Chief Executive-elect Carrie Lam plans HK$30,000 subsidy for eligible secondary school graduates
Suggestion part of HK$5 billion proposal aimed at city’s education sector
Secondary school graduates facing costly fees for a self-financing degree programme due to limited places at publicly funded universities have been given some good news with the incoming government revealing plans to provide a HK$30,000 subsidy to eligible students.
This was one of the measures floated by Chief Executive-elect Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor at her meeting with education representatives on Monday to discuss how to use the HK$5 billion boost to the sector she had pledged during her campaign.
Another measure brought up at the meeting was increasing the number of teachers per class in primary and secondary schools.
These plans were confirmed during a radio programme on Tuesday morning by education lawmaker Ip Kin-yuen, who was among the 30-plus education representatives who met Lam.
The minimum requirement for admission to a local university is getting a level three for Chinese language and English language and a level two for mathematics and liberal studies in the Diploma of Secondary Education (DSE) examination.