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The International Baccalaureate offers students a globally accredited qualification to enter higher education institutions. Photo: Handout

Surge in number of Hong Kong students attaining perfect score in International Baccalaureate exams

  • A total of 130 students achieved top marks, compared with 55 last year, despite fewer local candidates this time around
  • Hong Kong’s average score is also up, hitting 38.93, and higher than the global average of 32.99
Education

A total of 130 Hong Kong students attained a perfect score in the International Baccalaureate (IB) exams this year, more than double the number last year.

In 2020, 55 pupils from the city scored a perfect 45 points, including those who received a grade improvement after appealing to the IB organisation, according to the body headquartered in the Swiss city of Geneva.

This year’s increase in perfect scores was achieved despite the number of local candidates dropping from 2,324 to 2,193. They were among more than 170,600 candidates worldwide who received their IB diploma and vocational programme results on Monday.

Globally, 1,155 candidates scored 45 points, up from last year’s 339 and 2019’s 275.

Among the 130 top scorers in Hong Kong, 17 were from Diocesan Boys’ School in Mong Kok. Photo: Handout

The IB, which offers students an internationally accredited qualification to enter higher education institutions, is a two-year programme for teens aged between 16 and 19. They are required to take six subjects and complete three components, including an extended essay.

Under a “dual route” offered by the IB organisation this year amid the Covid-19 pandemic, written tests only went ahead in places where they could be held safely, while assessment using internal coursework and teachers’ predicted grades applied to pupils living in areas where the tests could not take place.

Number of Hong Kong students with perfect scores in IB drops by nearly a third

Written tests were carried out in Hong Kong in May, despite hundreds of pupils petitioning to move the city to the non-exam route, citing the mental toll brought by the pandemic and months of in-person class suspension.

Another 65,600 pupils globally took the non-exam route, the IB organisation said.

Hong Kong’s average score this year was 38.93, up from last year’s 36.31, before student appeals. It is higher than the global average of 32.99.

Among the 130 top scorers in Hong Kong, 17 were from Diocesan Boys’ School in Mong Kok and six were from Po Leung Kuk Choi Kai Yau School.

Hong Kong IB students want to skip exams over ‘unfair’ policy

An IB organisation spokeswoman said the focus this year was “less on maintaining standards and more about ensuring our students have equal access to higher education”, although she did not address the significant increase in this year’s number of top scorers.

“[We hope] to ensure our students are treated fairly … We ensured that fairness and comparability were built-in throughout our processes, and we undertook significant reviews of results before the release of results,” she said.

She added that for students who might be disappointed in their results, they could file an appeal via their schools.

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