Advertisement
Redefining Hong Kong
Hong KongEducation

'English has been forgotten': Hong Kong must improve English standards to stay competitive, says lawmaker Michael Tien

Lawmaker Michael Tien says the language is essential for boosting technology in the city

Reading Time:2 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
Michael Tien (left) with Alice Au, Post senior editor Yonden Lhatoo, Kelly Yang and Ming Chen. Photo: Bruce Yan
Cannix Yau

If technology is the future, Hong Kong needs to push for higher English standards to connect industry players to the rest of the world as the issue has been neglected for years and threatens the city's competitiveness.

New People's Party lawmaker Michael Tien Puk-sun made the point yesterday in the latest event in the Redefining Hong Kong series, organised by the South China Morning Post, as panelists argued the question of whether declining English standards would undermine the city's identity.

"When was the last time 'English standards' were mentioned in the chief executive's policy address?" Tien asked the audience of 100 business leaders, educators and policymakers. "It was 2008, seven years ago. After that English has been forgotten."

Read more: Appalling English standards in Hong Kong: the biggest culprit is ...

The future for Hong Kong is technology and for [that] to thrive we need good English
LAWMAKER MICHAEL TIEN

Citing the IELTS English proficiency test results for final-year undergraduates from 2004 to 2014, Tien argued that English standards in Hong Kong were not really declining, but that the weakest link - writing and speaking - had not improved.

Advertisement

Fellow speakers agreed that the government needed to urgently rethink education policy, including small-class teaching, curriculums and the supply of effective foreign teachers for kindergarten and primary schooling, otherwise Hong Kong risked losing its competitive edge as an international city.

Read more: Hong Kong's English language skills branded 'pathetic' as Chinese has 'negative influence'

Tien said now was the best time for the government to promote the use of English as it pushed for the establishment of the new Innovation and Technology Bureau.

Advertisement
Advertisement
Select Voice
Choose your listening speed
Get through articles 2x faster
1.25x
250 WPM
Slow
Average
Fast
1.25x