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Education in Hong Kong
Hong KongEducation

As Hong Kong teachers join migration wave, children with special education needs struggle to relate to new hires

  • Report highlights problems after 3,389 teachers left public schools, 200 quit special needs schools
  • Concern group suggests that all trainee teachers should do special education diploma course

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The immigration wave has impacted the lives of special education needs pupils who have lost experienced teachers they trusted. Photo: Jonathan Wong
William Yiu

Hong Kong children with special education needs (SEN) have been affected by the departure of teachers who quit their jobs in recent years mainly to emigrate.

Concerned parents and an expert say these children need time to adjust to new teachers, and not all the replacements are sufficiently trained to deal with them.

With only about 40 per cent of teachers in regular schools trained in SEN, one suggestion is for all trainee teachers in universities to undergo a compulsory special education diploma course and gain the skills needed in the classroom.

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The problems were highlighted in a research paper compiled by the Legislative Council Secretariat and released last month, giving an overview of special needs students and teachers’ qualifications.

Students with autism often struggle to warm up to new teachers. Photo: Shutterstock
Students with autism often struggle to warm up to new teachers. Photo: Shutterstock

There were almost 59,000 SEN students in primary and secondary schools in 2021-22, double the number from a decade earlier.

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