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Hong Kong universities still fixated on exam grades

A new assessment system aims to make students all-rounders, so why are we still fixated on grades

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Students at Tai Po Old Market Public School will sit the new diploma. Photo: Edmund So
Linda Yeung

When Cheng Kai-ming was helping the Education Commission draft reforms to Hong Kong's education system in 2000, he believed changing how public exams were structured would ease the obsession with grades, which was becoming a hurdle to fostering future talent.

Hong Kong students showed "limited ability, despite their high scores", the then-Education Commission chairman Antony Leung Kam-chung noted at the time. The restructuring was intended to give young people the versatility and creativity to succeed in the rapidly changing work environments of the future.

Students are rewarded or punished according to their exam grades
Robin Cheung, retired principal

That has yet to be achieved.

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"I used to think, wrongly, that if we modified the public exams, it would be a positive force. Now I don't think that will work.

"Exams can be modified so they are not a major obstacle to learning, but they can't be a driving force," says Cheng, a University of Hong Kong education professor.

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He doesn't believe the education sector can truly change while exam results remain so prized by universities and employers.

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