教育司署年報 Education Department Annual Report 1966-1967





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ANNUAL

KONG

PULATION-PSYCHOLO LIBRARY

JUL 2 1968

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFOR

RY

SUMMARY

1966-67

A

EDUCATION

DEPARTMENT

HONG KONG

EDUCATION DEPARTMENT

ANNUAL SUMMARY

1966-67

W. D. GREGG, M.A. (CANTAB.), J.P.

DIRECTOR OF EDUCATION

PRINTED AND PUBLISHED BY J. R. LEE, ACTING GOVERNMENT PRINTER AT THE Government Press, JAVA ROAD, HONG KONG

26488

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EXCHANGE RATES

When dollars are quoted in this Report, they are, unless otherwise stated, Hong Kong dollars. The official rate for conversion to the pound sterling is HK$16=£1 (HK$1=1s. 3d.). The official rate for conversion to U.S. dollars is HK$5.714=US$1 (based on £1=US$2.80).

POPULATION ESTIMATES

All population estimates referred to in this publication are taken from the medium census projection of 1961.

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CONTENTS

Section

I. IMPORTANT EVENTS of the YeAR

II. COMMents on Statistical Tables

III. STATISTICAL Tables:

Paragraphs

1 - 42

43 - 98

Tables I -Number of Schools and Pupils (by Educa-

tional Level).

-Teachers and Teacher Training.

- Enrolment by Level of Education and Age.

Enrolment

Courses.

in Technical and Vocational

Tables II

Tables III

Tables IV

Table V

Table VI

- School Fees.

Tables VII

· Results of Examinations.

Expenditure on Education.

Tables VIII- Universities; Enrolment by Faculties, Degrees

Tables IX

Table X

Conferred.

Hong Kong Students' Unit, London.

Adult Education.

Table XI - Enrolment in Special Schools.

Appendix

-Education Scholarships Fund Accounts for

the Year ended 31st August, 1966.

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NOTE

Attention is invited to the Triennial Survey of the Education Department 1964-67 which includes a detailed description of the educational system in the colony.

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TECHNICAL

EDUCATION

GENERAL

EDUCATION

AGE

PRIMARY 6

12

FI

COURSE STRUCTURE OF TECH

SECONDARY GRAMMAR OR

SECONDARY TECHNICAL SCHOOLS

14

15

FLOME F2(MD) FUM FAMO

XHOUL

CERTIFICATE

16

17

FAMO

Full-time

Courses

Completion of Form or equivalent

Completion of Form Vor equivalent

Part-time

Day-release

Courses

Part-time

Evening-only

Courses

Plus day-time employment

PA

→→→TO C2

Completion of

Form 3 and Passing a

competitive examination

Craft

TO CI

HDI HD2

ODI

OD2

CERTIFICATE COURSES

CEL CE2

SPECIAL *FA PTDR

IN

G

OCI OC2

HCH

HC2

ORDINARY

CERT.

C. & G. CERT.

COMPLETION OF FORM 4 OR mome EQUIVALENT

G

OCI

OC2

HCI HC2

COMPLETION OF FORM 3 OR EQUIVALENT

P1

AGE 15

22

P2

GI G2

PRELIMINARY CERTIFICATE

ORDINARY CERT.

C. & G. CERT.

GENERAL CERTIFICATE

TI

T2

T3

T4

T5

INTER-

FINAI

MEDIATE CERT. C. & (

C. & G. CERT,

CI

C2

C3

C4

C5

INTER-

MEDIATE CERT, C. & G. CERT.

FINAL CERT. C. & G. CERT

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GURE II

NICAL EDUCATION IN HONG KONG

TO UNIVERSITIES

GRADUATE MEMBERSHIP

HD3

'STUDENT' APPRENTICESHIP

PART III

HIGHER DIPLOMA

PART I & II OR EQUIVALENT OF

1.Struct.E., 1.0.B., R.I.C.S.,

1.E.E., I.Mech.E., I.Prod.E.,

T.L. OR A.C.C.A.

TO ENDORSEMENT COURSES

·TO HC OR T COURSES

ORDINARY Diploma; CITY & GUILDS CERTIFICATES

(SECRETARIAL, PRE-SEA CADETS.)

CERTIFICATE

TO C OR T COURSES

ACCA

C

HIGHER

CE

www

DIPLOMA

COURSES

F

(Technologist)

G

H

HD

wwww

ICE

IEE

ORDINARY DIPLOMA COURSES (Technician)

I Mech E

тов

KEY

Association of Certified and Corporate Accountants

Craft

Civil Engineering

Form

- General

Higher Certificate

Higher Diploma

Institution of Civil Engineers

Institution of Electrical Engineers Institution of Mechanical Engineers

Institute of Building

Institution of Production Engineers

Institution of Structural Engineers

Lower Form

Middle

I Prod E

I Struct E

LF

M

CERTIFICATE

COURSES

OC

Ordinary Certificate

(Craft/Technician)

OD

Ordinary Diploma

P

PA

RICS

Preliminary

Pre-apprenticeship

Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors

Technician

Textile Institute

TO

CE3 CE4 CE5 CE6

-ENDORSEMENT

COURSES

TECHNOLOGIST

T

PART I I.C.E.

PART II I.C.E.

TI

+ FS

UF

Upper Form

¿CTORY INSPECTORS, WORKSHOP STRUCTORS, ELECTROTHERAPISTS)

←TO ENDORSEMENT COURSES

HIGHER CERT.

C. & G. CERT.

TECHNICIAN/ TECHNOLOGIST

TO ENDORSEMENT COURSES

HIGHER CERT.

C. & G. CERT.

TECHNICIAN/ TECHNOLOGIST

CERT. 3. CERT.

PRELIMINARY* GENERAL

I

TECHNICIAN

|

CRAFT

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SECTION I

IMPORTANT EVENTS OF THE YEAR

Death of Mr. C. K. LAW, Assistant Director of Education

1. Hong Kong suffered disastrous rainstorms from 10th 12th June, 1966 and one of the victims was Mr. C. K. Law, Assistant Director of Education. The late Mr. Law's untimely death in tragic circumstances came as a great shock to his friends and colleagues and at a Memorial Service held on 31st July, 1966, Mr. K. J. ATTWELL, Acting Director of Education, paid tribute to the late Mr. LAW's services to education in Hong Kong and offered the heartfelt condolences of all members of the Education Department to his widow.

Disruption to Schooling

2. The rainstorms caused widespread dislocation of normal services and necessitated the closure of many schools in the colony for a period of about one week. Schools on Hong Kong island were particularly seriously affected since most of them were flooded at the height of the storm and many access roads were rendered impassable. The building of the North Point Government Primary School was probably the most severely damaged. The school suffered such extensive damage as a result of a major landslide to the rear of the premises that accommodation had to be provided for approximately half the school population in other schools in the area.

School Building and Development

3. New school buildings including extensions completed during the year provided places for 45,350 primary and 10,210 secondary pupils (the corresponding figures for 1965-66 were 50,535 and 13,240 respec- tively). The following tables list the individual primary projects provid- ing more than 2,000 places in two daily sessions and secondary projects providing more than 900 places:

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A-Projects completed in 1966-67 providing more than 2,000 primary places

each:

Name of Project

Address

Name of Sponsor

No. of

Nature

Places

Pooi Shing Primary

School

Block 11, Ham

Christian

P, a

2,160

Tin Resettle-

Mission

ment Estate, Kowloon.

in Many

Lands

Melrose Christian

School

Block 12, Ham

Christian

P, a

2,160

Tin Resettle-

Nationals'

ment Estate, Kowloon.

Evan-

gelism

Commis-

sion

Yuen Long Primary

School

Au Tau, Yuen Long, N.T.

Government

P, g

2,700

(Reprovisioning)

Taikoo Chinese

Primary School (Reprovisioning)

Q.B.I.L. No. 3,

Quarry Bay.

Taikoo

P. a

1,620

Dockyard

and Engi-

neering Company of H.K.

Kei Sau Primary

School

Block 17, Sau Mau Ping

Church of

P, a

2,160

Resettlement

Estate,

Christ in China

Kowloon.

St. Bonaventure

Primary School

Block 16, Tsz

Franciscan

P, a

2,160

Wan Shan

Resettlement

Estate, Kowloon.

Fathers

Kei Shek Primary

School

Block 4, Shek

Lei Resettle-

Church of

Christ in

P, a

2,160

ment Estate, N.T.

China

Chih Ching Primary

School

Block 50, Tsz

China Free

P, a

2,160

Wan Shan

Resettlement

Methodist Church

Estate,

Kowloon.

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Name of Project

Name of

No. of

Address

Nature

Sponsor

Places

Grantham Training

Block 61, Tsz

Grantham

P, a

2,160

College Past

Wan Shan

Training

Students' Associa-

Resettlement

College

tion Tsz Wan Shan Primary School

Estate,

Past

Kowloon.

Students' Associa-

tion

Catholic Primary

Block 3, Yuen

Catholic

P, a

2,160

School, Yuen Long

Long Resettle-

Mission

ment Estate,

N.T.

St. Edward's Primary

School

Block 4, Ham

Maryknoll

P, a

2,160

Tin Resettle-

Fathers

ment Estate,

Kowloon.

Kit Sam School

Block 10, Sau

Catholic

P. a

2,160

Mau Ping

Mission

Resettlement Estate,

Kowloon.

Block 5, Yuen

Yuen Long

P, a

2,160

Long Resettle-

Chamber

ment Estate,

of Com-

N.T.

merce

Block 11, Sau

The

P, a

2,160

Mau Ping

Resettlement

Christian & Mis-

Estate,

sionary

Kowloon.

Alliance

Pooi To Primary School K.I.L. 8638, Ma

(Reprovisioning)

Tau Chung. Kowloon.

United

P, n

2,160

Hong

Kong

Christian

Baptist

3

Churches

Associa- tion

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B-Projects completed in 1966-67 providing more than 900 secondary places

each:

Name of Project

Ming Yin College

Address

Woh Chai Street,

Name of Sponsor

No. of

Nature

Places

Church of

S, a

960

Shek Kip Mei, Kowloon.

Christ in

China

Southwestern College

I.L. 5806-5811,

Private

S, P

1,200

Water Street,

Hong Kong.

Hong Kong Christian

College

K.I.L. 8544,

Private

S, P

1,600

Hart Avenue,

Kowloon.

NOTES: P - Primary

S = Secondary

= Government

Aided

n =Private non-profit-making

D= Private

C-Totals of all smaller projects:

Primary

12,950

Secondary

6,450

3,760

4. Sites were recommended for schools which will ultimately provide places for 2,160 primary and 10,280 secondary pupils, the corresponding figures for 1965-66 being 16,150 and 19,590 respectively. Much of the future primary provision will take the form of standard schools in Resettlement Estates and elsewhere, where no grant of site is involved.

5. The first standard 24-classroom Resettlement Estate primary school was officially opened on 3rd February, 1966. Nineteen such schools have since been completed in Resettlement Estates and a decision has been taken to provide similar primary schools in future Housing Authority and Government Low Cost Housing Estates.

Hong Kong Students Office, London

6. During the year, 1940 applications on behalf of 606 students were submitted to universities and colleges by the Hong Kong Students Office, London. 355 of these applications were successful.

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7. The number of local school children who go to Britain to com- plete their schooling continues at a high level as shown by the figures below:

Year

1964-65

1965-66

1966-67

::

New Arrivals

Total

215

455

291

661

263

861

Scholarships, Bursaries and Maintenance Grants

8. The following government awards were made tenable at the two universities:

I. University of Hong Kong

(a) 20 scholarships and maintenance allowances amounting to

$46,750 per annum for first degree courses;

(b) 84 bursaries amounting to $219,250 per annum for first

degree courses;

(c) 5 teaching bursaries amounting to $9,500 per annum for the

Diploma in Education course;

(d) 2 new awards for one-year Special Honours Degree course

in Science amounting to $2,000 per annum;

(e) 1 bursary amounting to $550 per annum for 2-year Part- time Evening Diploma/Certificate in Education course.

II. Chinese University of Hong Kong

(a) 15 scholarships and maintenance allowances amounting to $30,500 per annum for first degree courses tenable at the Foundation Colleges of the University;

(b) 88 bursaries amounting to $145,900 per annum for first degree courses; tenable at the Foundation Colleges of the University;

(c) 12 teaching bursaries amounting to $18,900 per annum for

the Diploma in Education Course.

9. Government maintenance grants worth $173,800 per annum were awarded to 250 pupils at Anglo-Chinese secondary schools, and to 107 pupils at Chinese Middle schools, for matriculation courses.

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10. Thirty-eight new Grantham Scholarships totalling $25,000 were awarded to students at School Certificate, Matriculation, and University levels of study. The majority of these awards covered tuition fees only.

11. Twenty-five awards of loans amounting to $24,500 were made from the Hong Kong Rotary Club Students' Loan Fund to needy students of the two universities and the Hong Kong Technical College.

12. One hundred and forty-six awards of loans amounting to $171,000 were made from the Standard/Sing Tao Fat Choy Drive Students' Loan Fund to needy students of the two universities, the Hong Kong Technical College, post-secondary colleges, Anglo-Chinese secondary and Chinese middle schools.

13. Departmental and other scholarships were also awarded for overseas courses, as follows:

(a) 8 departmental scholarships for courses on the teaching of specialist subjects, and attachments to educational institutions in Britain for periods which normally last one year;

(b) 5 Government Training Scholarships for courses on the teaching of cultural subjects, 4 tenable in Britain and 1 in Australia, for periods varying from 1 year to 3 years;

(c) 5 British Council Scholarships tenable in Britain, for 1-year periods of training in the teaching of English as a second language, and in other specialized fields;

(d) 2 Confederation of British Industry Overseas Scholarships tenable

in Britain for practical industrial training;

(e) 3 Sino-British Fellowship Trust Scholarships tenable in Britain

for 1-year periods of training in specialized fields;

(f) Commonwealth Scholarships:

All but one of the 10 United Kingdom Awards offered for post- graduate studies in Britain were accepted; 2 Canadian Awards for postgraduate studies in Canada were offered but were declined;

1 Australian Award for postgraduate studies in Australia was offered and was declined;

(g) 2 American International Teacher Development Programme Scholarships, for 6-month periods of training in the U.S.A., in specialized fields of education;

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(h) 3 Fulbright Travel Grants;

(1) 6 Canadian Aid Programme Scholarships for academic and

technical training in Canada.

14. There were 1,283 applications for admission to British educa- tional institutions and hospitals, and 1,247 students are known to have left Hong Kong for further studies in Britain. The number of students known to be in Britain at the end of March 1967, including nurses and students at school and tutorial classes, was 3,604. In addition 1,111 students are known to have left Hong Kong for the United States of America, 549 for Canada and 193 for Australia.

Examinations

15. The University of London accorded recognition of the Pass with Credit level in the Hong Kong English School Certificate as being equivalent in standard to the Ordinary Level pass of the General Cer- tificate of Education.

16. The number of entries for the Hong Kong English School Cer- tificate Examination continued to increase. In 1965 the total number of entries stood at 17,000. This rose to 22,500 in 1966 and in 1967 has reached 26,500. With these rapidly increasing numbers it is proving increasingly difficult to obtain suitable accommodation in which to conduct the examination and the recruitment of invigilators and markers has become a major problem.

17. The floods, caused by the heavy rain in June 1966 considerably disrupted the General Certificate of Education Examination. The papers scheduled to be held on 13th June, 1966 had to be postponed until 18th June, 1966. In addition, it proved impossible for many students to attend other papers because of the prevailing conditions. By special arrange- ment, the University of London later provided alternative papers for these candidates and permitted all candidates who felt that their per- formance had been adversely affected in the summer to take a special examination in January 1967. A total number of 1,741 candidates (about 24% of the entries in June 1966) entered for this examination.

Research, Testing and Guidance

18. The Research, Testing and Guidance Section continued to im- plement agreed policy of assessing 'potential and attainment' and of conducting applied educational research. During the year standardized attainment tests in Chinese and Arithmetic were administered to all

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government primary school children who had completed their third, fourth and fifth years of primary education, and some 45,000 pupils were tested in both subjects. Test results provide cumulative informa- tion on the performance of children for the guidance of teachers and inspectors of schools, and are particularly valuable in the screening of slow learners and the selection of children of promise for appropriate educational provision.

19. Researches into primary mathematics teaching, Chinese vocabu- lary at the third year primary level, and follow-up of some 1,000 primary school leavers are yielding results.

Special Education

20. The first supply of braille textbooks produced by the Braille Printing Press was available for use by blind children in the school year beginning September 1966.

21. The John F. Kennedy Children's Centre built from the World Rehabilitation Fund and run by the Hong Kong Red Cross, was officially opened by H.E. the Governor, Sir David TRENCH on 2nd March, 1967. The centre will accommodate 80 spastic children (60 residents and 20 day pupils) when in full operation.

22. Tsz Wan Shan Red Cross School, the first special school in an annexe school building, was officially opened by Lady TRENCH on 10th March, 1967. The school will accommodate 120 physically handicapped children when in full operation.

23. Approval has been given for the 7 Red Cross Hospital Schools to be placed on the Subsidy List as a single subsidized school with effect from 1st January, 1967.

Music

24. The Nineteenth Annual Schools Musical Festival attracted record entries of 6,746. An estimated 35,000 students competed in 335 different classes held in eight centres. Visiting adjudicators for music were Pro- fessor Philip CRANMER, M.A., B.Mus., F.R.C.O., Mr. John CHURCHILL, B.Mus., F.R.C.O., G.R.S.M., A.R.C.M., L.R.A.M., and Mr. Lamar CROWSON, A.R.C.M., Mr. Hedley GOODALL, F.G.S.M., L.R.A.M., adjudicated the English speech classes and Professor YAO Hsin-nung, B.A. and Mr. Donald FRASER, M.B.E., judged the Chinese Speech classes and the Chinese Instrumental classes respectively.

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25. 4,092 candidates sat for the annual practical examination of the Associated Board of the Royal Schools of Music and 1,424 candidates entered for the theory examination. 435 ballet students entered for the Royal Academy of Dancing examinations (visiting examiner Miss Irene AYRES).

26. The Hong Kong Youth Orchestra has continued to flourish since its formation in 1963. The orchestra now has 80 players and gives regular concerts for the public in the City Hall.

Art

27. Two drawing competitions organized in conjunction with other Government departments brought a good response from schoolchildren. Works of high quality were produced by entrants in a Traffic Safety Poster Competition held in July 1966 at the City Hall and in a drawing competition open to secondary school pupils which was sponsored by the Hong Kong Trade Development Council in connexion with the U.S. Stores Festival to be held in September and November 1967.

28. A number of schools and organizations overseas made requests for local schoolchildren's paintings, chiefly for display purposes. The art works sent to the Lion's Club of Geneva were for sale at a fair held to raise funds for modernizing the equipment of a children's hospital in that city.

Careers

29. In conjunction with Radio Hong Kong and a number of other government departments a series of programmes dealing with careers available in government service was broadcast during the summer holiday period 1966.

30. Under the Summer Holidays Apprenticeship Scheme arrange- ments were made for a number of Vth Form students from technical schools to undergo a period of training in factories of member firms of the Chinese Manufacturers' Association so that the students might obtain first hand experience of the work.

31. Visits to local firms and institutions were organized and special- ists in their field gave talks on a wide variety of careers to secondary school students and to members of the Hong Kong Association of Careers Masters. Additional pamphlets were produced in the series of 'Career Guides' which have proved a helpful source of information to school leavers.

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Adult Education

32. In conjunction with the Prisons Department, adult education classes were organized for inmates of the Tai Lam Treatment Centre on the pattern of existing classes at Lai Chi Kok Prison. The programme proved popular and the original three classes were expanded to five in September 1966.

33. In August 1966 some 500 centre supervisors, organizers and class teachers attended a 3-day residential conference at Northcote Training College and this was followed by a training conference for 400 voluntary helpers of the Adult Education and Recreation Centres.

34. A nine-month supervisors' training course commenced in October 1966 for intending staff of the Adult Education and Recreation Centres and as part of the in-service training programme a training session was also organized for teachers of adult classes in February 1967.

35. During the year activities of the Adult Education and Recreation Centres included a joint-centre variety concert held at the City Hall and a series of solo-singing competitions which were broadcast weekly over the Chinese channel of Radio Hong Kong.

36. In addition to the regular publication of the Adult Education Centre Bulletin, a Supervisor's Guide Book was published in October 1966.

British Council

37. Five British Council Scholarships were awarded. These were tenable in Britain for 1 year periods of training in the teaching of English as a second language, and in other specialized fields.

38. A British Council officer has continued to serve on full-time secondment to the Department as Adviser on the teaching of English in primary and secondary schools. An English Teaching Centre has been established, concerned mainly with the provision of refresher courses for teachers and the production of teaching materials.

Visitors from Overseas

39. During the year the Department and schools received a number of distinguished visitors from abroad. The visitors included education- alists, government officials and journalists from Britain and other parts of the Commonwealth and from several other oversea countries.

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40. In September 1966 the Rt. Hon. Frederick LEE, M.P., Secretary of State for the Colonies visited the Technical College in the course of a brief stay in the colony and a few months later, in March 1967, the Rt. Hon. Herbert BOWDEN, C.B.E., M.P., accompanied by Sir Arthur SNELLING, K.C.M.G., K.C.V.O. made a visit to the same institution.

41. Other visitors from Britain included Mr. D. M. SMITH and Mr. J. GAILER of the Ministry of Overseas Development, Mr. T. HATTON, Warden of Hong Kong House and Mr. A. V. HARDY, Deputy Secretary of the University of Cambridge Local Examinations Syndicate.

42. Under the auspices of the British Council, Mr. R. W. Morris, Director of the Centre for Curriculum Renewal and Educational De- velopment Overseas (CREDO) visited Hong Kong in February 1967. During his visit Mr. MORRIS held discussions with representatives of various sections of the Education Department and with members of the Syllabuses and Textbooks Committee.

SECTION I

COMMENTS ON STATISTICAL TABLES

43. The information obtained from the census in 1961 has been brought up to date by using a medium projection estimate of popula- tion, which includes all types of immigration as well as natural popula- tion increase.

44. The estimate of population in the relevant age groups at March 1967 is:

Age-group

Total

Percentage of total population

Pre-school

0 - 5

681,600

16.5%

Primary

6 - 11

638,600

15.4%

12 - 14

283,500

6.8%

Secondary

15 - 16

176,400

4.3%

Matriculation

17 - 18

165,800

4.0%

Total

1,945,900

47.0% (47.3% in 1966)

45. For purposes of comparison, school enrolment figures for the same age groups are:

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Age-group Pre-primary

Primary

Total

Full-time Part-time

5 & under

54,561

29,790

1,167

85,518

6 - 11

12,330

500,087

13,060

525,477

12 - 14

94,582

12,350

106,932

15 & over

3,706

7,215

10,921

Total

66,891

628,165

33,792

728,848

Secondary

Non-School School

Matriculation

Age-group

Total

Certificate

Certificate

Course

Courses

Courses

11 & under

282

3,335

3,617

12 - 14

6,801

77,344

3

84,148

15 - 16

8,752

62,033

638

71,423

17-18

7,479

30,923

5,274

43,676

19 & over

8,957

5,174

2,807

16,938

Total ...

32,271

178,809

8,722

219,802

46. The total school enrolment up to and including Matriculation Level at March 1967 was 948,650 (885,736 at March 1966).

Provision of Primary School Places

47. During the past year 45,350 additional primary places were provided. 36,000 of these places were in government and aided schools including 25,920 in twelve annexe schools in new resettlement estates. These annexe schools, however, are not expected to be filled for yet another year, as the blocks with schools incorporated are often com- pleted well in advance of the remaining housing blocks.

48. In March 1967, a total of 628,165 pupils were attending primary day schools, which is 98.4% of the estimated number of children in the 6-11 age group inclusive. This does not mean, however, that every child between 6-11 is in primary school as 128,078 places representing 20.4% of the total primary day school enrolment were occupied by children outside the primary school age group.

Provision of Secondary School Places

49. A total of 10,210 secondary school places were provided in new school buildings and extensions during the year under review; 2,640 of these places were in the government and aided sectors. In March 1967,

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the total enrolment in the field of secondary education represented 35% of the estimated population in the 12-18 age group. The corresponding percentages for previous years were 33% in 1965-66, 32% in 1964-65 and 32% in 1963-64.

Progression from Primary to Secondary Education

50. A total of 73.6% of the primary pupils who completed their primary day schooling in July 1966 were admitted into secondary day schools. The corresponding percentages for the years 1965 and 1964 were 72.3% and 70.8% respectively. An analysis of the progression for 1966 is as follows:

(i) Percentage progression from primary schools to

school certificate courses in:

Government and Aided Schools

Assisted places in Private Schools

Private Schools

15.6%

2.5%

50.3%

68.4%

Sub-Total

(ii) Percentage progression from primary schools to Modern, Technical, and Special Courses, not leading

to a school certificate in:

Government and Aided Schools

Private Schools

Sub-Total

Total

2.6%

2.6%

5.2%

73.6%

51. In addition there were 10,409 pupils attending first year second- ary courses in night schools and tutorial classes of all types. This number forms 14.5% of all the primary pupils who completed their primary schooling in July 1966.

Student wastage during the School Certificate Course

52. Student wastage is much higher in the private sector than in the government and aided sectors. Statistics also indicate that such wastage is higher in Chinese Middle schools than in Anglo-Chinese secondary schools. During the last year, student wastage in Anglo-Chinese second- ary schools showed a general decrease in all forms, and the overall wastage for the complete five-year school certificate course dropped by almost 7% to about 19%. In Chinese middle schools, the pattern of student wastage remained more or less the same as in the previous

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year. Although there was a slight lowering of wastage at the stage of promotion from Middle IV to Middle V, the overall wastage for the complete five years of the school certificate course remained at a high figure of approximately 52%.

Progression from Secondary School Certificate Classes to Matriculation

Forms

53. With the inception in September 1965 of the Chinese Matricula- tion course of one year's duration leading to the Matriculation Examina- tion set by the Chinese University of Hong Kong, the number of Matriculation places has increased by more than 100% during the past two years. Consequently, the percentage progression from Secondary School Certificate classes to Matriculation Forms has also showed a progressive increase. In September 1966, a total of 33.2% of students who completed the School Certificate courses in secondary day schools in July 1966 were admitted to Matriculation classes in Anglo-Chinese secondary and Chinese middle day schools. The corresponding percent- ages for 1965 & 1964 were 27.5% and 20.8% respectively. A break- down of the percentage for 1966 is as follows:

Percentage progression from School Certificate to Matricu- lation courses in-

Government and Aided Schools

Private Schools

Total

16.0%

17.2%

33.2%

If Anglo-Chinese schools and Chinese middle schools are viewed separately, the figures are as follows:

(i) Percentage progression from English School Certificate

to Anglo-Chinese Matriculation courses in-

Government and Aided Schools

Private Schools

Total

16.7%

12.2%

28.9%

(ii) Percentage progression from Chinese School Certificate

to Chinese Matriculation courses in-

Government and Aided Schools

Private Schools

J

Total

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14.3% 30.1%

44.4%

54. The number of students attending first year of the Anglo-Chinese Matriculation course in private night schools also increased by 378 to 913 in September 1966, the latter number representing 6.7% of all the students completing the English School Certificate course in July 1966. At present there is no Chinese Matriculation night course.

TABLE I

NUMBER OF SCHOOLS AND PUPILS

55. The enrolment in schools at various levels of education is given in Tables Ia & Ib. Increases or decreases in school enrolment over the past three years are as follows:

March 1964 to March 1965 Increase Decrease

March 1965 to March 1966

March 1966 to March 1967

Increase Decrease Increase Decrease

Pre-primary Schools

Private Schools

2,941

7,985

13,412

Primary

Government Schools

2,403

2,627

602

Aided Schools ..

20,361

54,859

31,319

Private Schools

4,042

25,679

6,419

Sub-Total (net)

..

18,722

31,807

25,502

Secondary

Government Schools

415

224

986

Aided Schools ..

2,020

3,845

3.828

Private Schools

13,633

15,303

19,186

Sub-Total (net)

16,068

18,924

24,000

Total (net)

37,731

58,716

62,914

Pre-primary Schools

56. Sixty five new schools were registered during the past year bringing the total number of kindergartens up to 444 on 31st March, 1967. Total enrolment in these schools has increased by 13,412 or 25.1% from 53,479 in March 1966 to 66,891 in March 1967.

Primary Schools

57. While enrolment in primary day schools increased by 30,851, enrolment in night schools and special afternoon classes showed a decrease of 5,349. Total enrolment increased by 25,502. The greatest share of the expansion was in subsidized day schools.

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58. Twelve private primary day schools were brought under subsidy on 1st March, 1967 resulting in approximately 8,000 private primary places being converted to subsidized places. Enrolment in government and aided primary day schools increased by 33,535, while there was a drop of 2,684 in private primary day schools during the year under review.

59. In March 1967, the primary enrolment in government and aided day schools formed 66.9% of the total primary day school enrolment, being 2.3% higher than the equivalent percentage for last year.

60. For the past five consecutive years from 1962, total enrolment in night schools, tutorial classes and special afternoon classes continued to decrease with the improved provision in day schools. In March 1967, the enrolment was 33,792, compared with 61,559 in March 1962, and 39,141 in March 1966. This is a clear indication that part-time primary education is not regarded as a satisfactory alternative to the full-time primary course. Nevertheless, the primary night schools provide educa- tional opportunities for children and adolescents who are or have been unable to attend day primaries.

Secondary Schools

61. The number of pupils enrolled in school certificate forms increased by 19,133 or 12% from 159,676 in March 1966 to 178,809 in March 1967. The greatest share of this expansion was in private day schools. At the same time the enrolment in secondary schools not providing school certificate courses went up by 2,752.

62. Expansion was much greater in Anglo-Chinese secondary schools than in Chinese middle schools. During the past year enrolment in Anglo-Chinese secondary schools increased by 19,031 or 13.8%, while the corresponding figures for Chinese middle schools were 2,854 or 5.6%.

63. The rapid growth in enrolment in Matriculation courses during the last two years indicates an increasing demand for Matriculation places. The total number of Chinese and Anglo-Chinese Matriculation students in day schools in March 1967 was 7,634. The corresponding figures for March 1966 and March 1965 were 5,859 and 3,515 respec- tively, and the percentage increase in enrolment from March 1965 to March 1967 was 117.2%. During the past year the number of students attending the Anglo-Chinese Matriculation course in private night schools also increased by 340 or 45.5% to 1,088 in March 1967. At present no Chinese Matriculation evening course is provided by any school.

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TABLE II

TEACHERS AND TEACHER TRAINING

64. Table IIa shows the qualifications and employment figures for practising teachers in schools of different types and at different levels of education. Table IIb details the present enrolment in the different courses of training offered at the teacher training colleges. In addition to the 512 new non-graduate teachers who successfully completed their training in full-time college courses in 1966, 49 graduates were awarded the Diploma or Certificate in Education of the University of Hong Kong and Chinese University of Hong Kong (University of Hong Kong: 30, Chinese University of Hong Kong: 19) and 705 practising teachers successfully completed the part-time in-service training courses. The comparative figures for 1965-66 were: 793, 43 and 841 respectively.

65. The number of applicants for full-time courses of teacher train- ing in 1966 were as follows:

Two-Year Course

One-Year Course

*Special One-Year Course

Number Applied

Number Admitted

}

541

6,943

224

77

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Applications and admissions (in brackets) in previous years were as

follows:

Two-Year Course

One-Year' Course

...

1963

944 (114)

1964,

1965

930 (126)

9,142 (748)

5,374 (780)

5,278 (639)

137 (17)

*Special One-Year Course

146 (50) 158 (45)

* Admission to this course is restricted to selected students who have successfully com-

pleted a suitable four-year course at a post-secondary college.

66. There are 1,013 teachers attending the in-service training course conducted by the three Training Colleges. The corresponding enrolment for last year was 1,196.

67. There are also 18 teachers in kindergartens attending the two- year in-service training course for kindergarten teachers organized by the Inspectorate.

68. The one year in-service training courses for teachers of handi- capped children organized by the Special Education Section of the Inspectorate were temporarily suspended in September 1966. Up to July 1966, 27 teachers of blind children, 33 teachers of deaf children

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and 16 teachers of physically handicapped children had successfully completed their training.

Teacher Employment

69. Non-graduate teachers trained in college full-time courses are reluctant to accept the conditions of service in most private schools. An attempt is therefore made to control admission to the colleges in accordance with the employment opportunities in government, aided, and the better known private schools, while relying upon the in-service courses of training to make good any shortfall in the supply of trained teachers for new schools and to raise the standard of teaching in exist- ing private schools. Delays in the school construction programme and other variable factors make it difficult to forecast the number of college trained teachers required each year. Nevertheless over 93.1% of the teachers who qualified from full-time courses at the training colleges in 1966 have now been successful in obtaining teaching posts. Details of employment obtained by these teachers are as follows:

Qualification

Employed in Primary Schools

Govt. Aided Priv.

Employed in Secondary Schools Govt. Aided Priv.

Total

Two-Year Course

20

40

1

2

44

12

119

Special One-Year Course One-Year Course

1

1

1

7

3

14

24

252

54

330

Total ...

463

70. In addition, 195 out of 670 teachers, who successfully completed the in-service courses of training in July 1966, obtained employment in aided schools after being regraded as qualified teachers. An additional 266 in-service trained teachers who had qualified in previous years also obtained employment in aided schools.

71. In recent years there has been an increasing number of untrained graduates from the University of Hong Kong and the Chinese University of Hong Kong applying to enter the teaching profession. The following figures illustrate this point.

Total Number of Applications for Assistant Education

Officer posts

Number of Applications from H.K.U. & C.U.H.K. Students/Graduates

Number of Applications from other Graduates

Untrained

Trained] Being

Untrained

Trained

Trained

Feb. 1965

225

Feb. 1966

397

Feb. 1967

455

58*

61

129

60

292

98

302

22223

28

23

27

7220008

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72. The salaries paid in private secondary schools to graduate teachers have shown a recent tendency to increase, with the result that larger numbers of untrained graduates from the two universities have shown a willingness to accept the conditions of service in these schools. At the beginning of the school year 1966-67, 125 newly qualified graduates of the local universities found teaching posts in private secondary schools; only six of them were trained. Meanwhile 23 trained and 81 untrained newly qualified graduates were employed in govern- ment and aided secondary schools.

Pupil-Teacher Ratio

73. The following tables show the pupil/teacher ratio in primary and secondary day schools. The secondary schools include grammar, technical, vocational and modern schools, but do not include tutorial day classes.

No. of Pupil/Teacher

Ratio

Primary Day Schools

Trained

No. of Teachers

Untrained

Total

Pupils

Government Schools

2,665

73

2,738

85,020

31.1 (31.1)

Grant Schools

5

1

6

157

26.2 (30.0)

Subsidized Schools

8,254

1,358

9,612

334,685

34.8 (34.3)

Private Schools

1,565

5,305

6,870

208,303

30.7 (29.6)

Total ...

12,489

6,737

19,226

628,165

32.7 (32.0)

*(1,616)

Secondary Day Schools

No. of Teachers

Trained

Untrained

Total

No. of Pupil/Teacher Pupils

Ratio

Government Schools

479

137

616

13,888

22.5 (21.9)

Grant Schools

440

403

843

20,387

24.2 (23.7)

Subsidized Schools

285

331

616

17,432

28.3 (26.2)

Private Schools

1,172

3,831

5,003

135,787

27.1 (26.7)

Total ...

2,376

4,702

7,078

187,494

26.6 (25.8)

*(3,219)

• Figures representing University graduates without a professional qualification. Pupil/Teacher ratios as at March 1966 are shown in brackets.

74. Following the implementation of the new staffing ratios recom- mended in the government White Paper on Education Policy, pupil/ teacher ratios for government, grant and subsidized secondary schools have become higher. In the private sector the ratios have risen in primary and secondary schools.

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TABLE III

AGE GROUPS OF PUPILS

75. The age groups of pupils at various levels of education are given in Tables IIIa- d. 'Over Age' and 'Under Age' Pupils.

76. There is considerable overlap of ages in the primary and second- ary sectors of education. If the age groups 6-11 years inclusive and 12 to 16 years inclusive are regarded as the normal primary and second- ary age groups for the 6-year and 5-year course respectively, then the percentages of under-age and over-age pupils are as follows:

Primary Schools

Day

Enrolment

% of Total

Night & Tutorial Enrolment

% of Total

Under-age Pupils

29,790

4.7%

1,167

3.5%

Pupils aged 6-11 Years ...

500,087

79.6%

13,060

38.6%

Over-age Pupils

98,288

15.7%

19,565

57.9%

Total

628,165

100.0%

33,792

100.0%

Secondary Schools

Sch. Cert. Courses

Non-Sch. Cert. Courses

Enrolment

% of Total

Enrolment

% of Total

Under-age Pupils

3,335

..

1.9%

282

0.9%

Pupils aged 12-16 Years

139,377

77.9%

15,553

48.2%

Over-age Pupils

36,097

20.2%

16,436

50.9%

Total ...

178,809

100.0%

32,271

100.0%

77. For a number of years there has been little change in the per- centages of under-age and over-age pupils in primary and secondary schools in Hong Kong.

TABLE IV

TECHNICAL EDUCATION

78. The enrolment in all technical and vocational day schools is given in Table IVa.

79. In March 1967, the enrolment in technical schools offering courses leading eventually to a school certificate was 6,048. Table IVb contains details of the enrolment in all full-time and part-time technical and vocational courses.

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Table V

EXPENDITURE ON EDUCATION

80. Actual Government expenditure on education for the financial year 1966-67 totalled $273,010,807 as follows:

Recurrent $

%

Non-Recurrent

%

$

Administration and Inspection Government Schools (including new buildings & furniture and maintenance) Grant-in-aid Schools (including new buildings & furniture) Subsidized Schools (including new buildings & furniture)

11,890,358

4.7

39,859

0.2

68,489,203

26.8

3,383,070

19.1

18,358,166

7.2

340,040

1.9

114,621,808

44.9

7,010,893

39.5

Chinese University of Hong

Kong

16,511,642

6.5

2,540,889

14.3

Private Schools

6,192,681

2.4

3,074,266

17.4

Other Expenditure (including

scholarships)

5,156,425

2.0

252,696

1.4

Grants to Hong Kong Univer-

sity

14,049,932

5.5

1,098,879

6.2

Total

255,270,215

100.0

17,740,592 100.0

81. This expenditure as compared with that for the previous year shows an increase of over $28.5 million, which is due to the continued expansion of education in the Colony, and to the increased grants to Hong Kong University and the Chinese University of Hong Kong. The actual total recurrent expenditure on education was 22% of the actual total public recurrent expenditure of the Colony for 1966-67.

82. The total recurrent expenditure of $3,625,616 on Other Educa- tion shown in Table V is made up as follows:

(a) Evening Institute and Adult Education (b) Hong Kong Students in United Kingdom (c) Miscellaneous Services including Courses of instruc-

tion and recruiting expenses, etc.

...

$2,878,893

438,764

271,365

(d) Other Charges and miscellaneous grants

36,594

...

$3,625,616

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83. The total expenditure of $5,850,269 in respect of Teacher Train- ing shown in Column 4 includes an amount of $1,109,760 paid to 1032 teachers in training as interest-free loans which were introduced in September 1965.

84. Building expenditure on Government Schools (with expenditure for previous years for reference) is analysed below. This expenditure is included in the total Non-Recurrent Expenditure in Column 10 of the Table.

Previous

years' Expenditure expenditure during

Total

Cost as at

31.3.67

brought

1966-67

forward

$

$

Northcote Training College Replacement Technical College Extension (Classroom)

4,378,699

5,674

4,384,373

176,216

1,433,534

1,609,750

Belilios Public School

3,317,412

292,751

3,610,163

Shau Kei Wan Secondary School

2,758,428

58,635

2,817,063

Central District & Sir Ellis Kadoorie

School

4,597,579

110,021

4,707,600

Heung Yee Kuk Secondary School

109,808

109,808

Technical Institute

...

34,000

34,000

Technical College Wool Section

32,005

667,568

699,573

Peak School

156,060

156,060

Kennedy Town Police School

221,418

116,873

338,291*

Yuen Long Primary School

111,697

111,697†

Perth Street Middle School

2,357,150

580

2,357,730

Tsuen Wan Secondary School

2,238,620

41,115

2,279,735

Technical College Workshop

1,103,458

76,578

1,180,036

King George V School

905,915

4,345

910,260

Shau Kei Wan Secondary Technical

School

2,337,116

48,987 2,386,103

Total

24,424,016

3,268,226

27,692,242

* Furniture & equipment only, building cost included in overall cost of Police Quarters Block. ↑ Furniture & equipment only, building cost included in overall cost of N.T. Departmental

Quarters Block.

85. Building subsidies amounting to $6,273,605.18 were paid to sub- sidized schools to meet part of the cost of 77 new school buildings and extensions, and expenditure on major repairs to 113 existing schools. Building grants totalling $237,463.84 were paid to grant schools to meet part of the cost of major repairs to 21 existing schools. Most of the larger subsidies were grants on a dollar for dollar basis, the other half

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being paid from contributions made by the school authorities. In the case of big projects, interest-free loans, normally to the extent of 30% of the building cost were granted in addition to building subventions. In rural areas, the villagers were usually unable to contribute more than a small part of the total cost, in which case building subsidies exceeding 50% of the cost were paid.

86. In accordance with the approved policy outlined in the Educa- tion Policy White Paper, Government has started to give immense capital assistance towards the cost of constructing and equipping new secondary aided schools. Although quite a number of these projects were approved in 1966-67, payment on 80% grant basis was made in respect of only one school.

87. Government continued to give assistance in the form of Loans to both private and aided schools. Interest-Free Loans, repayable over a period of 11 years, continued to be issued and in addition one loan bearing interest at the rate of 34% per annum repayable over a period of 21 years, was approved and partly issued during 1966-67. Payment of loans made during 1966-67 amounted to $6,284,200 which represented part payment of approved loans to 18 schools, totalling $14,988,200, of which about 30% was for primary and 70% for secondary education. These loans are listed below:

Schools

Primary or Loan Secondary Approved

Payments made

Up to

1.4.66-

Out- standing

31.3.66

31.3.67

$

$

$

(a) Interest-free Loans;

i. Catholic Primary &

Secondary School at Wanchai

Primary/

Secondary 1,266,400 533,400 733,000

Nil

ii. Caine Road Catholic

Primary School

Primary

$30,000

530,000

Nil

iii. Catholic Primary &

Secondary School at San Po Kong

Primary/

Secondary 3,086,000 2,826,000 260,000

iv. Chung Sing School

(Extension) Yuen Long.. Primary

91,000

Nil

67,000

24,000

v. Holy Trinity College of

the Precious Blood

vi. Kowloon Tong School

(Extension)

vii. Kung Lee Anglo-Chinese

Secondary School viii. Ma Tau Chung Catholic

Secondary School

Secondary 1,200,000 625,000 $75,000 Nil

Secondary 880,000 138,000 632,000 110,000

Secondary 2,000,000

Secondary

571,800

1,374,000 626,000

571,800 Nil

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Schools

Primary or Loan Secondary Approved

Payments made

Up to 31.3.66

$

$

1.4.66- 31.3.67

$

Out- standing

$

ix. North Point Kaifong

Welfare Advancement

Association School

Primary

454,400

454,400 Nil

x. Pooi To Middle School

(Primary Section)

Primary

384,000

384,000 Nil

xi. St. Clare's Primary School Primary

619,000

301,000

318,000

xii. Secred Heart Primary

School, Cheung Chau .. Primary

201,600

201,600

Nil

xiii. St. Joseph's Anglo-Chinese

Secondary School (Kwun

Tong)

Secondary

729,000

242,000

487,000

xiv. Tsung Him School

(Extension)

Primary

63,000

63,000

Nil

xv. Wong Shiu Chị Middle

School (Extension)

Secondary 165,000

165,000

Nil

xvi. Ying Wa Girls' School

Secondary 600,000

554,000

46,000

xvii. Yuen Long Lutheran

Middle School

Secondary

$40,000

336,000 204,000

13,381,200 4,122,400 7,443,800 1,815,000

(b) 31% per annum Interest

Bearing Loan:

xviii. Alliance College at Ma

Tau Chung

Secondary 1,607,000 1,375,000 232,000 Nil

7,675,800

Less Reimbursement of Overpay- ment of Loan to Catholic Pri- mary & Secondary School at Wanchai owing to revision of Loan originally approved

1,391,600

14,988,200 5,497,400 6,284,200 1,815,000

88. The total estimated expenditure on education for the financial year 1967-68, including grants for only one quarter to the University of Hong Kong ($5,050,000) and to the Chinese University of Hong Kong ($5,000,000) but excluding provision for pension, passages, quarters and medical attention, is $290,338,500. Funds for the Universities covering the academic year 1967-68 are provided in the new expenditure head under the control of the University Grants Committee. The total provi- sion, excluding the grants to the Universities, for 1967-68 is $280,288,500 compared with $252,160,000 for 1966-67.

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TABLE VI

89. Fees paid in Government Schools are credited to general revenue, but aided and private schools retain their fees. Extra subscriptions are also retained by schools. Hence the net cost of education to Government

was:

Actual Expenditure

Less Fees collected in Government Schools

Net Cost

$273,010,807

10,118,632

$262,892,175

TABLE VII

EXAMINATION RESULTS

90. Table VIIa gives an analysis of the results in the two School Certificate Examinations for the last twelve years, while Table VIIb provides a detailed analysis of results for each individual subject in the 1966 English School Certificate Examination.

91. From Table VIIa, it can be seen that the overall percentage pass in the 1966 English School Certificate Examination has risen a little, as compared with those of the last two years, despite the fact that a still more liberal attitude towards the admission of schools and students to the examination has been adopted. This slight increase in the pass per- centage was mainly the result of Syndicate's decision to relax to some extent, the conditions for the award of a certificate.

92. In the Chinese School Certificate Examination, there was a decrease of 12.4% in the number of candidates who entered for the examination compared with 1965. The decrease was attributable to the fact that only students completing a 5-year course were taking the examination this year, whereas in the previous year, there was in addi- tion a group of students who had completed a 6-year course. Table VIIc gives an analysis of the 1966 Chinese School Certificate Examina- tion results and a comparison between the results of the 1965 and 1966 examinations.

93. Entries for the General Certificate of Education increased from 6,546 in 1965 to 7,446 this year. The percentage of passes at both levels decreased over the same period, from 55.7% to 54.7% at advanced level and from 61.8% to 57% at ordinary level. (See Table VIIe).

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94. Although the number of pupils who sat the Secondary Schools Entrance Examination was only 996 more than the 1965 figure, the number of promotions increased by 1,127. (Table VIIƒ).

95. In January 1967, a special General Certificate of Education Examination was held. 1,588 candidates, from a total of 1,741 entries, sat for this examination. The percentage of passes at advanced level was 36.9% and at ordinary level 21.2%. (See Table VIIh).

TABLE IX

HONG KONG STUDENTS' UNIT, LONDON

96. The total number of students in the United Kingdom is 3,604, as compared with 2,951 in 1966, an increase of 653 students, or approximately 26% during the last year.

97. The courses being taken by students shown under the heading 'Others' in Table IX include:

Arts Degree, Agriculture,

Art & Commercial Art,

Bakery,

Beauty Culture,

Dress Design,

Dentistry,

Dispensing,

Economics,

Education,

General Certificate of Education, Interior Decoration,

Journalism,

Optician,

Pharmacy,

Public Administration,

Printing,

Secretarial,

Social Science,

Teacher Training.

TABLE X

ADULT EDUCATION

98. Adult Education is provided by Government evening classes and private schools. The Government classes comprise :

Evening Institute-

The Institute offers English Courses, courses in General Background Education and Practical Background Education, Rural Literacy Classes, Middle School Course and Teachers' Courses in Art, English, Modern Mathematics, Music, Handwork, Woodwork and Gymnastics.

Total number of classes

Total enrolment

629 12,951

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Evening School of Higher Chinese Studies-

This school offers a 3-year course in General Arts.

10

Total number of classes

242

Total enrolment

Adult Education and Recreation Centres--

There are 12 centres and the total membership is 47,983. These figures are not shown in any of the statistical tables as the emphasis is on recreative rather than formal education.

Private Schools-

These include the private evening colleges, Chinese literacy classes and also full-time and part-time vocational schools.

NOTES ON APPENDIX

Trustee's REPORT

ON THE ADMINISTRATION OF THE EDUCATION SCHOLARSHIPS FUND DURING THE YEAR ENDED 31st august, 1966

THE Director of Education, as Trustee of the Education Scholarships Fund, has pleasure in presenting his Report and the attached Statements 1 to 6 of the Fund's accounts for the year ended 31st August, 1966.

2. The year under review has again been one of continued progress. Total assets of the Fund increased by $5,696.77 and at the 31st August, 1966 stood at $347,205.87. Of this figure, $317,277.27 (or 91.38%) was represented by sterling and local investments. The principal features of the Investment Account were the investment of $17,500 of the generous donation of $20,000 received from Mr. MURJANI towards the end of the previous year, the purchase of rights issues of the Hong Kong Electric Co., and the replacement of existing shares by a donation of new shares of an increased value by the donor of the J. F. Grose Scholarship.

3. Income from investments, excluding donations of $2,997.18 credited to income, amounted to $22,774.34 which represents an average yield of 7.18%. The table below summarizes the return on sterling and local investments cover- ing the two Schedules:

Type of Investment

Sterling

Local

Total

Second Schedule

Investment Cost

Income

Av. Yield

Investment Cost

$

$

%

$

67,563.93 3,959.22

17,621.89

929.20

5.86 5.27

Third Schedule

Income

$

26,785.02 1,676.76 6.26 205,306.43 16,209.16 7.90

Av. Yield %

85,185.82

4,888.42 5.74

232,091.45

17,885.92 7.71

4. During 1965-66, sixty eight and ninety three scholarships were awarded under the Second and Third Schedules, respectively, all being financed from investment income and donations received.

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5. No further donations were received by the Education Scholarships Fund Committee for the establishment of new scholarships.

6. Funds are available to meet the existing awards to be made in 1966-67 under the Second Schedule Scholarships but there was a shortfall in income in respect of two scholarships under the Third Schedule and it is estimated that in 1966-67, deficiencies of approximately $160 and $1,273 respectively, will arise on the awards relating to the U Sze Wing and the Murjani Scholarships. The donor of the U Sze Wing Scholarship, however, made a cash donation of $160 and Mr. MURJANI generously donated a further $20,000 after the close of the financial year.

7. The capital gains on the sale of the rights issue between the Scholarships and the difference in the cost of the investments under the Grose Scholarships mentioned in paragraph 2 above, are reflected in the Capital Account of the Third Schedule Scholarships, which increased from $221,503.43 to $222,598.18 as at 31st August, 1966.

8. The total amount transferred to the Reserve Account under Section 13(2) of the Education Scholarships Fund Ordinance in respect of the Third Schedule Scholarships was $1,620.00.

9. The accounts for the year ended 31st August, 1966 have been audited by the Director of Audit.

HONG KONG,

5th December, 1966.

K. J. ATTWELL,

Director of Education,

Trustee of the Education Scholarships Fund.

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TYPE

OF

SCHOOL

Government

Grant

No. of

Schools

TABLE I a

NUMBER OF SCHOOLS AND PUPILS (BY EDUCATIONAL LEVEL) AS AT 31.3.67

M Male; F = Female

KINDERGARTEN

M.

Enrolment

F.

Total

No. of

Schools

SECONDARY

PRIMARY

MATRICULATION

Re-organized 'Special Non-School Certificate Secondary' Course

School Certificate Course

Secondary Course

Enrolment

Enrolment

M.

F. Total

No. of

Schools

Enrolment

M. F. Total

No. of

Schools

Enrolment

M.

F. Total

No. of Schools

107 43,125 41,895 85,020

10

16 1

746 1,857 2,603|

20

157

157

Subsidized.

577 178,364 164,573 342,937|

91 81

Private

444 36,037 30,854 66,891

937 127,416 104,116 231,532

M.

F. Total

No. of

Schools

Enrolment

M. F. Total

8,568 6,439 15,007 13 933 304 1,237

22

7,717 10,174 17,891 22 1,232 1,264 2,496

2,264 1,107 3,371 25 8,181 5,301 13,482

276 131 407

154 14,579 11,530 26,109 228 79,095' 53,334 132,429|||| 61 3,445 1,137 4,582

Special

P.M. Class

22

908 1,403 2,311

TOTAL.. 444 36,037 30,854 66,891 1,644 349,813 312,144 661,957

101 87 188 162 17,589 14,494 32,083 295 103,561 75,248 178,809 102 5,886 2,836, 8,722

TABLE Ia-Contd.

NUMBER OF SCHOOLS AND PUPILS (BY EDUCATIONAL LEVEL) AS AT 31.3.67

M =

Male; F = Female

ADULT & FURTHER EDUCATION

Post School Certificate Courses

Adult Education

Total

Number

TYPE

OF

Teacher Training

Technical and Vocational

Other Courses

Academic and General

Technical and Vocational

SCHOOL

of

Schools

(counted

by edu-

cational

Total

Enrolment

Enrolment

Enrolment

Enrolment

Enrolment

No. of

Schools

M.

F. Total

No. of

Schools

M.

F. Total

No. of

Schools

M.

F. Total

No. of

Schools

M.

F. Total

No. of Schools

Enrolment

level)

M. F.

Total

Government

691 1,452 2,143

1,208

100 1,308

Grant

Subsidized.

Private

Special P.M. Class

30

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TOTAL

2 4,362 8,831| 13,193|| 112,241 499 12,740

150

133,267

45

20,544

621

360,369

2,325 1,481 3,806

21 1,078 1,604 2,682 72 4,037 2,724 6,761|

1,925

474,792

22

2,311

1,452 2,143

1,208 100 1,308 8 2,325 1,481 3,806 23 5,440 10,435] 15,875|| 7316,278|||| 3,223| 19,501|

2,763

991,283

NOTES: (a) In the above table, a school providing education at more than one level is considered a separate school for each level; thus a school providing kindergarten, primary and secondary education is counted as a kindergarten, as a primary school, and also as a secondary school.

(b) The total number of ‘registered' schools, not counted by level of education, is 2,333.

(c) These figures do not include 1,234 students in Special Schools and seminaries.

(d) In addition to the three Teacher Training Colleges, the Technical College Evening Department provides a two-year course for In-service training of teachers of technical subjects.

TABLE I b

ENROLMENT SUMMARY

KINDERGARTEN

PRIMARY

SPECIAL SECONDARY FORMS

Date: 31.3.1967

KINDERGARTEN

TOTAL

Type of School

No. of

Schools

Day

Private

Yr. I

Yr. 2

Yr. 3

34,318

29,326

3,047

Male

Female Combined

36,037

30,854 66,891

444

'PRIMARY' (6 year course)

TOTAL

No. of

Type of School

Schools

1

2

3

4

5

6

Male

Female

Combined

Day

Government English School

434

434

393

379

331

288

1,118

1,141

2,259

Government

14,302

12,637

13,978

12,961

26,939

102

Grant

41

75

116

116

Subsidized

46,144

31,821

41,862

36,103

77,965

471

Private

62,396

28,330

27,210

23,108

24,230

22,968

105,868

82,374

188,242

743

Total: Day

62,830

28,764 27,603 23,487 85,048

67,789

162,826

132,695 295,321

1,322

Night

Subsidized

1,319

1,468

1,605

1,597

1,364

899

2,049

6,203

8,252

44

Private (Incl. Tutorial)

1,655

1,392

2,331

4,741

6,428

6,682

10,187

13,042

23,229

173

Total: Night

2,974

2,860

3,936

6,338

7,792

7,581

12,236

19,243

31,481

217

Special P.M. Classes

1,437

323

228

157

100

66

908

1.403

2,311

22

TOTAL

67,241

31,947

31.767

29.982

92,940

75,436

'JUNIOR' (New 5 year primary course)

TOTAL

Type of School

1

2

3

4

5

Malc

175,970 153,343 329.313

Female Combined

1.361

No. of

Schools

Government

Day

Grant

Subsidized

14,685

15,625

14,866

10,646

28.029

27.793

55,822

102

41

41

41

77,002

70,674

60,859

48,185

134.453

122.267

236,720

529

Private

8,320

4,479

3,833

3,229

TOTAL

100,207

90,778

79,399

62,060

11,361

173,843 158,801

8.700

20,061

74

332,644

706

*SPECIAL SECONDARY' FORMS

TOTAL

Type of School

No. of

Schools

Day

Private

Government

2

16

Subsidized

172

TOTAL

188

Male

Female Combined

10

16

91

81

172

101

87

188

7

31

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TABLE Ib--Contd.

ENROLMENT SUMMARY

ANGLO-CHINESE

SECONDARY COURSES leading to a SCHOOL CERTIFICATE AND MATRICULATION COURSES

SECONDARY (ACADEMIC)

TOTAL

Type of School

2

3

4

5

6

Male

Female

Date: 31.3.1967

Combined Schools

No. of

Day

Government English School

259

207

173

151

176

472

494

966

2

Government

1,078

1,072

1,081

996

936

3,056

2,107

5,163

8

Grant

3,529 3,394

3,377

3,220

2,972

7,522

8,970

16,492

22

Subsidized

1,991

1,658

1,563

1,185

$99

4.784

2,212

6,996

14

Total: Govt. & Aided

(Excl. Eng. Sch.)

6,598

6,124

6,021

5,401

4,507

15,362

13,289

28,651

44

Private (Incl. “Asst. places”).

23,863

20,930

18,504

16,242

11,740

57,285

33,994 91,279

151

(Assisted places)

(1,155)

(995)

(871)

(722)

(569)

(2,528) (1,784)

(4,312)

(40)*

Total: Day

30,720

27,261

24,698

21,794

16,423

73,119

47,777

120,896

197

Night

Government

413

357

300

193

188

149

497

1,103

1,600

1

Private

743

618

521

494

508

2,263

621

2,884

8

Total: Night

1,156

975

821

687

696

149

2,760

1,724

4,484

9

TOTAL (Academic)

31,876

28,236

Type of School

25,519 22,481 17,119

SECONDARY (TECH. & VOC.)

149

75,879

49,501 125,380

206

TOTAL

No. of

1

2

3

4

5

6

Male

Female Combined

Schools

Day

Government

946

916

946

1,012

Subsidized

90

86

77

1,012

803

3,268

1,355

4,623

6

48

379

379

1

Total: Govt. + Aided

1,036

1,002

1,023

1,090

851

3,647

1,355

5,002

7

Private (Incl. "Asst. places")]

317

185

124

49

38

713

713

1

(Assisted places)

(71)

(51)

(18)

(12)

(9)

(161)

(161)

(1)*

TOTAL

(Tech. & Voc.)

1,353

1,187

1,147

1,139

889

4,360

1,355

5,715

8

GRAND TOTAL

33,229

29,423 26,666 23,620

18,008

149

80,239

50,856 131,095

214

Day

Type of School

MATRICULATION (FORM VI)

TOTAL

No. of

1st Yr.

2nd Yr.

Government English School.

60

47

Government

563

320

Grant

1,408

921

Subsidized

81

23

Private

1,624

385

Total: Day

3,736

Night

Private

621

1,696

467

TOTAL

4.357

2,163

Male

Female

Combined:

Schools

58

49

107

1

709

174

883

1,202

1,127

2,329

22

81

23

104

2

1,763

246

2,009

20

3,813

1,619

5,432

54

806

282

1,088

7

4,619

1.901

6,520

32

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TABLE 10~Conta.

ENROLMENT SUMMARY

SECONDARY COURSES leading to a SCHOOL CERTIFICATE and MATRICULATION COURSES

CHINESE

Date: 31.3.1967

SECONDARY (ACADEMIC)

TOTAL

Type of School

No. of

Schools

2

3

4

3

6

Male

Female

Combined

Day

Government

Grant

414

403

373

344

349

1,076

807

1,883

257

303

287

280

272

195

1,204

1,399

Subsidized

1,567

1,332

1,183

962

730

3,018

2,756

5,774

14

Total: Govt. & Aided

2,238

2,038

1,843

1,386

1,351

4,289

4,767

9,056

22

Private (Incl. “Asst. places")

11,034

8,157

6,516

5,303

4,906

18,144

17,772

35,916

98

(Assisted places)

(290)

(287)

(235)

(231)

(231)

(257)

(1,017)

(1,274)

(25)*

Total: Day

13,272

10,195

8,359

6,889

6,257

22,433

22,339

44,972

120

Night

Government

222

191

125

99

69

66

199

573

772

Private

456

277

278

272

270

84

690

947

1,637

1242

Total: Night

678

468

403

371

339

150

889

1,520

2,409

3

TOTAL

(Academic)

13,950

10,663

8,762

7,260

6,596

150

23.322

24,059

47,381

123

Type of School

SECONDARY (TECH. & VOC.)

TOTAL

I

2

3

4

6

Male

Female Combined

No. of

Schools

Day

Government

Subsidized

82

78

72

49

52

333

333

1

Total: Govt. & Aided

82

78

72

49

52

333

333

1

Private (Incl. “Asst. places")

(Assisted places)

(-)

(----)

(~~)

(-)

(

(-)

TOTAL

(Tech. & Voc.)

82

78

72

49

52

333

333

1

GRAND TOTAL

14,032

10,741

8,834

7,309

6,648

150

23,322

24,392

47,714

124

33

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Day

MATRICULATION (MIDDLE VI)

TOTAL

No. of

Type of School

1st Yr.

Male

Female Combined

Schools

Government

247

166

81

247

Grant

167

30

137

167

Subsidized

303

195

108

303

Private

1,485

876

609

1,485

TOTAL

2,202

1,267

935

2,202

48

* Included in private schools.

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SECONDARY COURSES NOT leading

to a SCHOOL CERTIFICATE

TABLE I Contd.

ENROLMENT SUMMARY

344

34

Date: 31.3.1967

Type of School

SECONDARY COURSES

(Modern, Tech., Voc., Comm. Tutorial)

TOTAL

No. of

Schools

Yr. 1

Yr. 2

Yr. 3

Yr. 4

Yr. 5

Yr. 6

Male

Female Combined

Day

Government

Subsidized

1,381

1,092

596

64

38

Private

853

341

63

64

1,238

ANGLO-

CHINESE

Total: Day

2,434

1,433

659

128

1,276

2,264

1,107

3,371

7

1,290

1,269

2,559

20

3,554

2,376

5,930

27

Night Government

Private (Incl.

Tutorial)

4,844

4,410

3,945

3,351

3,737

55

11,397

8,945

20,342

111

Total: Night

4,844

4,410

3,945

3,351

3,737

55

11,397

8,945

20,342

111

TOTAL

7,278

5,843

4,604

3,479

5,013

35

14,951

11,321

26,272

138

CHINESE

Type of School

Yr. 1

Yr. 2

Yr. 3

SECONDARY COURSES

(Modern, Tech., Voc., Comm. Tutorial)

TOTAL

No. of

Schools

Yr. 4

Yr. 5

Yr. 6

Male

Female Combined

Day

Government

Subsidized

Private

1,068

ཤྲཱི། །

T

476

130

78

74

1,338

488

1,826

12

Total: Day

1,068

476

130

78

74

1,338

488

1,826

12

Night Government

1,434

724

445

746

1,857

2,603

Private

620

387

174

102

64

35

554

828

1,382

Total: Night

2,054

1,111

619

102

64

35

1,300

2.685

3,985

12

TOTAL

3,122

1,587

749

180

138

35

2,638

3,173

5,811

24

TABLE II a

NUMBER OF TEACHERS IN SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES CLASSIFIED

BY QUALIFICATIONS AS AT 31.3.67

M = Male; F · Female

KIN-

DER-

PRIMARY

SECONDARY

GAR-

TEN

GRAND

TOTAL

Govern-

Private

Grant Subsidized

Private

Total

ment

M. F. M. F.

M. F. M. F. M. F. M. F.

Govern-

ment

M. F.

Grant

M. F.

Sub-

sidized

M. F. M. F.

Private

Total

M. F. M.

F.

University Graduates or equivalent:

13 36 2.2 29

20

23

41 331 40

156 148

537 217

247

473

183 425

315 1,043

573

8895

32

361 160 93 79 165 103 39 $94

42 223 173❘ 238] 68 1,753

8988

238 836 535 1,274 932 627 2,309 910 3,372 1,324

28

8 664 837 1,777|

836

154

4 2,945 5,005| 307 8284,089 7,614| 142 84 76 120 92 31 262 422 1,188 3,176 1,342 3,598|

7

15

24

LA

913

17 $72 433 4,669] 8,711 510 928 522 2,298 4,956

Trained

Untrained

Completed Secondary

School Course:

Trained

Untrained

Not Completed

Secondary School Course:

Trained

Untrained

35

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11 17 43 110 54 127

T

3 2

23

26

7

80 211

3,803 5,809 2,258 4,612 6,953 12,273 397 219 378 465 451 165 3,445 1,558 4,671 2,407 11,693 16,334 NOTE: In addition, there are 342 (M. 151; F. 191) teachers in subsidized night schools, 2,230 (M. 1,544; F. 686) teachers in private tutorial and evening classes and 96 (M. 33; F. 63) teachers in special afternoon classes. The majority of these teachers also teach in day schools.

77

TOTAL

69 1,654 892 1,846

36

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TABLE II a-Contd.

NUMBER OF TEACHERS IN SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES CLASSIFIED

BY QUALIFICATIONS AS AT 31.3.67

M = Male; F

Female

POST-SECONDARY TECHNICAL

POST-SECONDARY TEACHER TRAINING AND GENERAL

GRAND

Govern-

Grant

Subsidized Private

Total

Govern- | Grant Subsidized Private

TOTAL

Total

ment

ment

M. F.

M. F.

M. F. M. F.

M. F.

M. F. M. F.

M. F. M. F.

M.

F.

M.

University Graduates

or equivalent:

Trained

Untrained

Completed Secondary School Courses:

Trained

Untrained

Not-Completed Secondary Course:

Trained

Untrained

20

2

33 30

121

29

15

106

74

49

78

24

111 54

131

54

83

6 95 10

137

12

29

15

73

16

161

30

79 341

82

NOTE: In addition, there are 1,749 (M. 1,343; F. 406) teachers in the Evening Institutes, Evening School of Higher Chinese Studies, Technical College Evening Department and Teacher Training Colleges (In-service Courses for Teacher Training), 586 (M. 450; F. 136) teachers in private evening colleges and adult classes and 138 (M. 47; F. 91) in special schools.

TOTAL

106

3

TABLE II b

ENROLMENT IN TEACHER TRAINING COURSES AS AT 31.3.67

Students admitted in

Students passing final examination 1966

September 1966

Total No. of students at March 1967

Description of Course

M.

F.

Total

M.

F.

Total

Number % Passed

Two-year Training Course

180

361

541

248

637

885

124

100.0 %

One-year Special Training

Course

7

10

17

6

9

15

15

93.75%

One-year Training Course

Sub-total

Part-time Training:

51

173

224

51

161

212

373

99.46%

238

544

782

305

807

1,112

512

:

Full-time Training:

37

Two-year Secondary Course:

Chinese

19

...

English

28

25

94

28

hong

34

53

33

**

15

51

ww

49

16

84

35

1965

100.0

100.0 %

Two-year Primary Course:

Urban (Hong Kong/

Kowloon)

145

260

405

Rural

30

28

Two-year Kindergarten

Course

20

982

277

511

58

42

ཡཱ

50

20

18

8888888

522

100.0 %

92

98

100.0

18

18

100.0 %

One-year Course for teachers

of handicapped children

16

100.0 %

Sub-total

222

342

564

386

645

1,031

705

TOTAL

460

886

1,346

691

1,452

2,143

1,217

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TABLE III a

GENERAL EDUCATION: ENROLMENT BY LEVEL OF EDUCATION AND AGE AS AT 31.3.67

38

YEAR

DAY SCHOOLS

KINDERGARTEN AND INFANT CLASSES

1st Yr.

2nd Yr.

Any further Year

Total

M.

F.

M.

F.

M.

F.

M.

F.

Numbers enrolled in the following age groups:

Under 3

318

248

5

1

327

253

3 and under

4 and under 5

4,150

3,160

379

283

62

39

4,591

3,482

9,164

7,600

2,858

2,304

189

132

12,211

10,036

5 and under 6

3,965

3,880

7,841

6,559

836

580

12,642

11,019

6 and under 7

741

773

3,993

4,000

576

426

5,310

5,199

7 and under 8

147

130

535

477

80

68

762

675

8 and under 9

9 and under 10

10 and under 11

11 and under 12

12 and under 13

13 and over

16

128

104

22

19

159

139

16

27

24

7

11

35

51

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TOTAL

18,495

15,823

15,770

13,756

1,772

1,275

36,037

30,854

39

SPECIAL

SECONDARY FORMS

S. 1

TABLE III b

GENERAL EDUCATION: ENROLMENT BY LEVEL OF EDUCATION AND AGE AS AT 31.3.67 DAY SCHOOLS (NOT INCLUDING TUTORial Classes)

YEAR

PRIMARY CLASSES

J.I/P.1

J.2/P.2

J.3/P.3

J.4/P.4

P. 5

P. 6

Total

M.

F. M. F.

M.

F.

M.

F. M. F.

M.

F.

M.

F.

M.

F.

Numbers enrolled in the following age groups:

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Under 5

4,274 3,566|

3

5 and under 6

11,514 10,138) 146 136

1

6 and under 7

7 and under 8

29,259 25,500 2,788 2,225 28,405 26,821| 14,812 12,691 2,160 1,712|| 1561 100

142 1011

4,277 3,572

11,666 10,275

32,196 27,830||

8 and under 9

9 and under 10

10 and under 11

11 and under 12

12 and under 13

13 and under 14

9,122 8,768 27,852 25,652 10,465 8,862 1,994 1,481, 207 144 2,090 2,050 11,772 10,718 24,119 22,123′ 8,073 6,530 2,319 1,684| 473

26

36

131

45,569 41,337

30

8|| 49,670 44,915||

156

191 112|| 48,564) 43,217 539 3,907 3,538 12,491 11,419 17,081| 15,363| 10,555 9,031 1,869|| 1,326|| 46,376| 41,216|| 187 1,150 1,091 4,994| 4,076 11,713| 9,952 15,824 13,826 9,104 7,124|| 42,941) 36,256,

$6

20

14 and under 15

15 and over

43

1

18

13

65 397 353 1,802 1,363 4,892 3,775 10,469 8,631 13,462 11,414|| 31,078) 25,601| 21 107 101 585! 375 2,001 1,211 4,972 3,451 8,429 6,732|| 16,114 11,891 23 181! 125 584

59

30

29

354 1,795 1,128 3,357 2,296|| 5,966 3,932 42 169 106 574 389 1,432 903 2,252 1,454

33

27

26

21

| 2 * * *

TOTAL

85,375 77,662 62,995 56,547 57,003 50,199 46,671 38,876 46,751 38,297 37,874 29,915|| 336,669, 291,496|

NOTE: 'P' refers to a class in the 6 year system of primary education.

'J' refers to a class in the re-organized 5 year system of primary education. 'S' refers to a special secondary class in the re-organized system of education.

1011

87

TABLE III b-Contd.

GENERAL EDUCATION: ENROLMENT BY LEVEL OF EDUCATION AND AGE AS AT 31.3.67

NIGHT, TUTORIAL AND SPECIAL AFTERNOON CLASSES

40

Digitized by

Google

PRIMARY CLASSES

YEAR

3

Total

M.

F.

M.

F.

M.

F.

M.

F.

M.

F.

M.

F.

M.

F.

Numbers enrolled in the

following age groups:

Under 5

170

165

170

165

...

5 and under 6

384

437

31

8

387

445

6 and under 7

3821

563

531

581

12

11

459

647

7 and under 8

242

443

98

166

48

8 and under 9

153

370

166]

324

148

155

9 and under 10

121

296

177

395

188

317

10 and under 11

62

208

137

430] 207

479

11 and under 12

31

116

107]

387

190

672

བྷུབྷི་ྲཨཏི

49

25

16

6

13

8

435

691

541

52

185

175

271

353

344

350

12 and under 13

18]

63

62

239

122

543

355

735

13 and under 14

13

48

34

135

91

347|

333)

740

14 and under 15

13

41

16

71

38

2111 262

582

རཋ ཧྨཡྻོ ཙྩུ རྞྞ གྷུ

30

93

56

647

987

84

128

76

9181 1,343

293

243

205

123

1,175 1,836

535

433

312

245

1,319 2,403

491

655

466

487

1,514| 2,722

485

839

471

701 1,429❘

2,810

492

811

495

823

1,336 2,539

15 and over

64

23

94

123

195

628

815

1,075

1,249 1,302

1,643|| 3,155 4,060

TOTAL

1,597|

2,814

876 2,307 1,184 2,980 2,468 4,027 3,534 4,358 3,485

4,162|| 13,144 20,648

TABLE III c

Secondary Schools (School Certificate Forms Chinese and Anglo-CHINESE)

GENERAL EDUCATION: ENROLMENT BY LEVEL OF EDUCATION AND AGE AS AT 31.3.67

SCHOOL CERTIFICATE FORMS-CHINESE AND ANGLO-CHINESE

YEAR

41

2

3

4

5

6

Total

1

MATRICULATION

2

Total

M.

F.

M.

F. M. F.

Σ

M.

M. F.

M. F. M.

F. M.

F.

M. F. M. F.

Numbers en-

rolled in the

following age groups:

Under 11

11 and under 12

12 and under 13

144

85

1,734 1,084) 157

055

10.

10

154 91

!

7,164

4,904 1,466

མཙྪ

91

13:

11

1

949 129 76

m

9

13 and under 14

9,409 6,925 5,462 4,057] 1,057) 768

67 129

1

1,904 1,186|

8,762 5,935

15,996|| 11,879|

14 and under 15

15 and under 16

16 and under 17

17 and under 18)

18 and under 19

}

80

19 and under 20

20

28

38

156 66

6,389 4,499 7,946 6,189 4,490 3,361 1,053|| 723 2,104 1,475 5,274 4,086 6,808 5,361 3,979 2,787|| 766 528 483 412 1,979 1,456 4,964 3,985 5,936 4,324 3,019 2,303|| 160] 119 441 275 1,981 1,551 4,642 3,288 4,820 3,417 7 13 403

77

45

19,955 14,817||

2

18,931| 14,237|

20

20

18

1

21 19

16,381| 12,484|| 328! 207

12,051|| 8,663|| 1,170||||| 795||

18

39

19

106

20 and under 21]

8

3

17

8

29

21 and over

11

28

3

45

290 1,909 1,149 3,592 2,455 29 42 70 425 271| 1,632

16 104 61 532

28 154

1,007 43| 55

258 36 32

50 25 13

6,169| 4,040|| 1,615 726 2,265 1,440 927 335 726 378 228 78 267 98 93 16

53 10 381 217

184 115 1,354 910 422247|| 2,037|| 973

485 200||||1,412 535 269 68 497 146 89 19 182 35

TOTAL

27,699 19,562 22,958 17,206 20,008 15,492 18,163 12,766

14,393) 10,063 140| 159

159 103.561 75,248 4,383 2,176 1,503 66

5,886 2,836

Digitized by

Google

Total

TABLE III d

GENERAL EDUCATION: ENROLMENT BY LEVEL OF EDUCATION AND AGE AS AT 31.3.67

SECONDARY SCHOOLS (Non School Certificate Courses)

SECONDARY-NON SCHOOL CERTIFICATE COURSES

42

Digitized by

Google

YEAR

5

M.

F.

M.

F.

M.

F.

M.

F.

M.

F.

M.

F.

M.

F.

Numbers enrolled in the

following age groups:

Under 12

121

143

N

130

149

12 and under 13

474

474

23

28

40

31

17

13 and under 14

752

773

192] 214

40

49

14 and under 15

1,020

846

606

368

236

180

15 and under 16

814

709

761

659

421

417

121

16 and under 17

695

582

668

572

355

539

243

17 and under 18

558

3831

558

419

402

429

300

18 and under 19

400]

186

384

273

297

261

296

19 and under 20

320

119

300

167

243

173

250

20 and under 21

221

78

181

96

164]

144

225

TECER 8 2 2 2

505

531

14:

22

N

9

1,000 1,067

32

39

16

17

1,910 1,650

113

69

76

2,189 1,977

230

193

254

3

2,359

2,180

304

334

480

27

2,179

2,020

293

370

491

19

10

1,766 1,514

225

4311

446

31

1,549

1,134

145

295

291

1

1,087

755

21 and under 22

171

74

170

114

148

71

223

100

2931

154

1

1,006|

514

22 and over ...

325

162

292

156

333

226

326

154

626

304

7

1

1,909 1,003

TOTAL

5,871

4,529

4,148

3,282 2,845 2,508

2,032

1,627

2,629

2,522

64

26

17,589 14,494

Digitized by

Google

43

TABLE IV a

ENROLMENT IN TECHNICAL AND VOCATIONAL DAY SCHOOLS AS AT 31.3.67

Branch of Education

No. of

Schools

Government

M.

Enrolment

F. Total

No. of

Schools

Subsidized

M.

Enrolment

F. Total

No. of Schools

Private

Enrolment

M.

F. Total

No. of Schools

Total

Enrolment

M. F. Total

Technical College

11,208 100 1,308|

11,208 100, 1,308

Technical Schools...

6 3,387 1,368 4,755 2

379 333 712 10 2,496

201 2,697 18 6,262 1,902 8,164

!

Vocational Schools

1

185

185 4 359

367 726 5 544 367: 911

Commercial Schools

76

76 18

486 1,189, 1,675 19 486 1,265 1,751

:

TOTAL

7|4,595 1,468 6,063

564 409 973 32 3,341 1,757 5,098 438,500 3,634 12,134

TABLE IV b

ENROLMENT IN TECHNICAL AND VOCATIONAL COURSES OTHER THAN TEACHER TRAINING COURSES FOR THE YEAR 1966 TO 1967

Government Schools

Subsidized Schools

Private Schools

GRAND TOTAL

Description of Courses

Figure in brackets=length in years

M

F

Total

M

F

Total

M

F

Total

M

F Total

POST SECONDARY AND FURTHER:

HONG KONG Technical COLLEGE

Higher Diploma (Full-time) courses:

Building Technology (3)

69

70

Structural Engineering (3)

74

76

Commerce-Accountancy (3)

104

125

Electrical Engineering (3)

153

153

Mechanical Engineering (3)

76

76

Production Engineering (3)

68

Textiles (3)

61

Dyeing & Finishing (3)

73

75

22332080

69

NAOJURNA

104

153

153

76

68

22923023

Sub-total

678

30

708

|

Ordinary Diploma (Full-time) courses:

Building (2)

Electrical (2)

108

Mechanical (2).

Textiles (2)

Marine Engineering Cadets' Course(2)||

Sub-total

Certificate (Full-time) Course:

Commerce-Secretarial (1)

45488

50

01111

56

108

48

19

45

270

6

276

1

T

| | | | |

| | | | |

T

678

30

708

28***

45

50

108

108

48

19

சுமககித

270

a

276

6353

65

65

65

44

Digitized by

Google

Sub-total

65

155

65

65

65

Digitized by

Google

45

TABLE IV b-Contd.

ENROLMENT IN TECHNICAL AND VOCATIONAL COURSES OTHER THAN TEACHER TRAINING COURSES FOR THE YEAR 1966 TO 1967

Government Schools

Subsidized Schools

Private Schools

GRAND TOTAL

Description of Courses

Figures in brackets-length in years

M

F Total M

Total

M

F Total

M

F

Total

Craft Courses:

Automobile Mechanics (1)

21

Carpentry and Joinery (1)

25

Radio Mechanics (1)

31

Sheet Metal Work (1)...

19

96

1998

21

25

31

19

96

Sub-total

Pre-Apprentice Courses:

Building (1)

Electrical (1)

Mechanical (1)..

Sub-total

Other full-time Courses:

Masters and Mates

Radar Observers

30

30

39

39

36

36

105

105

| | | |

| | | |

| | |

T

| | | │

| | |

| | | |

21

25

31

19

96

| | | | | │

21

25

31

19

96

30

30

39

39

36

36

105

105

40

40

Radar Maintenance

16

66

Radio Officers, 1st Class P.M.G. Radio Officers, 2nd Class, P.M.G.

45

****

66

858

16

8

8

45

****

Sub-total

175

175

40

40

16

16

66

66

&

8

45

45

175

175

*****

***

Certificate (Part-time Day) Courses:

Laboratory Technicians (3)

62

13

75

62

13

75

Mechanical Engineering (5)

Electrical Engineering (5)

P.W.D. Engineering Support Staff (4)

::

186

186

M

186

62

62

62

57

$7

37

Land Surveyors (3 months)

8

8

8

R.I.C.S. (1)

16

16

16

00

186

62

57

8

16

Workshop Instructors' Training

Course (11 wks.)

Housing Managers (2)

Sub-total

25

25

25

38

38

38

454

13

467

454

13

O|||

25

38

467

TABLE IV b-Contd.

ENROLMENT IN TECHNICAL AND VOCATIONAL COURSES OTHER THAN TEACHER TRAINING COURSES FOR THE YEAR 1966 TO 1967

Government Schools

Subsidized Schools

Private Schools

GRAND TOTAL

Description of Courses

Figures in brackets-length in years

M

F

Total

M

F

Total

M

F

Total

M

F

Total

Part-time Short Courses and Seminars:

Housing Caretakers (5 courses) Pleasure Craft Engineers (3 courses)

265

74

74

Pleasure Craft Masters (3 courses)

70

Hand Power Tools (2 courses)

60

Critical Path Planning (1 course)

21

21

Large Diam. Bored Piles (2 courses)

74

74

Matrix Method of frame Analysis

(1 course)

37

37

First Aid for Lab. Tech. III (1 course)||

22

Concrete Practice (9 courses)

272

Appreciation of Woodworking Mach.

(2 courses)

42

42

Work Study for Builders (2 courses)

60

60

Building Law (2 courses)

64

64

Site Supervision (3 courses)

105

105

**ASA* MAR 0813

| | | | | │

1 1 1 1 1 1

111

620827 722 7836

| | |

Modern Developments in Dyeing & Finishing processes for Wool

Knitwear (1 course)

38

38

Structural Designs & Details of Water|| Retaining Structures (1 course)

41

41

265

265

74

74

70

70

60

21

21

74

74

37

37

22

22

272

272

42

60

64

105

38

38

41

41

60

46

Digitized by

Google

Sub-total

1,245

1,245

1

{

| | | | | |

Part-time evening Courses:

Accountancy (5)

155

17

Advanced Structures (1)

45

Automobile Engineering (4)

64

Automobile Mechanics (4)

28

Book-keeping (3)

160

180

Bricklaying & Plastering (3)

26

511181

172

45

64

28

340

26

Carried forward

478

197

675

| | | | | |

1

T

1,245

1,245

155

17

172

45

45

64

64

28

28

160

180

340

26

26

T

| | | | | |

478

197

675

Digitized by

Google

47

TABLE IV b—Contd.

ENROLMENT IN TECHNICAL AND VOCATIONAL COURSES OTHER THAN TEACHER TRAINING COURSES FOR THE YEAR 1966 TO 1967

Government Schools

Subsidized Schools

Private Schools

GRAND TOTAL

Description of Courses

Figures in brackets=length in years

M

F

Total

M

Total

M

F

Total

M

F

Total

Brought forward

Building Technology (4)

Building Craft Pre-apprenticeship Extension (2)

Building Law (1)

Building Organization &

Supervision (1)

Building Technicians (4) Carpentry & Joinery (3)

Cert. Course in Commerce (3) Civil Engineering (4)

Chinese Factory Accounts (2) Commercial Design (2)

Concrete Technology (1)

Costing (2)

Dental Mechanics (1)

Dyeing & Finishing (4)

Electrical Engineering (4)

Electrical Fitting & Installation

Craft (3)

Electrical Technicians (4)

General Course (2)

2,631

Health Inspectors (1)

Industrial Chemistry (4)

§ 8 DE ABF9KAANRADY ZAZZ

32

119

Institution of Electrical Engineers,

Pt. III (2)

23

Institution of Structural Engineers

A & B (1)

Management Studies (3)

Marine Engineering (4)

102

388

33

85

197

675

539

! || | ||||||||||||||||||

23

33

85

102

Bow

32

119

2,631

29

71

130

194

22

136

30

37

636

17

Carried forward

5,790

258

6,048

1

11

11

}

I

11 1

110111

11111

1

... │

1

I

1

11 │

T

1

478

197

675

119

23

33

85

102

སྐྱུ ཋ 8ཉྩིང༔R8ནཱཝ8Rཀིཙྩོ ནསིཏྭཱཤ© ཀིཾ ཡཾཝིཛྫི

1

11

2,631

......... TH||2||||||

85

A == *879883≈xAng 522 ~ *d

2,631

102

5,790 258

6,048

TABLE IV ¿—Contd.

ENROLMENT IN TECHNICAL AND VOCATIONAL COURSES OTHER THAN TEACHER TRAINING COURSES FOR THE YEAR 1966 TO 1967

Ag

11,092

543 11,635

14,115

657

14,772

Government Schools

Subsidized Schools

Private Schools

GRAND TOTAL

Description of Courses

Figures in brackets=length in years

M

F

Total

M

F

Total

M

F

Total

M

F

Total

Brought forward

5,790

258

6,048

5,790

258

6,048

Mechanical Engineering (4)

626

626

I

626

1

Mechanical Engineering Craft

Practice (4)

36

Naval Architecture (4)

57

Painting & Decorating (2)

21

Plumbing Craft (3)

61

Production Engineering (4)

44

Preliminary Course (2)

3,245

Radio Servicing (2)

56

Refrigeration (1)

45

R.L.C.S. (1)

1 1 1 1 1 ⠀⠀

36

626

36

57

21

61

61

44

44

3,245

3,245

36

45

45

45

| | | | | | | | |

$7

21

61

44

3,245

56

45

45

Sanitary Engineering & Building

Services (2)

1

32

Sheet Metal Work (4)...

17

Shorthand (6)

3

285

288

111

32

32

17

17

3

285

288

...

Special Dyeing & Finishing (2)

8

8

8

8

Soil Mechanics (1)

14

14

14

14

Structural Engineering (4)

159

159

159

159

Supply Officers (3)

103

103

103

103

Supervisory Studies (1)

30

30

30

30

Surveying (2)

175

175

175

175

Technical Teachers (2)

19

19

19

19

Telecommunications (6)

391

391

391

391

Television Servicing (2)

16

16

16

16

Tool and Die Making (4)

16

16

16

16

Trade School Extension (2)

22

22

Weaving (4)

46

46

46

Work Study (1)

15

15

15

Sub-total

1

48

Digitized by

Google

11,092

543 | 11,635

Grand-total

14,115

657 | 14,772

1

I

I

TABLE IV b-Contd.

ENROLMENT IN TECHNICAL AND VOCATIONAL COURSES OTHER THAN TEACHER TRAINING

COURSES FOR THE YEAR 1966 TO 1967

GRAND TOTAL

Government Schools

Subsidized Schools

Private Schools

Description of Courses

Figures in brackets-length in years

M

F Total M

F

Total

M

F Total

M

F

Total

MISCELLANEOUS

Full-time:

Technical

Vocational

49

Digitized by

Google

Commercial

Total

Part-time:

Technical Vocational Commercial

Total

| | 1

T

| | |

T

| | 1

111

1

1,369

129

996

33

2,365

162

1,369

129

996

33

2,365

162

1,498

1,029 2,527 1,498

1,029

2,527

709

I

710

709

710

953

821

1,776

955

821

1,776

875 873 1,748

875

873

1,748

2,539

1,695

4,234

2,539

!

1,695

4.234

Technical

3,387

1,368 4.755

379

333

712

2,496

201

2,697

6,262

1,902

8.164

Vocational

Commercial

Total

185

185

359

367

726

544

367

911

76

76

486

1.189

1,675

486

1,265

1,751

3,387 1,368 4,755

564

409

973

3,341

1,757 5,098

7,292

3,534 | 10,826

GRAND TOTAL

17,502

2,025 19,527

564

409

973

7,378

4,481 | 11,859 25,444

6,915 | 32,359

SECONDARY

Full-time:

TABLE V

ACTUAL EXPENDITURE ON EDUCATION DURING

THE YEAR ENDED 31.3.67

A: Allocation of Expenditure

RECURRENT

Primary Education...

Secondary

Teacher Training

Technical & Vocational

Post Secondary

Other Education

Administrative (non-allocated)

Sub-total

NON-RECURRENT

GRANTS TO HONG KONG UNIVERSITY.

GRANTS TO Chinese UNIVERSITY

Total:

B: Source of Expenditure

From Territorial Revenue

From United Kingdom Funds

From other sources

Total:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

Year ended 31.3.67

Year ended 31.3.66

$147,825,446 $129,175,860

43,547,048

38,735,282

5,850,269

5,156,232

10,439,095

9,277,173

1,530,809

1,333,687

3,625,616

2,892,191

11,890,358

11,044,405

$224,708,641

$197,614,830

$ 14,100,824

$ 14,641,633

$ 15,148,811

$ 14,937,074

$ 19,052,531 $ 17,376,447

$273,010,807

$244,569,984

$273,010,807 (including

revenue from fees)

$273,010,807

N.B.: Details of expenditure by voluntary Agencies are not included.

50

Digitized by Google

TABLE VI

TOTAL RECEIPTS FROM SCHOOL FEES (1ST APRIL, 1966 to 31st March, 1967)

Day Schools

Evening and Special Afternoon Classes

Schools

School Fees

Total

Extra Subscriptions

School Fees

Extra Subscriptions

Government

$ 8,174,592.90

$ 1,944,039.50

Grant

$ 4,895,354.18

$2,343,144.50

$10,118,632.40

$ 7,238,498.68

Subsidized

Private

$ 14,056,157.09 $ 7,704,626.91 $ 64,359.60

$ 64,259,50 $ 21,889,403.10

$119,440,941.22 $ 2,179,869.04

$11,205,162.10

$ 93,334.50

$132,919,306.86

TOTAL

| $146,567,045.39

Note: 1.

2.

$12,227,640.45

$13,213,561.20

$157,594.00 $172,165,841.04

Extra Subscriptions = Incidentals/Tong Fai and Monthly Subscriptions. These are used to defray posts of new equipment, building repairs, games equipment, library books and magazines, domestic science and handbook materials, etc.

In addition, donations from voluntary bodies towards new school buildings, equipment and running expenses, etc., are as follows:

Aided School

Private Schools...

...

$ 3,357,248.05 $ 7,470,192.17

TOTAL

$10,827,440.22

TABLE VII a

ANALYSIS OF SCHOOL CERTIFICATE RESULTS

English School Certificate

Chinese School Certificate

Year

Sat

Passed

% Passed

Sat

Passed

% Passed

1955 ...

1,979

1,322

66.8

1,445

947

65.54

1956 ...

2,416

1,517

62.8

1,548

1,173

75.77

1957

2,958

1,860

62.9

1,852

1,194

63.17

1958

3,309

2,245

67.8

2,118

1,477

69.74

1959

3,944

2,586

65.5

2,316

1,644

70.99

1960

4,491

2,941

65.5

2,377

1,656

69.7

1961

4,644

2,946

63.4

2,334

1,788

76.6

1962

3,181

3,186

61.5

2,284

1,752

76.7

1963 ...

6,334

3,829

60.4

2,732

2,091

76.5

1964

8,153

4,522

55.46

2,964

2,014

67.9

1965

9,675

5,265

54.4

6,990

4,476

64.0

1966

13,977

7,872

56.3

5,854

3,866

66.0

51

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TABLE VII b

ANALYSIS OF ENGLISH SCHOOL CERTIFICATE RESULTS (1966)

...................................

Subject

No. Sat

No. Passed

% Pass (Of those who sat)

F. V

13,977

8,614

61.6

English Lang.

F. VI Night School

760 17,443

603

9,702

79.3

55.6

2,706)

485)

17.9

Physics

Chinese Lang. &

Literature

Chinese History

Geography ...

History I

History II

Biology {F.VI

Chemistry

F. V F. VI

Mathematics

...

·F. V

F. VI

Biblical Knowledge

Econ. & Pub. Affairs

Eng. Literature

D. S. Cookery

D. S. Needlework

General Science

Add. Gen. Science...

Art Papers 1, 2 & 3

Art Papers 1, 2 & 4

Dressmaking

Technical Drawing...

F. V 1 F. VI.

***

13,5551

99 13,654 9,707 9,785

71.61

71.7

781

78.85

:

:.

:

:

11,297

7,465

66.1

10,867

5,984

55.1

102

95

93.1

8,194

4,534

55.3

::

:

11,307} 11,309 6,712 6,714

59.41

59.4

100.0/

8,729

5,772

66.1

6,804) 6,899 3,807) 3,868

56.0r

56.1

64.23

9,491

1513

9,642

6,2951

134)

6,429

66.31

88.7)

66.7

:

:.

5,251

3,494

66.5

3,884

1,822

46.9

...

:.

:

:

:

:

1,607

1,240

77.2

364

339

93.1

55

28

50.9

135

43

31.9

67

22

32.8

269

120

44.6

5

4

80.0

115

:.

:

65

56.5

725

586

80.8

52

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Google

TABLE VII b-Contd.

Subject

No. Sat

No. Passed

% Pass (Of those who sat)

Metalwork

Pottery

Practical Electricity

Woodwork

403

281

69.7

:

:

:

15

15

100.0

28

27

96.4

261

179

68.6

Embroidery...

49

40

81.6

Principles of Accounts

185

159

86.0

Typewriting & Shorthand...

80

6

7.5

Music, Papers 1, 2 & 3a

71

68

95.8

Music, Papers 1, 2 & 3b

Elementary Chinese

F. V

:

181

F. VI

+ 82

Land

3

75.0

141

20

16

77.81

80.0

21

100.0/

F. V

French { F. VI

Portuguese

Dutch

158

2

6

1

137

86.7

2

100.0

4

66.7

100.0

Hindi

German

16

15

93.8

1

197

1

171

100.0

86.8

Indonesian

4

100.0

Burmese

Malay

Spanish

Thai ...

100.0

0.0

1

100.0

80.0

RESULTS OF EXAMINATION FOR 1965 AND 1966

Full Examination

No. of Entrants

No. of Candidates Sat

No. of Passes

No. of Failures

Percentage Passed

No. of Entrants

English Language Only

No. of Candidates Sat

No. of Passes

No. of Failures

Percentage Passed

**

眼瞎

***

***

***

53

:

1965

1966

***

10,061

14,686

9,675

13,977

***

5,265

7,872

...

*

4,410

6,105

54.42

56.32

3,068

3,569

2,162

2,706

437

485

1,725

2,221

20.21

17.92

Digitized by

Google

Percent-

Sat Passed

age

Passed

TABLE VII c

ANALYSIS OF CHINESE SCHOOL CERTIFICATE RESULTS, 1966

Subject

...

:

5,851

*

5,034

86.0

5,087

2,759

54.2

5,641

3,830

67.9

4,831

2,862

59.2

3,201

2,013

62.9

1,532

885

57.8

4,352

2,653

61.0

2,637

1,634

62.0

4,319

2,591

60.0

5,689

3,730

65.6

192

112

51.3

:

3,230

2,376

73.6

993

815

82.1

43

38

88.4

928

407

43.9

44

41

93.2

30

13

43.3

66

29

43.9

10

8

80.0

15

15

100.0

:

:

:

:

:

Chinese Language

English Language

History

Geography

Civics

Advanced Mathematics

Ordinary Mathematics

Physics

Chemistry

Biology

Domestic Subjects...

:

Biblical Knowledge (Protestant) Biblical Knowledge (Catholic) Buddhist Studies

Art

Music

Bookkeeping

...

:

1965

1966

7,085

6,206

6,990

5,854

4,476

3,866

2,514

1,988

64.0

66.0

RESULTS OF EXAMINATION FOR 1965 AND 1966

Typewriting

Technical Drawing Dressmaking

:

:.

Number of entrants

Number of candidates sat

Number of passes

Number of failures

Percentage passed

:

...

54

:

:

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Google

TABLE VII d

HONG KONG MATRICULATION EXAMINATION RESULTS

1960

1961

1962

1963

1964

1965

1966

1967

No. of candidates (‘O' and ‘A' levels combined)

3,426

4,281 3,272

3,388

3,673

4,161

No. of candidates at ‘A' level only

1,546

1,935 1,952

1,795

1,782

2,001

2,446

2,235

No. of candidates successfully completing matriculation requirements

570

714

865

886

939 1,134

1,258

(Not yet

known)

55

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Google

NOTE: The ‘O' level examinations were discontinued after the 1965 papers. Future statistical tables will give only the second and lower lines of figures shown above.

1966

1967

HONG KONG CHINESE MATRICULATION EXAMINATION RESULTS

1964

1965

No. of candidates entered

3,055

4,041

2,183

2,555

No. of candidates successful

1,007

1,100

908

(Not yet known)

TABLE VIIe (i)

GENERAL CERTIFICATE OF EDUCATION EXAMINATION ANALYSIS OF RESULTS, SUMMER 1966

Number of Candidates entered Number of Candidates sat

***

Number of Entries (Ordinary Level) Number of Passes (Ordinary Level) ....... Number of Entries (Advanced Level)

7,446

6,701

20,574

9,451

10,905

Number of Passes (Advanced Level) Number of Passes at O.L.*

4,679

1,029

Number of Certificates awarded

5,381

Ordinary Level

Advanced Level

Subject

%

Entries

Sat Passes

Entries

Sat

%

Passed

Passes

Passed

Principles of Accounts

187

146

121

82.9

Art, Syllabus A

85

70

48

68.6

Biology

2,371

1,765

1,166

66.1

Botany

12

8

62.5

British Constitution

36

17

3

17.6

Chemistry

2,367

1,804

1,418

78.6

Commerce

59

34

16

47.1

Cookery

18

16

10

62.5

Needlework

7

5

71.4

Economics

291

199

78

39.2

Elementary Surveying

76

66

56

84.9

English Language

6,211

5,623

1,522

27.1

English Literature

513

380

226

59.5

English Literature 'B'

99

75

36

48.0

French

178

138

68

49.3

General Science

2

50.0

Geography

1,429

1,040

62.0

Geology

6

2

50.0

German

24

15

33.3

History

1,034

772

428

55.4

Ancient History

Hist. of Br. Com. & Emp..

18

13

10

77.0

Br. Economic History

8

6

16.7

Hum. Anat., Phy. & Hygiene

Italian

Latin, Syllabus A

Logic

Pure Mathematics ‘A'

Pure Mathematics 'B' Add./Further Maths. Applied Mathematics Pure & Applied Maths. Music

Physics

Physics-with-Chemistry

2,303

113

81

70

86.4

1

2,252

Religious Knowledge

ཌཌི8བྷུeསྶ 1 1ཋ8ས⌘

100.0

17

11

45.5

46

13.0

1,829

1,598

87.4

1,900

64 211

58 90.6

157

74.4

1,243

44.4

1,838

1,479

80.5

15

3

20.0

55

16

29.1

Russian

2

100.0

Spanish

Technical Drawing

133

116

0 68.1

Zoology

Bahasa Indonesia

3

Burmese

1

Chinese/Classical Chinese

116

91

Dutch

+

Hindi

Japanese/Classical Jap.

Malay

~22-0

75.0 100.0 96.8

100.0

66.7 33.3

3,117

Norwegian

Portuguese

Siamese

Urdu

TOTAL

1

20,574 | 16,598

131

75.0 100.0

|****|||||22|8g|2||__ | | | | |~||~||

39

314

5

39

580

185

1 |188གམྦྷ81118| [o-c

Passed at O.L.*

64.1

11

72.0

44

100,0

15.4

38.0

135

13.0

53.0

20.0

29.0

126

18.9

95

3 100.0

134

27.9

88

20.0

1,462

991

2,763

12-181° | 187 | | | | | |- ||

1

100.0

10

5 50.0

1

24

8 33.3

10

716

49.0

162

76

37

48.7

11

392

40.0

185

49*

305

6

3

50.0

417

60.4

75

70.1

57.1

1,933

70.0

125

100.0

9,451

57.0 10,905

8,556

4,679

54.7 1,029

NOTE: * Denotes candidates who failed to reach the pass standard at the Advanced Level but

were awarded a pass at Ordinary Level.

56

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TABLE VIIe (ii)

GENERAL CERTIFICATE OF EDUCATION EXAMINATION ANALYSIS OF RESULTS, JANUARY 1967

Number of Candidates entered ... Number of Candidates sat

Number of Entries (Ordinary Level) Number of Passes (Ordinary Level) Number of Entries (Advanced Level) Number of Passes (Advanced Level) Number of passes at O.L.* Number of Certificates awarded

1,741

1,588

1,740

332

831

206

134

507

Ordinary Level

Advanced Level

Subject

Entries

Passed Sat

% Passed

Entries Sat Passed

% Passed at O.L.*

Passed

Art, Syllabus A

Biology

British Constitution

5

+

4 100.0

1

6

66.7

42

32

12

37.5

12

15

9

2

22.2

3

Chemistry

6

2

40.0

113

77

21

27.3

12

...

English Language .......

1,536

1,441

252

17.5

W

English Literature 'A'

1

5

2

40.0

French

9

4

50.0

1

1

0

·

1

Geography...

1

1

1 100.0

121

74

22

29.7

10

History

96

61

37 60.7

95

44

13

29.5

19

Ancient History

1

1

-

Hist. of Br. Com. & Emp.

11

-

1

1

Human Anatomy, Physio-

logy and Hygiene

100.0

1

Latin, Syllabus 'A'

1

-

Pure Maths., Syll. ‘A'

2

238

167

Additional Mathematics

52

23

18 78.3

1

615

I

}

$ 1

41.3

46

}

T

Applied Maths.

170

124

45 36.3

40

Pure & Applied Maths.

32

28

22 78.6

1

Music

1

0

T

Physics

2

2

2 100.0

2

2

1

Physics-with-Chemistry

1

*

Religious Knowledge

5

فيا

60.0

1

I

I

1

I

Zoology

1

Į

2

1

I

I

O

1

O

TOTALS

1,740

1,570 332

21.2

831

559

206 36.9

146

NOTE: * Denotes candidates who failed to reach the pass standard at the Advanced Level but

were awarded a pass at Ordinary Level.

57

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TABLE VIIƒ

SECONDARY SCHOOL ENTRANCE EXAMINATION, 1964, 1965 AND 1966

Sat

Promoted

Scholarships

Type of School

1964

1965 1966 1964 1965

1966 1964

1965 1966

Government

Grant

Subsidized

Private

8,113 7,891 7,407

107 78

70

12,310 13,586 15,067

1,932 1,707 1,717

51

21

36

36

31

19

36

2

2

4,597

5,594 6,616

104

105

8,005 7,589 7,596

1,433

1,578 1,658

2283

23

32

135

23

TOTAL

28,535 29,144|| 30,140| 8,013

8,900 10,027

170

160

179

TABLE VII g

OVERSEAS EXAMINATIONS, EXCLUDING TECHNICAL EXAMINATIONS, 1966

Examinations

Entered

Sat

General Certificate of Education Examination

7,446

6,701

London Chamber of Commerce Examinations

7,196

5,383

Pitman's Shorthand Examinations

520

498

Pitman's Typewriting (Intermediate) Examination

35

34

University of London External Degree Examinations

97

84

Chartered Institute of Secretaries Examinations

128

90

Institute of Book-keepers Examination

47

39

Association of International Accountants Examinations

489

417

Association of Certified and Corporate Examinations

205

160

Institute of Chartered Shipbrokers Examination

7

4

Institute of Fire Engineers Examination

66

55

Cambridge Certificate of Proficiency in English Examinations

142

126

Cambridge Lower Certificate in English Examinations

60

58

College of Preceptors Examination

4

3

Gemmological Association Examination

5

$

British Federation of Master Printers Examination

2

2

Society of Engineers (Graduateship) Examinations

3

D

Institute of Export Examination

Swinburne Technical College Diploma Examination

1

Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology Examination

1

The Polytechnic Diploma in Management of Studies Examination The Australian Institute of Cartographers Examination

1

1

Northern Universities Joint Matriculation Board (G.C.E.) Examination

TOTAL

58

Digitized by

1

16,459

13,668

Google

TABLE VII ħ

TECHNICAL EXAMINATIONS RESULTS FOR THE PERIOD

FROM 1.4.66–31.3.67

Technical Examinations

Institution of Building, Membership

Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors

First Examination

Institution of Structural Engineers Part A... Institution of Structural Engineers Part B

Institution of Civil Engineers, Mechanical Engineers,

Electrical Engineers and Structural Engineers:

Joint Part I

Institution of Electrical Engineers, Associate Membership:

Part II

Part III

Institution of Mechanical Engineers, Associate Membership:

Part II

Part IIIA and IIIB

City and Guilds of London Institute

Technological Examinations

Ordinary Certificate:

Electrical Engineering S1-S3

Mechanical Engineering S1-S3

Higher Certificate:

Electrical Engineering S1 Mechanical Engineering S1

P.M.G. Certificate in Wireless Telegraphy:

First Class, Part I

First Class, Part II

Second Class, Part I

Second Class, Part II

Colonial Certificate of Competency:

Masters

First Mates

Second Mates

Radar Maintenance Technicians

Radar Observers...

First Class Engineers, Part A First Class Engineers, Part B Second Class Engineers, Part A Second Class Engineers, Part B

...

59

***

No.

No. Sat

Passed

7

2

6

28

47

12

72

12

not

yet known

34

14

*4

15

36

15

14

52

1,638

1,186

19

13

18

12

32

34

2

IN

23

21

ara2

15

12

7642

:

15

71

aman-23+2

9

16

9

36

4

12

sannävääw.

3

6

7

2

...

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Google

TABLE VII /

THE ASSOCIATED BOARD OF THE ROYAL SCHOOLS OF MUSIC

THEORY OF MUSIC EXAMINATION 1966–67

(Previous year's figures in brackets)

Sat

Passed

July 1966

Nov. March

Total

July

1966 1967

1966

Nov. March 1966 1967

Total

Grades I-VIII.

354

487

(315)

(487)

583 1,424 294 (472) | (1,274)| (283)

439

(455)

486 1,219 (412) | (1,150)

Grades I-VIII

L.R.S.M.

PRACTICAL EXAMINATION, 1966

:

:

60

:

Sat

Passed

4,049

2,017

(3,542)

(2,893)

43

14

[

(30)

(9)

Digitized by Google

TABLE VIII a

UNIVERSITY OF HONG KONG

Analysis of Student Numbers in FacuLTIES AND THE INSTITUTE of Oriental Studies-31st March, 1967

Engineering and Architecture

Reading for First Degrees

1st year/1st pre-clinical year 2nd year/2nd pre-clinical year

3rd year/1st clinical year

4th year/2nd clinical year 5th year/final year B.Sc. Special

Sub-totals

Reading for Higher Degrees*

Masters (Part-time)

Masters (Full-time)

Masters in Education (Part-time)

Masters in Education (Full-time)

Doctors (Part-time)

Doctors (Full-time)

Sub-totals

152

72

13

19

Arts

Science Medicine

I.O.S.

M. W. M. W. M. W.

(Eng.) M. W. M. W.

(Arch.)

M. W.

Social

Study

M. W.

Sub-totals

Part- | Full- time time

Total

115 153 73 18 117 156 61 201 1041 145 49 26

95

251

114

76

12

67 12

68

38220

65

569

821

5931

58

23

495

7

281

|||

17

971

15

93

32

790

279

496

205

109

1,879

964

70

27

131

31

126)

68

34

261

261

Reading for Diplomas & Certificates

Cert. Ed. (Part-time)

341

11

Dip. Ed. (Full-time)

9

Dip. in Social Study.

Cert. in Social Study, 1st year

Cert. in Social Study, 2nd year

Sub-totals

59

45

14

18

19

2

8

10

29

88

Others

Language School

37

11

12

36

External

9

L

21

Sub-totals

16

2

3

48

69

Sub-totals

TOTALS

487; 530

1,017

264; 89) 429)

353

80

2271

100 14

37

11

31

26

245 2,052) 2,297

509

227

114

48

29

2,297

61

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Google

* A "full-time" candidate for a Master's Degree intends to complete the degree in two years; for a Ph.D., in three years. Others appear against the designation “part-time”.

Men: 1,547-67.35%

Women:

750*** 32.65%

TABLE VIII b

UNIVERSITY OF HONG KONG DEGREES CONFERRED NOVEMBER, 1966

HIGHER DEGREES

:.

:

***

::

:

M.D.

Ph.D.

...

M.Sc.(Eng)

M.A.

M.Sc.

***

...

***

...

:

:

...

...

FIRST DEGREES

...

B.Sc.(Sp)

M.B.,B.S. B.Sc. (Eng)

B.A.

B.Sc.(Gen)

B.Arch. ...

***

2

4 6

***

5

in 00

18

:

30

73

***

...

***

55

257

67

7

62

Digitized by

Google

Digitized by

63

Google

TABLE VIII c

THE CHINESE UNIVERSITY OF HONG KONG

STUDENT ENROLMENT AS At 31.3.67

1st year

2nd year 3rd year 4th year

Post-Grad | Sub-total

Faculty

Department

College

M F

M

F

M F

M F

M

F

M

F

1. Arts

Chi. Lang. & Lit.

Eng. Lang, & Lit.

History

R.K. & Phil.

Philosophy Fine Arts

Music

Nlavu-alow

ہےں ہےںںںںں نے ں نے ںں نے

ں نے ہے میں نے ںں ہے ںں نے ی

II. Commerce

& Social

Science

Acct. & Finance

Econ. & Bus. Adm. Economics

Business Manage-

ment

Geography

Soc. & Soc. Work

Social Work

Sociology

Journalism

2WW.

19367

sal-0.lwwõoôw

I

Tulloan.

2000-45

|ul|zönaweÑoo

136

10=3=6722

moonnmminen|00|

|ŵalo....☎omuFau

akwwuuato-OBWA

sauuãax=☎wa|E

623

TOTAL

by Subj. [by Dept. by Faculty

amunỡ I-TUS

ZIRORIZNIC89X*

251

100

131

28373658RE

382

534

398

780

TABLE VIII c-Contd.

THE CHINESE UNIVERSITY OF HONG KONG

STUDENT ENROLMENT AS at 31.3.67

1st year 2nd year

3rd year

4th year Post-Grad | Sub-total

TOTAL

Faculty

Department

College

M

F

M

F

M F

M

F

M

F M F

by Subj. | by Dept. by Faculty

III. Science

Mathematics

Physics

Chemistry

Biology

26

29

53

3

39

16

38

13

11

11

10

11

3

11

6

37

8

11

7

12

10

12

N..

8

7

8

9

7

AXACARISEES

32

38

103

39

81

8

37 40

32 19

MNAKPURA

65

46

150

45

180

77

$1

128

561

Chung Chi: Sub-Total (by sex)

78 69

92 77

(by class)

147

169

91 89

180

121 88

209

382 323

705

(M)

(F)

New Asia:

Sub-Total (by sex)

93

52

(by class)

145

112 53

165

90 43

133(21)

103 45

148(27)

398 193

591(48)

1,125

750

GRAND TOTAL

United:

Sub-Total (by sex)

91 70

(by class)

161

91 55

146

83 73 80 36 156(3) 116(11)

345 234

579(14)|

1,875*

TOTAL

453

480

469

473

IV. Others

School of Ed.

Graduate School

Research Inst.

N.A.

772

15

4

|||

Exchange & Part-

C.C.

time Students

N.A.

27

TOTAL

19

5

24

2

8

99

14

212-2

64

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NOTE:

* If the students of the School of Education, Graduate School, the Institute, and the exchange and part-time students are included, the grand total will be 1,974.

( ) Figures in parentheses are pre-University graduates re-admitted to degree courses.

TABLE VIII d

THE CHINESE UNIVERSITY OF HONG KONG

DEGREES AND DIPLOMAS CONFERRED, 1966

DEGREES CONFERRED

B.A.

B.Sc.

B.Comm.

B.S.Sc.

...

...

Dip.A.

Dip.Sc. Dip.S.Sc.

***

Dip. in Education

::

***

Diplomas CONFERRED

...

...

***

...

POST-GRADUate Diplomas Conferred

:

115

*

67

35

83

...

18

3

w ão in

65

19

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TABLE IX a

NUMBERS OF STUDENTS WHO HAVE LEFT HONG KONG FOR

OVERSEAS STUDY DURING RECENT YEARS

YEAR

1962-63

1963-64

1964-65

1965-66

1966-67

::

::

U.K.

U.S.A.

Canada

Australia

568

810

310

405

626

911

327

372

793

794

279

238

...

1,046

1,012

387

276

...

1,247

1,111

549

193

TABLE IX b

HONG KONG STUDENTS' UNIT, LONDON

TOTAL NUMBER, AND DISTRIBUTION BY COURSES OF HONG KONG STUDENTS IN BRITAIN

Course

1963

1964

1965

1966

1967

Nursing Engineering

548

469

450

533

637

229

235

276

309

364

Medicine

150

143

132

120

126

Law

77

106

110

117

119

Architecture

59

40

34

40

42

B. Science

79

80

79

98

110

Accountancy

20

Music

31

Arts

Education

Economics

28111

23

30

44

54

34

31

31

42

38

32

Commerce

47

Dentistry

8

G.C.E.

733

Textiles...

16

Secretarial

88

Social Science ...

11

Meteorology

2

Others ...

574

617

845

998

243

School Children

229

294

455

661

861

1,996

2,035 2,445

2,951

3,604

66

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TABLE X

ADULT EDUCATION: AS AT 31.3.67

Government

Total

Enrolment

Private

Enrolment

Enrolment

Total

Total

M.

F.

M.

F.

M.

Total

F.

131

111

242

848

481 1,329

979

592

1,571

2,574

2,277

4,851

2,574

2,277

4,851

1,131

924

2,055

1,131

924

2,055

9

114

123

9

114

123

137

239

376

137

239

376

13

21

34

13

21

34

...

24

15

39

24

15

39

253

4,656

4,909

253

4,656

4,909

90

474

564

230

1,123

1,353

320

1,597

1,917

* 4,362

8,831

13,193

1,078

1,604

2,682

5,440 | 10,435 | 15,875

General:

Evening School of Higher Chinese Studies and Private Evening Colleges..

English Language.

...

Chinese (General Subjects)

Music

Art and Crafts

Mathematics

Gymnastics

...

...

***

***

Practical Household Courses

Chinese Literacy

...

67

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Sub-total

:

Technical and Vocational:

Technical Courses

Commercial Courses

Part-time Release Courses Other Vocational Courses

10,221

10,221

709

1

710 | 10,930

1❘ 10,931

1,033

485

1,518 1,004 906

1,910 2,037

1,391

3,428

987

14 1,001

987

14

1,001

2,324 1,817

4,141 2,324

1,817

4,141

Sub-total

12,241

499 12,740 4,037

2,724

6,761 | 16,278 3,223 19,501

TOTAL

16,603

9,330 | 25,933 5,115 4,328

9,443 | 21,718 | 13,658 | 35,376

68

TABLE XI

ENROLMENT IN SPECIAL SCHOOLS AS AT 31.3.1967

Type of Schools

Kg.

Primary

Secondary

Secondary Vocational

Total

:

:

:

Schools for Blind Children

Schools for Deaf Children

Schools for Physically Handicapped Children

School for the Mentally Handicapped

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21 (28)

142 (142)

34 (29)

197 (199)

81 (97)

429 (381)

(11)

510 (489)

114 (183)

308 (315)

422 (498)

28

13

15

TOTAL

229 (308)

894 (838)

34 (40)

1,157 (1,186)

NOTE: Last year's figures in brackets.

EDUCATION SCHOLARSHIPS FUND

ACCOUNTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED

31ST AUGUST, 1966

CONTENTS

APPENDIX

Statement

Page

1

Balance Sheet.

70

2 Income and Expenditure Account

71

3

Third Schedule Scholarships-Balance of Capital and

Reserve Fund Accounts

72

4

Sterling Investments

5

Local Investments

6

Deposit at Call

لا اله الا الا الله

73

73

76

69

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STATEMENT 1

EDUCATION SCHOLARSHIPS FUND BALANCE SHEET AS AT 31ST AUGUST, 1966

APPENDIX-Contd.

Statement

1964-65

ASSETS

2nd Schedule

S

3rd Schedule

Total

(or Notes)

93,531.55

Sterling Investments at cost

(80,326.66)

(Market Value $75,234.72)

67,563.93

26,785.02

94,348.95

201,439.22

Local Investments at cost

(217,947.28)

(Market value $243,102.38)...

17,621.89

205,306.43

222,928.32

44,797.99

Cash at Bank

***

3,637.12

20,046.03

23,683.15

1,703.15

Deposit with the Treasury:

Sterling Investment Income in Transit

1,700.82

1,700.82

Deposit at Call

500.00

4,000.00

4,300.00

37.19

Tax Reclaimable

31.50

13.13

44.63

341,509.10

289,329.17

27,576.20

91,055.26

236,150.61

347,205.87

FINANCED AS FOLLOWS:

Capital

67,826.24

222,598.18

2,710.00

21,893.73

341,509.10

Reserve Fund

Suspense Account

Income and Expenditure Account

18,042.96

11,153.24

A

5,186.06

22,399.19

91,055.26

256,150.61

290,424.42

29,196.20

27,585.25

347,205.87

3

Note 1

2

K. J. ATTWELL,

70

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K. W. FORROW,

Treasurer,

Education Scholarships Fund.

1st October, 1966.

Director of Education,

Trustee of Education Scholarships Fund.

Note 1: The $2,710.00 shown under Suspense Account for 1964-65 consisted of a donation of $2,500.00 in respect of the Murjani Scholarship pending acceptance by the Committee; and $210.00 additional donation in respect of the U Sze Wing Scholarship to meet deficiency in the award.

CERTIFICATE OF THE DIRECTOR OF AUDIT

The above Balance Sheet and the accompanying Income and Expenditure Account (together with annexed State- ments 3-6) have been examined in accordance with Section 10(5) of the Education Scholarships Fund Ordinance, 1955. I have obtained all the information and explanations that I have required, and I certify, as a result of this audit, that in my opinion the Balance Sheet and Income and Expenditure Account are correct.

Audit Department, Hong Kong.

7th November, 1966.

P. T. WARR, Acting Director of Audit.

Scholarships

STATEMENT 2

EDUCATION SCHOLARSHIPS FUND

APPENDIX-Contd.

INCOME AND EXPENDITURE ACCOUNT FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31st August, 1966

Balance

Statement

31st August 1966 (or Notes)

Balance 1st Sept. 1965

Income

Amount Available for Awards

Payment of Transferred to Awards 1965-66 Reserve

THIRD SCHEDULE

Fung Ping Shan

Shiu Hing

Lo Wai Kwan

Ho Wing

Alfred Crook

584.50

353.47

937.97

400.00

537.97

481.40

981.39

1,462.79

800.00

2,917.17

2,969.73

5,886.90

1,500.00

662.79

4,386.90

496.72

573.16

1,069,88

400.00

669.88

1,113.54

854.72

1,968.26

800.00

1,168.26

Lau Man Kui

Iu Po Sham

Crozier

2,046.35

1,140.13

3,186,48

500.00

2,686.48

280.09

177.23

457.32

150.00

307.32

Note 2

1,610.86

1,676.97

3,287.83

1,600.00

Cheung Pui Iu

1,687.83

Notes 3 & 8

412.86

450.91

863.77

400.00

64.35

399.42

Cheung Hok Chau

Williamson

426.53

455.56

882.09

300.00

243.85

338.24

444.95

484.71

929.66

400.00

108.70

420.96

Q.C. Centenary J. F. Grose

112.82

536.03

648.85

400.00

248.85

Q.C. Centenary Lo Tze Hoi

Note 4

457.44

453.64

911.08

400.00

wwwww

511.08

Q.C. Centenary Lo Min Nung

457.45

453.64

911.09

400.00

Q.C. Centenary Pang Kwok Sui

511.09

762.46

549.12

1,311.58

400.00

911.58

Q.C. Centenary U Sze Wing

112.40

450.84

563.24

320.00

243.24

Note 5

Griffiths Prize

100.79

111.21

212.00

80.00

Chan Yat Hing

132.00

3,317.08

2,992.65

6,309.73

1,560.00

Lui Kee

Murjani

1,203.10

3,546.63

960.68

1,930.99

2,891.67

700.00

2,191.67

3,287.00

3,287.00

2,450.00

837.00

Note 6

17,096.09

20,883.10

37,979.19

13,960.00

1,620.00

22,399.19

SECOND SCHEDULE

4,797.64

4,888.42

9,686.06

4,500.00

5,186.06

Note 7

Total Second & Third Schedules

21,893.73

25,771.52

47,665.25

18,460.00

1,620.00

27,585.25

71

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Notes 2 to 7 relate to the respective amounts shown under the Income Column, whilst Note 8 relates to the amount as shown under the Balance as at 31st August, 1966.

Note 5: Including $210.00 cash donation credited to Suspense Account in 1964–65.

Note 6: Including $2,500.00 cash donation credited to Suspense Account in 1964-65.

Note 7: Including difference in exchange of $19.76.

Note 8: The amount of cash available for award to be made in 1966-67 is only $870.43 because $817.40 has been reinvested by the Crown Agents.

Note 2: Including tax reclaimable of $13.13.

Note 3: Including difference in exchange of $3.56.

Note 4: Including $287.18 cash donation.

APPENDIX-Contd.

STATEMENT 3

EDUCATION SCHOLARSHIPS FUND

THIRD SCHEDULE SCHOLARSHIPS CAPITAL AND RESERVE FUND ACCOUNTS

As at 31st August, 1966

Scholarships

Fung Ping Shan

Shiu Hing

*

L

Capital Accounts

Reserve Fund Accounts

$ 6,000.00

$

8,085.15

2,707.15

15,117.61

3,235.32

6,553.34

806.87

9,550.00

260.00

11,820.00

510.00

4,200.00

24,517.00

1,450.62

8,257.11

137.89

8,277.37

367.63

7,911.12

232.48

4,633.65

8,058.91

121.09

8,058.91

121.09

6,475.00

5,040.00

1,525.00

36,792.93

1,203.10

24,225.08

17,500.00

$222,598.18

$ 11,153.24

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:.

4:

:

...

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

Lo Wai Kwan

Ho Wing

...

Alfred Crook

Lau Man Kui

Iu Po Sham

Crozier

:

Cheung Pui Iu

Cheung Hok Chau

Williamson

J. F. Grose

Q.C. Lo Tze Hoi

Q.C. Lo Min Nung

Q.C. Pang Kwok Sui

Q.C. U Sze Wing

Griffiths Prize

Chan Yat Hing

Lui Kee

Murjani

72

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STOCKS

S. Australia 3% 1916 or after

British Guiana 5% 1980-85

1980-84

East Africa High Commission 54%

34% War Loan 1952 or after

Joint Misc. Fund

73

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STATEMENT 4

EDUCATION SCHOLARSHIPS FUND STERLING INVESTMENTS AS AT 31st August, 1966

APPENDIX-Contd.

Cost

Market Value

Scholarships Concerned | Nominal Value

Middle

Sterling

Second Schedule

Scholarships

do

£ 7,057. 5. 6d.|

518.12. 9d.

Local

Currency

£3,572.14.11d.] $57,163.93 500. 0. Od.

Market

Rate

Value

Local

Currency

39

£2,752. 6. 9d.} $44,037.40

8,000.00

671

350. 1. 7d.

5,601.26

do

Third Schedule Crozier Scholarship

do

155.16. 7d.j 3,040.12. 14.

150. 0. Od.

1,671. 1. 2d.

2,400.00

26,785.02

70+

109.17. 2d.j

1,757.73

49

1,489.17.11d.

23,838.33

£10,772. 6.11d.] £3,893.16. 1d. $94,348.95*

£4,702. 3. 5d. 575,234.72†

* Exchange cost at date of purchase.

↑ Converted at 1/3d=$1.-

STATEMENT 5

EDUCATION SCHOLARSHIPS FUND LOCAL INVESTments as at 31st August, 1966

Market Value

STOCKS

Scholarships Concerned

Nominal

Value

Cost

Rate

Value

$

34% Rehabilitation Loan 1973-78

Second Schedule Scholarships Third Schedule Iu Po Sham

12,000.00

11,053.39

N63

7,560.00

5,000.00

4,200.00 N63

3,150.00

17,000.00

15.253.39

10,710.00

367

Shares of $10.- -each in Hong Kong & Far Eastern

Investment Co., Ltd.

945

- op

Second Schedule Scholarships Third Schedule Shiu Hing

3,670.00

4,868.50 12.40

4,550.80

9,450.00

9,818.70

12.40

11,718.00

1,312

13,120.00

14,687.20

16,268.80

STATEMENT 5-Contd.

APPENDIX-Contd.

Market Value

STOCKS

Scholarships Concerned

Nominal

Cost

Value

Rate

Value

$

$

34

Shares of $10,- Co., Ltd.

each in Hong Kong Telephone

Third Schedule-Shiu Hing

340.00

711.00

24.30

826.20

115

do

-Lo Wai Kwan

1,150.00

2,880.10 24.30

2,794.50

306

do

-Ho Wing

3,060.00

6,808.00 24.30

7,435.80

249

do

-Q.C. Lo Tze Hoi

2,490.00

7,914.65 | 24.30

6,050.70

249

do

-Q.C. Lo Min

Nung

2,490.00

7,914.65 | 24.30

6,050.70

300

do

-Murjani

3,000.00

7,622.47 | 24.30

7,290.00

1,253

12,530.00

33,850.87

30.447.90

1,000

Shares of $7.50 each in Dairy Farm Ice & Cold Storage Co., Ltd.

Third Schedule-Lo Wai Kwan

7,500.00

14,962.80 36.75

36,750.00

400

200

do

do

-Lau Man Kui -Q.C. Pang

3,000.00

11,580.00 36.75

14,700.00

Kwok Sui

1,500.00

6,475.00 36.75

7,350.00

1,600

12,000.00

33,017.80

58,800.00

288

278 Shares of $10.— each in Hong Kong Electric Co., Ltd. Third Schedule-Cheung Pui Iu do

2,780.00

8,395.00 | 22.60

6,282.80

--Cheung Hok

Chau

2,880.00

8,645.00 | 22.60

6,508.80

282

53

901

do

do

Williamson

2,820.00

7,630.00 22.60

6,373.20

----Chan Yat Hing

$30.00

1,203.10

22.60

1,197.80

9,010.00

25,873.10

20,362.60

200

Shares of $7.— each in Union Water Boat Co., Ltd.......

Third Schedule-Q.C. U Sze

Wing

1,400.00

5,040.00 N19

3,800.00

387

Shares of $5. each in The Hong Kong Tramways Ltd. | Third Schedule—Q.C. J. F. Grose

1,935.00

4,626.75 13.45

5,205.15

150

Shares of 6/8d. each in Hong Kong & China Gas Co., Ltd.

Third Schedule-Griffiths Prize

£50.0.0d.

800.00

1,525.00 10.90

1,635.00

110

Shares of $25.- each in Hongkong & Shanghai Banking Corporation (London Register)

Third Schedule-Alfred Crook

2,750.00

9,550.00 N153 16,830.00

74

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STOCKS

STATEMENT 5-Contd.

APPENDIX-Contd.

Market Value

Nominal

Scholarships Concerned

Cost

Value

Rate

Value

500

Shares of $10. — each in China Light and Power Co., Ltd.

Third Schedule-Murjani

5,000.00

9,211.28 17.50

8,750.00

71% Fixed Deposit with the Bank of East Asia Ltd. 61% Fixed Deposit with the Bank of East Asia Ltd.

Third Schedule-Fung Ping Shan Second Schedule Scholarships Third Schedule-Lo Wai Kwan -Ho Wing

6,000.00

6,000.00

6,000.00

1,700.00

1,700.00

1,700.00

60.17

60.17

60.17

195.33

195.33

195.33

Alfred Crook

260.00

260.00

260.00

-Lau Man Kui

240.00

240.00

240.00

Williamson

513.60

$13.60

313.60

-Q.C. Lo Tze Hoi

265.35

265.35

265.35

-Q.C. Lo Min Nung

265.35

265.35

265.35

8% Fixed Deposit with Wayfoong Finance Ltd. 8% Fixed Deposit with Hang Seng Bank Ltd.

Total Local Investments

Third Schedule-Chan Yat Hing Third Schedule-Lui Kee

3,500.00

36,792.93 36.792.93 24,000.00 24,000.00

3,300.00

3,500.00

36.792.93

24,000.00

$145,837,93 $222.928.32

$243,102.38

75

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APPENDIX-Contd.

STATEMENT 6

EDUCATION SCHOLARSHIPS FUND

Deposit at CALL WITH THE HONGKONG & SHANGHAI BANK

As at 31st August, 1966

Scholarships

SECOND SCHEDULE

THIRD SCHEDULE:

Lau Man Kui

Lo Wai Kwan

Chan Yat Hing

Murjani

Total

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

T:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

76

76

:

:

:

:

Amount

$ 500.00

1,500.00

1,000.00

1,000.00

500.00

$4,500.00

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