Hong Kong education portal criticized for low usage by teachers, students

A Hong Kong government-funded online education portal has failed to meet user targets, with thousands of resources never downloaded or used, according to an Audit Commission report. The executive director of Hong Kong Education City told the commission that low usage stems from the city's shrinking student population. The report, released on Wednesday, highlights this as a main criticism.

The Audit Commission report reveals that Hong Kong Education City's online portal failed to meet its user number targets. It found that 272 teaching resources were never downloaded, about 20 were not viewed at all, and more than 2,700 online assessment items for teachers were never used.

EdCity's executive director told the Audit Commission that the platform's low usage is due to Hong Kong's shrinking student population. The portal launched four electronic resource products in 2015, including the eRead Scheme, offering primary and secondary students subscription access to over 5,000 Chinese and English e-books.

In 2023-24, EdCity recorded total income of HK$64.6 million (US$8.2 million) and expenditure of HK$64.5 million. Low usage of electronic resources formed one of the report's main criticisms.

Keywords reference Secretary for Education Christine Choi Yuk-lin and executive director Ken Ngai Yuen-keung, though the report centers on resource utilization.

Relaterede artikler

CBSE official addressing media about secure on-screen marking portal amid debunked social media claims.
Billede genereret af AI

CBSE clarifies on-screen marking portal not compromised

Rapporteret af AI Billede genereret af AI

The Central Board of Secondary Education has stated that its on-screen marking portal was not compromised. The board addressed recent social media claims and provided updates on post-result services for Class 12 students.

The head of Hong Kong's Education University has urged school governing bodies to find a 'way out' amid dwindling student numbers. His comments follow an announcement two weeks ago by education authorities that 15 primary schools—a recent record high—cannot operate subsidised Primary One classes due to low enrolment. Lee stressed the need for collective wisdom to explore various solutions.

Rapporteret af AI

Hong Kong education authorities are likely to miss their target of unveiling a concept plan for a proposed university town by the end of June. The project must first align with the city’s inaugural Five-Year Plan due in the third quarter.

Ahn Chang-ho, chair of South Korea's National Human Rights Commission, warned on Monday that the country's extreme early private education culture endangers children's physical and mental well-being. In a statement ahead of Children's Day, he called it a serious violation of children's rights, depriving them of play and rest. Citing UNICEF data, he noted Korean children rank high in academics but low in health metrics.

Rapporteret af AI

Times Higher Education released its Asia University Rankings on Thursday, with all eight Hong Kong public universities entering the top 100 for the first time, led by the University of Hong Kong in sixth place and the Chinese University of Hong Kong in 10th. The Education University of Hong Kong and Lingnan University made their debuts at 37th and 84th, respectively. Phil Baty, chief global affairs officer at THE, praised Hong Kong as the only metropolis with five universities in the global top 100 since 2024.

Dette websted bruger cookies

Vi bruger cookies til analyse for at forbedre vores side. Læs vores privatlivspolitik for mere information.
Afvis