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Hong Kong secondary schools hit by falling enrolments can raise quality through smaller class size, council chief says

  • Having classes of 25 to 27 students will be ‘effective for group discussions and presentations’
  • Council suggests attracting mainland Chinese students as trend of falling enrolments will persist

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Secondary schools have been hit by falling enrolment numbers. Photo: Dickson Lee

Hong Kong’s shrinking student population provides an opportunity to reduce secondary class size to around 25 for better teaching, the new chief of an influential school group has said.

Lee Yi-ying, head of the Subsidised Secondary School Council, also urged the city’s authorities to attract mainland Chinese students and do more to boost the birth rate.

The falling population had already affected enrolments in recent years, she said, adding it was inevitable the government would have to shut some schools in future.

“The decline will greatly impact schools,” Lee warned. “It is difficult to keep the current number of classes and schools.”

Lee Yi-ying, newly elected chairwoman of the Subsidised Secondary School Council and principal of Kowloon True Light School in Kowloon Tong. Photo: Yik Yeung-man
Lee Yi-ying, newly elected chairwoman of the Subsidised Secondary School Council and principal of Kowloon True Light School in Kowloon Tong. Photo: Yik Yeung-man

The number of babies born in Hong Kong has fallen sharply, from a high of 95,500 in 2011 to about 37,000 last year.

The trend hit primary schools hard when the number of Primary One pupils fell to around 50,000 in 2019 and 43,000 the following year. Secondary schools began feeling the impact last year.

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