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The Education Bureau (EDB) is a policy bureau responsible for formulating and implementing education policies in Hong Kong. The bureau is headed by the Secretary for Education and oversees agencies including University Grants Committee and Student Finance Office .
The Direct Subsidy Scheme (DSS) is instituted by the Education Bureau of Hong Kong to enhance the quality of private schools at the primary and secondary levels. [1] The Hong Kong government has been encouraging non-government secondary schools which have attained a sufficiently high educational standard to join the DSS by providing subsidies to enhance the quality of private school education ...
The Education Bureau provides education services for immigrant children from mainland China and other countries, as well as non-Cantonese-speaking Hong Kong children. Free "Induction Programmes" of up to 60 hours have been offered to NAC by non-government organisations.
Primary One Admission System (Chinese: 小一入學統籌辦法; Jyutping: siu2 jat1 jap6 hok6 tung2 cau4 baan6 faat3) is the admissions system for public and government-funded primary schools in Hong Kong. The system is administered by the Education Bureau. The system divides available school places into Discretionary Places and places for ...
Hong Kong government suggested small group education to provide better education standards a few years ago. The growth of CBS in Northern District would lead to the increase of classes and the class size of primary one, from 27 to around 39-42 in 2013. [ 8 ]
Students at the Chinese University boycotting classes in protest of the moral and national education curriculum. Moral and national education (MNE), initially known as Moral and civic education (MCE), was a school curriculum proposed by the Education Bureau of Hong Kong in 2012.
As a result, as of 2015, 30,000 children living in Shenzhen attended schools in Hong Kong. In 2016 parents sued the Education Bureau to get the right for Hong Kong and Macau-resident children to attend public schools in Shenzhen. [10] Middle class Hong Kong-born children are often from families who are unable to pay for private schools in the ...
Islamic Kasim Tuet Memorial College (IKTMC) is a secondary school in Chai Wan, Hong Kong. It is named after Kasim Tuet, a Hui Muslim who played a major role in the development of Chinese Muslim education in the city. Formerly known as the Islamic College, it is the only Islamic secondary school aided by the Hong Kong Education Bureau (EDB). [2]