Why I Want More Malaysian Students to Brag About Their Projects

Malaysian students build impressive projects but rarely share them publicly. Here is why that needs to change, and what students, lecturers, and institutions can do about it.

Malaysian Students Brag About IoT

Have you ever built something and then kept it to yourself?

I have seen this happen too many times, and it bothers me more than I probably let on. A student spends weeks getting an IoT sensor to talk to a cloud platform, wires everything up, writes the code, stays up late debugging, and then… nothing. They submit the assignment, get their marks, and move on. Nobody outside that classroom ever knows the project existed.

That project deserved better. And honestly, so did the student.

The Culture of Hiding Our Work

I think we have a cultural habit in Malaysia of downplaying what we build. We are taught, from a young age, that showing off is rude. That humility means staying quiet. That if your work is good, people will somehow find out on their own.

But in the world we are living in today, that thinking is holding our students back.

I recently wrote about how some students in Malaysia are still learning IoT using Blynk, ThingSpeak or Favoriot, platforms that have genuinely served the community well over the years. My concern was not with the tools themselves, it was with the possibility that some students might complete their programmes without being exposed to more current, industry-relevant environments. The response to that piece was warm and it opened a much bigger conversation I want to continue here.

Because there is a second problem, and it sits right next to the tools issue. Even when students build something impressive, they rarely tell the world about it.

What “Bragging” Really Means

I want to be careful with my word choice here, because when I say I want Malaysian students to brag, I do not mean arrogance. I mean documentation. I mean visibility. I mean the courage to say, “I built this, and here is how I did it.”

In the global tech community, sharing your work is not showing off. It is how you contribute. It is how you invite feedback, attract collaborators, and build a reputation before you even graduate. Every time a developer writes a blog post about what they learned building a project, every time a student posts a short video demo on LinkedIn or YouTube, every time someone publishes their code on GitHub with a clear README, they are adding value to the community.

They are also building something that a CV alone cannot carry: a visible portfolio of thinking.

I Have Seen What Happens When Students Share

When students do step forward and share their work, remarkable things happen. I have seen students connect with mentors because someone stumbled across their blog. I have seen project ideas get picked up by companies that were looking for exactly that kind of solution. I have seen young engineers get job offers because a hiring manager found their GitHub repository.

And I have seen something perhaps more important: the student’s own confidence change. When you write about your project publicly, you are forced to explain it clearly. You start to understand what you actually built. You start to see what worked and, more importantly, what did not. That reflection is part of the learning that never shows up in an exam.

The Platforms Are Already There

There is no shortage of places where Malaysian students can share their work. LinkedIn is the obvious starting point, and yet I still see so many profiles with nothing more than a degree listing and a generic summary. Imagine if every final year IoT project at a Malaysian university had a proper LinkedIn post, with photos, a short explanation of the problem it solved, and the tech stack used.

GitHub is equally powerful. A well-documented repository says more about an engineer’s capability than almost anything else. Medium or WordPress and personal blogs remain excellent homes for longer technical write-ups. YouTube or TikTok are perfect for demo videos. Even short-form platforms have an audience hungry for genuine student work.

The tools to publish are free. The audiences are there. What is missing is the habit and the encouragement.

What Lecturers and Institutions Can Do

I want to be fair here: this is not entirely on the students. If we want a culture shift, we need to start from inside the institutions.

Imagine if project documentation and public sharing were built into assessment rubrics. Imagine if a student was graded not only on whether the sensor collected data correctly but also on whether they could explain the project clearly to a non-technical audience. Imagine if universities celebrated student projects the way they celebrate sports achievements.

Some institutions are already doing this, and I applaud them. But it needs to be more systematic. Students should graduate not just with technical skills but with the confidence and habit of communicating those skills to the world.

A Personal Challenge

If you are a student reading this, I want you to do one thing this week. Pick a project you are working on or have completed. Write about it somewhere public. It does not have to be perfect. It does not have to be long. Just write honestly about what you were trying to solve, what you used to solve it, and what you learned in the process.

That one post could be the start of something you cannot predict yet.

If you are a lecturer or a programme coordinator, think about how you can make sharing a formal part of the learning journey. Not as a burden, but as a skill that students will use for the rest of their careers.

Malaysia has genuinely talented engineering students. I have met many of them, worked alongside some of them, and been impressed by what they can build when given the space to do it. My concern is that too much of that talent is invisible to the industry because no one taught them that visibility is part of the job.

So tell me, if you could make one change to how Malaysian engineering education celebrates student work, what would it be?


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Author: Mazlan Abbas

IOT Evangelist

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