STAR experience equipped
him in his new positions? “ Actually my time in STAR has proved to be a great
asset because whenever I went out, let’s say to St.Anthony’s, my only memory of
hostel life was in STAR. I had the good fortune of being the warden of the Blue
House for a time,” he recounted. It’s refreshing to know that besides ensuring
the correctness of our subject-verb agreements, Mr. Louis also picked up
administrative skills while in STAR.
He explained that when he was asked to
outline a plan for the hostel at Ipoh International School , he came back again to STAR to
refresh his STAR memories. “ I also obtained the rules and regulations from
STAR. SO STAR goes a long way. Wherever the teachers are going, we know the
extent of our influence. He continued, “ As a teacher , my real fine tuning was
in STAR for 18 years. As a principal, I had wonderful exposure to many
outstanding principals of our school. So that was a very good place for me.”
After retirement
Mr. Louis’s
professional life did not end after being the principal of St.Michael’s. He
joined Tenby International School and was given the task of starting a
Malaysian school alongside the international school in Ipoh. He pioneerd the establishment of the National Stream at
Tenby Schools Ipoh and when the batches finished their Form 5, he was asked to
start the A-Level programme for theTenby International School in Ipoh which was the
first sixth form project for Tenby in Malaysia. He started the pilot project in
2010 and headed the programme until June 2009. He now continues as a Sixth Form
teacher (CIE A levels) and doubles up as the Community Development
Manager,Tenby Schools Ipoh.
So it appears that our English teacher’s contribution to Malaysian education goes well beyond the teaching of English. To think that he could have taken a different path if he had studied law. I am glad I had the good fortune to have him as a teacher rather than as an opponent in court or worse, as a judge!
So it appears that our English teacher’s contribution to Malaysian education goes well beyond the teaching of English. To think that he could have taken a different path if he had studied law. I am glad I had the good fortune to have him as a teacher rather than as an opponent in court or worse, as a judge!
Final reflections
Would Mr. Louis have done it differently
if he had to do it all over again? He admits he wouldn’t reverse it . He went
on , “ Personally , I feel very enriched by the experience of teaching English
and to this day I think I’ve been as much a recipient as a giver of benefits. I
do not regret being a teacher. I’m very happy that I spent my 18 years in STAR.
I would not have used the time differently. Every year I spent here I learned a
lot, not only from the other colleagues and the principals but also from the
students. I still remember them although they might not know that I know them.”
He singles out some of his earlier students, Syawaluddin and Nor Azman Yahya
who were inspirational to him. “ It was wonderful to teach them because they
were very appreciative and very humble. I felt that I was becoming a better
person by working with them and for them. So I feel like I was in the right
place.”
I am sure that I am not just speaking
for myself when I say that whatever Mr. Louis imparted to us as students and
debaters was so much more than what we could ever give back to him. It is so
heartening to know that even to this day there are students who are benefiting
from his eloquent mastery of the English language which he unselfishly passed
on to his charges. We wish you all best , Mr. Louis and if you ever decide to
retire, please do it for real this time and take a well-deserved rest!
Interview
by Atan Mustaffa.
Ipoh. 2016.
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