Job Recruitment Website - Immigration policy - I'm going to Malaysia to attend high school.

I'm going to Malaysia to attend high school.

it depends on what kind of middle school you say you attend. There are three kinds of middle schools in Malaysia

1) Middle schools run by the Malaysian government, which generally teach in Malay (geography, history. . . . Math science can choose Malay or English (but I heard that it will be changed back to all Malay. I'm not sure, because I didn't go to junior high school. But I also read Chinese and English. (taking the spm diploma-something like the entrance exam for middle schools)

2) Private middle schools "This tuition fee is very high, and it may cost thousands of Malaysian ringgit a semester. There are two kinds,

one is for children in China, (basically, the classes are the same as those in junior high schools, but we spend more hours in English classes every day, and students also speak English. As in junior high school, the other is to take the SPM test. It seems to be in English for foreign children.

3) I read Independent Middle School, which is called Independent Middle School. There are 6 independent secondary schools in Malaysia. A few decades ago, China emigrated overseas to Malaysia, hoping to preserve Chinese culture.

it's run by the whole people, and there is no government subsidy, so you need to pay your own tuition, which is about 1-4 ringgit a month, depending on the region. If there are more independent secondary schools funded by local people, the tuition will be cheaper.

- teaching junior middle school in Chinese

- senior high school

Literature and Business: all Chinese, but bookkeeping is in English

Science: all Chinese, but physics is in English

Electronics: I'm not sure about this. If no one at home reads this

afternoon, you can take the government spm exam (. Except for government-run universities, almost all world-renowned universities admit that they can apply for diplomas recognized by universities, the United States, Britain, Japan, Australia, Germany and even China (sadly. . . Malaysia does not recognize it), but private universities or colleges in Malaysia recognize it.

TOEFL and IELTS are not required.