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Hong Kong

Programme lets students meet poverty face-to-face

When a primary school pupil in a poor family has trouble with his homework, Grace Huang Kwai-fong is ready with her mobile phone.

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Grace Huang (centre), one of the mentors who visits elderly people and helps children with their homework. Photo: SCMP Pictures
Teddy Ng

When a primary school pupil in a poor family has trouble with his homework, Grace Huang Kwai-fong is ready with her mobile phone.

Using messaging apps such as WhatsApp, she and a team of mentors answer questions from youngsters to give them a leg up in their education.

They are participants in a programme that encourages university students to do volunteer work and see first hand the challenges faced by the poor.

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The programme's organiser, U-Fire Networks, first invited about 30 business executives to provide coaching for 120 university students who then became mentors for about 200 primary and secondary students.

Huang, a business student, says the volunteer work has helped her connect with the people she meets, allowing her to better understand their needs.

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She also takes the pupils under her care to visit elderly people living alone on welfare. Through these regular visits the students have compiled a series of articles that tell the stories of the old people.

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