教育司署年報 Education Department Annual Report 1967-1968





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ANNUAL

SUMMARY

1967-68

EDUCATION-PSYCHOLOGY

LIBRARY

APD /

DOCUMENTS DE

INIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA

A

APR 22 1969

UNIVERSITY OF CALIF

EDUCATION

DEPARTMENT

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X

OLD

15. KWANI, BE

PROPOSED GOVERNMENT TELEVISION CEN'

BROADOA

DRIVE • KOWLOON

HONG KONG

 

EDUCATION DEPARTMENT

ANNUAL SUMMARY

1967-1968*

W. D. GREGG, M.A. (Cantab.), C.B.E., J.P.

Director of EDUCATION

PRINTED ANd Published BY S. YOUNG, Government PrinteR

at the Government Press, Java Road, Hong KONG

* 1st April 1967- 31st March 1968

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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$14.54 £1 (HK$1=ls. 44d.). The official rate for conversion to U.S. dollars is HK$6.06 US$1 (based on £1=US$2.40).

63410-20K-9/68

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Section

CONTENTS

Paragraphs

I. THE EDUCATIONAL SYSTEM OF HONG KONG

II. IMPORTANT EVENTS OF THE YEAR

III. COMMENTS ON STATISTICAL TABLES

IV. STATISTICAL TABLES:

Tables I

1 - 31

32 - 82

83 - 135

- Number of Schools and Pupils (by Educa-

tional Level).

Tables II

-Teachers and Teacher Training.

Tables III

Enrolment by Level of Education and Age.

Tables IV

Table V

Table VI

Tables VII

Enrolment in Technical and Vocational

Courses.

Expenditure on Education.

School Fees.

- Results of Examinations.

Tables VIII-Universities: Enrolment by Faculties, Degrees

Conferred.

-Hong Kong Students' Unit, London.

Tables IX

Table X

Adult Education.

Table XI

Enrolment in Special Schools.

Appendix

- Accounts of the Education Scholarships

Fund.

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HIGHER DIPLOMA

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Lower Form

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Ordinary Diploma

Preliminary

Pre-apprenticeship

Part-Time Day Release

Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors

Technician

Textile Institute

Upper Form

APRIL 1968.

J 97

SECTION I

THE EDUCATIONAL SYSTEM OF HONG KONG

1. The structure of the educational system from Kindergarten to University level is shown diagrammatically in Figure I. There are three main types of schools included in this system: those wholly run by Government, those run by voluntary bodies and assisted financially by Government, and those run and financed wholly by private bodies or individuals. Schools receiving assistance from Government are again subdivided into three groups: grant-in-aid, subsidized, and assisted private schools.

2. In general, schooling is not free although in government and government-aided primary schools fees are kept as low as possible, and in order to benefit poor children 20% remission of fees is allowed in respect of most places occupied; in government and aided secondary schools remission of fees is allowed in respect of 45% to 50% of all places occupied.

      3. In addition to fees, schools in receipt of recurrent aid are allowed to charge a 'subscription' to provide additional educational facilities, and to enable them to repay the Interest-Free Loans often granted by Government to assist in meeting the capital cost of construction of the schools.

4. Hong Kong is a city where Chinese and English are the most important languages in common use, and schools can be classified as follows according to the language of instruction and the second language studied:

Chinese

Type of School

Anglo-Chinese

English

Language of Instruction

Second Language

Chinese

English

Chinese

French

English English

(mainly for the benefit of expatriate children)

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Kindergarten and Pre-Primary Schools

   5. These schools cater for children aged from 3 to 6 years. They normally provide a two-year course and play a significant part in the educational system; approximately 50% of the pupils who entered the first year of the primary course in September, 1967 had received pre- primary schooling. They do not receive public assistance, but some non-profit-making kindergartens in government premises are charged only nominal rents.

Primary Education

   6. The six-year primary school course is normally begun at the age of six. The aim of the course is to provide a good general education; the curriculum includes Chinese, English, Mathematics, Social Studies, Nature Study, Art, Music, Handicraft, Needlework or Housecraft, Health Education and Physical Education. New suggested syllabuses for Junior 1-6 were issued to all schools in May, 1967.

   7. On completion of the primary course, suitable pupils are selected for places in government, aided and assisted secondary schools on the results of the Secondary School Entrance Examination.

Secondary Schools

   8. There has always been a great demand in Hong Kong for the academic type of secondary school education. In September 1967, 69.4% of the primary school leavers entered secondary school courses leading directly to a school certificate. Of these, 47.3% entered Anglo- Chinese Schools and 19.9% Chinese Middle Schools; 2.2% entered Secondary Technical Schools. A further 4.2% of the primary school leavers entered secondary courses not leading to a school certificate. Only 26.2% of the primary school leavers failed to commence some form of secondary schooling.

   9. The five-year Anglo-Chinese secondary school course leads to the Hong Kong English School Certificate Examination, which from 1968 will be known as the Hong Kong Certificate of Education (English). A Pass with Credit in each subject in this Examination is recognized by the University of Hong Kong, the University of London and some other overseas universities as equivalent to a Pass at Ordinary Level in the General Certificate of Education Examination.

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       10. The two-year Sixth Form course in Anglo-Chinese Secondary Schools leads to the Advanced Level Examination of the University of Hong Kong.

       11. The five-year Chinese Secondary School course leads to the Hong Kong Chinese School Certificate Examination, which from 1968 will be known as the Hong Kong Certificate of Education (Chinese).

       12. The one-year Sixth Form course in Chinese Middle Schools leads to the Matriculation Examination of the Chinese University of Hong Kong. (The degree course at the University of Hong Kong is normally of three years duration, whereas degree courses at the Chinese University of Hong Kong take four years).

Technical Education and Vocational Training

       13. There is one technical college in Hong Kong. This is wholly maintained and operated by Government, and provides a wide variety of technical, vocational and commercial courses from the pre-appren- ticeship level to the Higher Diploma in Technology. Instruction is provided in full-time day, part-time day-release, and evening courses. Fees are charged.

14. It is expected that the future role of the technical college will be the training of technologists and higher level technicians, while a technical institute, expected to be operating in 1969-70, will provide training at the lower levels. The institute will provide a larger proportion of part-time day-release places to meet the probable demand for them resulting from the development of more organized apprenticeship schemes in industry.

15. There are six government, two aided and one private secondary technical schools offering school certificate courses with a technical bias. Two of these government schools offer in addition a matriculation course. Three more government technical schools are in the Public Works Building Programme.

16. Vocational schools offering day-time post-primary courses of various durations, and not leading to a school certificate, are entirely operated by voluntary agencies. Relevant enrolment figures are given in Table Ib.

Special Schools

17. Special schools include those for deaf children, the blind, the physically handicapped, the mentally handicapped and spastics.

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Operated by voluntary organizations and private individuals, they cater for the needs of over 1,200 children of all ages. There are altogether 23 special schools, of which 13 receive government aid. In addition, 12 experimental classes for children with learning difficulties are operating in government primary schools.

18. The special schools and experimental classes are closely super- vised by the Special Education Section of the Inspectorate, which also conducts one-year in-service courses of training for teachers of handi- capped children.

Adult Education

19. Adult Education is provided by the Education Department in the Evening Institute, the Technical College Evening Department, The Evening School of Higher Chinese Studies, and 12 Adult Education & Recreation Centres.

20. The Evening Institute provides formal education courses rang- ing from literacy and special English classes to school certificate examination courses and classes for teachers of selected subjects, in addition there are practical background classes in woodwork, house- craft, sewing, and knitting.

21. The Evening School of Higher Chinese Studies offers a 3-year course in general arts to school certificate holders, leading to a diploma issued by the Education Department. Subjects included in this course are Chinese Literature, Philosophy, Sociology, and English Language and Literature. Most of the students attending these courses are day school teachers.

22. A wide variety of recreational, cultural, and creative activities such as physical education, art, music appreciation, photography, drama- tics, and discussions on civics, take place in the Adult Education and Recreation Centres.

23. The Departments of Extra-Mural Studies of the University of Hong Kong and the Chinese University of Hong Kong together run nearly 400 short courses covering a very wide range of subjects.

Universities and Higher Education

24. The University of Hong Kong, founded in 1911, is an independ- ent body supported financially by endowments and Government grants

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      made through the University Grants Committee which was established in 1966. The first planning period under this system covers the three academic years 1967-70, and the grant for recurrent expenditure for the whole of this period is HK$75,450,000.

      25. The University has five faculties: Medicine, Engineering and Architecture, Arts, Science, and Social Sciences. Enrolment figures are given in Table VIIIa on page 68. The intake of first-year students in 1967 was 741 students.

       26. The Chinese University of Hong Kong is a federal university with three foundation colleges. A large proportion of its income is derived from Government, which approved grants totalling $41,500,000 including $17,100,000 for site formation work at the new University site, for the financial year 1967-68.

       27. The University has three faculties: Arts, Science, and Commerce and Social Science. Enrolment figures for 1968 are given in table VIIIc. 517 first year students were enrolled in 1967.

Training of Teachers

28. Full-time training of one or two years' duration is provided at three government colleges. The minimum academic qualification for entry into the Two-year Course is five subjects (two being English and Chinese) at Grade E or above, obtained in the Hong Kong Certificate of Education Examination. Those who wish to apply for the Special One-year Course in Northcote College of Education are required to possess a Post-Secondary College Diploma. The One-Year Course at present being conducted in Sir Robert Black College of Education will be discontinued in September 1968.

29. Government also provides part-time in-service courses, of two years' duration, at all three colleges and shorter refresher courses at the Evening Institute. Annual scholarships of one to three years' dura- tion enable selected locally-trained teachers to take special courses in Britain.

30. Both universities provide one-year full-time post-graduate courses in education leading to a Diploma in Education, and two-year part-time post-graduate courses in education leading to the Diploma in Education at the Chinese University of Hong Kong and to a Certificate in Education at the University of Hong Kong. Facilities for higher degrees in education are also provided.

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Classification of Teachers

   31. The nomenclature for the main categories of non-technical teachers in government and aided schools is explained in the table below:

Title

Primary School Master or Mistress

Qualifications

(i) College of Education

Teacher's Certificate (One- Year Course).

(ii) In-Service Course of

Training Certificate (Two-Year Course),

Certificated Master (i) College of Education

or Mistress

Assistant Master

or Mistress

Overseas Qualified

Teacher

Assistant

Education Officer

Education Officer

Teacher's Certificate (Two-Year Course).

(ii) College of Education

Teacher's Certificate (Special One-Year Course).

By promotion.

Graduate of approved

University with suitable training, or by promotion. Internal degree or teaching

diploma or training college certificate after a course of at least two years. University of Hong Kong or

Chinese University of Hong Kong Pass Degree or a Degree recognized as the equivalent by the Director of Education (Candidates with a Diploma in Education are awarded one increment on appointment).

Honours degree and Diploma

in Education of a British or Commonwealth University, and three years' teaching experience; or by promotion.

School at which normally employed

Government and aided.

Aided and Private.

Government and aided (Primary and Lower Secondary).

As above, (Secondary classes).

Government (upper primary,

Secondary).

Aided (upper primary,

secondary).

Grant-in-aid and (on temporary

basis only) Government.

Government secondary (also

Colleges of Education, Inspectorate and Administration).

Government secondary (also

Colleges of Education, Inspectorate and Administration).

SECTION II

IMPORTANT EVENTS OF THE YEAR

Possible Promotion

Not normally

eligible.

Assistant Master or Mistress.

Senior Assistant

Master or Mistress.

Education Officer.

Senior Education

Officer.

Confrontation

32. After the failure of their efforts in street rioting and on the labour front, the communists looked increasingly to the communist- controlled schools as the instruments of their policies. Pupils of these schools were involved in street demonstrations, in the writing, dissemina- tion and display of inflammatory posters, and in the planting of bombs, both simulated and real.

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      33. On the evening of 27th November a pupil was severely injured in an explosion in the communist-controlled Chung Wah Middle School, and the school was closed, under Section 51 of the Education Ordinance, on the following day.

School Building and Development

      34. New school buildings including extensions completed during the year provided places for 35,830 primary and 9,915 secondary pupils (the corresponding figures for 1966-67 were 45,350 and 10,210 respec- tively). The following tables list the individual primary projects pro- viding more than 2,000 places in two daily sessions and secondary projects providing more than 900 places.

A-Projects completed in 1967-68 providing more than 2,000 primary places each:

Name of

Address

Project

Name of Sponsor

No. of

Nature

Places

Catholic Mission

Rutter St.,

Catholic

P, a

2,160

School

Hong Kong.

Mission

C. K. Law Memorial

School

Block 5, Shek

King's Col.

P, a

2,160

Pai Wan

Old Boys

Resettlement

Association

Estate,

School Ltd.

Hong Kong.

The North Point

      Kaifong Associa- tion Madam Chan Wai Chow Memorial School

82, Marble Road, Hong Kong.

North Point

P, a

2,160

Kaifong Association

San Wui Commercial

Society Sch. of Ham Tin

Block 13, Ham

San Wui

P, a

2,160

Tin Resettle-

Po Leung Kuk

Committee Fellow- ship Association Ting Mei Primary School

Five Districts Business

Welfare Associa- tion Seeto Ho School

ment Estate, Kowloon.

Block 9, Sau

Mau Ping Resettlement Estate, Kowloon.

Block 3, Ngau

Commercial Society of

Hong Kong

Po Leung

P, a

2,160

Kuk Committee

Fellowship

Association

Five Districts

P,

, a

2,160

Tau Kok

Business

Resettlement

Estate,

Kowloon.

Welfare

Association

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Name of Project

St. John Bosco School,

Ngau Tau Kok Branch

Address

Block 4, Ngau Tau Kok Resettlement

Estate,

Name of

No. of

Nature

Sponsor

Places

Salesian Co-

P, a

2,160

operators

Kowloon.

'Evangelize China'

Block 5, Ngau

'Evangelize

P, a

2,160

Fellowship Holy World School

Tau Kok Resettlement Estate, Kowloon.

China'

Fellowship

Inc.

St. Antonius Primary

School

Yan Wing

Catholic

P, a

2,160

Street, Yau

Mission

Tong.

Yeuk Wing Primary

School

Block 61, Tsz

Sheng Kung

P, a

2,160

Wan Shan

Hui

Resettlement

Estate, Kowloon.

H.K. & Kowloon

Joint Kaifong No. 1 Primary School

Block 12, Sau Mau Ping

H.K. & Kln.

P, a

2,160

Joint Kai-

Resettlement

fong

Estate, Kowloon.

Education

Committee

23,760

B-Projects completed in 1967-68 providing more than 900 secondary places each:

New Method College

10, Tai Hang

Private

S, P

1,440

Road,

Hong Kong.

Kung Lee College

I.L. 7993,

Church of

S, p

1,200

Tai Hang Rd., Hong Kong.

Christ in

China

Kei Chi Middle

School

K.T.I.L. 507,

Church of

S, a

1,150

Shui Ning Rd.,

Christ in

Kwun Tong.

China

NOTE:

P

Primary

S = Secondary

a

= Aided

P

Private

C-Totals of all smaller projects:

Primary

Secondary

12,070 6,125

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3,790

35. Sites were recommended for schools which will ultimately pro- vide places for 14,580 primary and 6,640 secondary pupils, the cor- responding figures for 1966-67 being 2,160 and 10,280 respectively. Most of the future primary provision will take the form of standard schools in resettlement and other estates, where no grant of site is involved.

       36. On 7th February, 1968 the Finance Committee of Legislative Council approved in principle the issue of interest-free loans, repayable over 21 years, of up to 80% of the capital cost of private non-profit- making schools. (Previously the repayment period for interest-free educational loans was 11 years.) One recommendation in accordance with the new terms was made before the end of the financial year.

Educational Television

       37. In February 1968 Government sanctioned the establishment of an Educational Television Unit as a new section of the Education Department. The unit will be housed in a new studio complex, and plans eventually to reach half a million children in schools of all kinds.

Technical College

       38. A wool workshop to provide facilities for training in wool technology was officially opened by His Excellency the Governor on 9th November, 1967. The International Wool Secretariat contributed half the capital cost of building and equipping the workshop, and Hong Kong wool manufacturers, under the sponsorship of the Federa- tion of Hong Kong Industries, contributed the remaining half. Total capital costs were about HK$1.5 million.

39. A new classroom block comprising Laboratories and 28 class- rooms was completed during the year.

Teacher Training

40. With effect from October, 1967 the three Training Colleges were re-named Colleges of Education (instead of

#).

       41. It was also decided that students would receive their college certificates immediately after successful completion of their courses, rather than after a period of probation.

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Adult Education

   42. Some 500 centre-supervisors, organizers and class-teachers attended an Adult Education Conference at Queen's College from 20th to 22nd July. The Conference followed a programme of lectures, seminars, panel-meetings and a variety of cultural and social activities. Another training conference for over 400 voluntary helpers of the Adult Education and Recreation Centres took place on 23rd July.

Scholarships, Bursaries and Maintenance Grants

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

I. University of Hong Kong

(a) 22 scholarships and maintenance allowances amounting to

$45,150 per annum for first degree courses;

(b) 69 bursaries amounting to $174,350 per annum for first

degree courses;

(c) 3 teaching bursaries amounting to $4,700 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) 14 scholarships and maintenance allowances amounting to

$25,200 per annum for first degree courses;

(b) 79 bursaries amounting to $140,100 per annum for first

degree courses;

(c) 10 teaching bursaries amounting to $16,600 per annum for

the Diploma in Education Course.

44. Government maintenance grants worth $139,500 per annum were awarded to 259 pupils at Anglo-Chinese secondary schools, and to 127 pupils at Chinese Middle schools, for matriculation courses.

   45. 55 new Gratham Scholarships totalling $34,000 were awarded to students at School Certificate, Matriculation and University levels of study. The majority of these awards covered tuition fees only.

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Hong Kong & Kowloon Joint Žaifong No. 1 Primary School.

Completeć 19001 · Jry 1968.

VAZHEN

The C. K. Law Memorial Primary School, Aberdeen, Hong Kong. Completed in April 1967.

E.

Planning an Expedition as part of the physical recreation programme.

The Start of a Canoeing Expedition.

MUSICAL

SICAL FROT

第廿香港校際音樂

A percussion band performing at the Schools Music Festival.

Pupils of the Tai Hang Tung Government Primary School taking part in the Schools Dance Festival.

46.

25 awards of loans amounting to $26,000 were made from the Hong Kong Rotary Club Students' Loan Fund to needy students at the universities and the Technical College.

47. 134 awards of loans amounting to $145,200 were made from the Standard/Sing Tao Fat Choy Drive Students' Loan Fund to needy students at the universities, the Technical College, post-secondary colleges, Anglo-Chinese secondary and Chinese middle schools.

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

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

(b) Six Government Training Scholarships for courses on the teach- ing of cultural subjects, four tenable in Britain, one in Australia and one in New Zealand for periods varying from one to three years;

(c) Six British Council Scholarships tenable in Britain, for one-year periods of training in the Teaching of English as a Second Language, and in other special fields;

(d) Three Confederation of British Industry Overseas Scholarships

tenable in Britain for practical industrial training;

(e) Three Sino-British Fellowship Trust Scholarships tenable in

Britain for one-year periods of training in special fields;

(1) Two New Zealand Mutual Aid Programme Awards tenable in New Zealand for six months' training in physical education; Commonwealth Scholarships:

(g)

(i) of nine United Kingdom Awards offered for postgraduate

studies in Britain, eight were accepted;

(ii) of three Canadian Awards offered for postgraduate studies

in Canada, two were accepted;

(iii) one New Zealand Award for postgraduate study in New

Zealand was offered and accepted;

(h) one Fulbright Travel Grant;

(i)

two Canadian Aid Programme Scholarships for academic and technical training in Canada.

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   49. There were 1,583 applications for admission to British educa- tional institutions and hospitals, and 1,382 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 1968, including nurses and students at schools and tutorial classes, was 4,184. In addition, 1,414 students are known to have left for the U.S.A., 862 for Canada and 236 for Australia.

Careers

50. During the past academic year, the Association of Careers Masters, on which 138 secondary schools are represented, organized 25 talks on subjects related to careers. Discussions took place with the Association of Heads of Secondary Schools and the Labour Department on the possibility of establishing a special Youth Employment Service similar to that operated in the United Kingdom. Visits to firms were arranged, and a number of radio and press interviews given.

Hong Kong Students Office, London

51. 1,906 applications on behalf of 557 students were submitted to universities and colleges by the Hong Kong Students Office, London, of which 360 were successful.

52. The increasing number of students pursuing various courses in the United Kingdom is shown by the figures below:

Year

1964-65

1965-66

1966-67

1967-68

Total Number

of Students

2,445

2,951

3,604

4,184

Syllabuses and Textbooks Committee

   53. The Syllabuses and Textbooks Committee produced a completely new set of Primary School syllabuses together with a model time- allocation table for the guidance of local schools. Lists of textbooks considered suitable for use in primary and secondary schools were compiled by the Committee and issued to schools.

Examinations

54. The total number of entries for the English School Certificate Examination rose from 22,000 in 1966 to 25,000 in 1967. Entries for

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the Chinese School Certificate increased from 6,000 to 7,500, and the number of candidates for the Secondary School Entrance Examination from 30,700 to 33,800.

55. The 1967 Examinations schedule was disrupted by the local disturbances; many papers in both the English and Chinese School Certificate Examinations had to be postponed, some for several days.

        56. A visit from Mr. J. Robert CLEARY, a staff member of the Education Testing Service, in June marked the beginning of a project to introduce Multiple Choice testing as part of the English School Certificate and the Secondary School Entrance examinations. Trial tests. have been conducted in many large schools to establish the most satisfactory type of questions.

       57. The most significant event was the decision to change the name of the two School Certificate Examinations to Certificate of Education (English) and Certificate of Education (Chinese) respectively. Certificates in future will be issued to every candidate taking part in the examina- tion recording the grade achieved in every subject. There will no longer be any question of passing or failing either in individual subjects or in the examination as a whole.

Research, Testing and Guidance

        58. Standardised attainment tests in arithmetic and Chinese for each of the last four years of primary schooling, and in English for the third year, were devised and administered; as were various verbal and numerical ability tests for primary school children completing the sixth year. The testing and guidance programme now includes 60,000 children in government primary schools. A number of non-government schools sought admission to the testing and guidance programme and were included.

59. A system of cumulative pupil record cards was introduced into participating primary schools, and a scheme for scaling the results of internal school examinations and for their use in pupil guidance was initiated.

       60. Analysis of the results of a three-year experimental study of the teaching of primary mathematics, using the Colour Factor method, was completed and a report published.

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   61. A study of the written Chinese vocabulary of primary school children, and a follow-up investigation into 1,000 primary school leavers, are proceeding.

Special Education

   62. Audiometric and speech screening programmes were introduced, the former into government primary schools and the latter into all appropriate subsidized special schools. Diagnostic facilities and guidance for handicapped children were made available in the Special Education Section.

Health Education

63. The Health Education Section conducted a short summer course for women teachers of government primary schools, on the personal hygiene of girls. A comprehensive catalogue of reference books and resource material on family life education, compiled by the Working Committee on Family Life Education, was distributed to secondary and middle schools in January.

Physical Education

   64. Two youth recreation camps were held during the summer vacation in the New Territories. These were attended by over 2,000 secondary school boys, and were organized in conjunction with the Armed Services. It is expected that similar camps will be held annually.

Music

65. The Twentieth Annual Schools Musical Festival attracted record entries of 7,240; an estimated 35,000 students competed in 344 different classes held in six centres. Visiting adjudicators for music were Sir Bernard HEINZE, LL.D., M.A. Mus.D., F.R.C.M., Dr. Joseph GROOCOCK, B.Mus., F.R.C.O., Hon. Mus.D., Maurice JACOBSON, B.Mus., A.R.C.M., F.T.S.C., and Mr. John HOLGATE, F.G.S.M., L.R.A.M., Dip. R.A.D.A., who adjudicated the English Speech Classes.

   66. 4,395 candidates sat for the annual practical examination of the Associated Board of the Royal Schools of Music, and 1,544 candi- dates entered for the theory examinations. 436 ballet students entered for the Royal Academy of Dancing examinations (visiting examiner- Miss Irene Ayres).

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Art

67. Hong Kong children's paintings were exhibited in the United States at the Annual Stores Festival 1967. This exhibition was sponsored by the Hong Kong Trade Development Council as part of its display at the Festival. Paintings by Hong Kong school children were also sent to Luxemburg for the World Schools' Art Exhibition to be held there during 1968.

68. Competitions and exhibitions of school children's art work, judged by members of the Art Section, were held during the year; these were sponsored by the Agriculture and Fisheries Department, the Road Safety Association and the Sheung Shui Social Centre.

Conferences and Exhibitions

        69. The Director of Education, Mr. W. D. GREGG, attended the Commonwealth Education Conference held in Lagos, Nigeria, from 26th February to 9th March, 1968. At the conference, the level of present aid programmes in education for the developing countries, including the operation of the Commonwealth Scholarship and Fellowship Plan, was reviewed. The agenda also included university and higher education, education for social and economic development including adult educa- tion and literacy, curriculum development, teacher training and supply, English language teaching, and the use of audio-visual aids and mass media.

70. The Education Department provided exhibits and displays for the government pavilion at the Chinese Manufacturers' Exhibition, held from 5th December, 1967 to 9th January, 1968. The theme was 'Govern- ment's growing participation in and responsibility for the education of Hong Kong's children and youth'.

University of Hong Kong

71. Changes in the University's Ordinance and Statutes effected during the year included the provision for a lay Chairman of the University Council and for a Pro-Chancellor. The Chancellor appointed Sir Albert RODRIGUES, C.B.E., E.D., LL.D., J.P., to hold both of these offices.

72. At a Congregation in March 1968, Sir Albert conferred the degree of Doctor of Laws honoris causa on H.E. Sir David TRENCH, Governor of Hong Kong and Chancellor of the University, and on

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  Dr. T. J. HUA, M.B., B.S. (1927) and the degree of Doctor of Science honoris causa on Dr. R. L. HUANG, B.Sc. (1942), Professor of Chemistry in the University of Malaya, and on Dr. Y. C. WONG, O.B.E., Professor of Mathematics in the University.

   73. The new Faculty of Social Sciences, constituted in May 1967, admitted its first undergraduates in September. This new Faculty consists of the Department of Economics and Political Science, Psychology, Social Work and the new Departments of Sociology and Statistics.

74. In the Faculty of Medicine, a new Department of Micro-biology was established in January 1968.

   75. The Centre of Asian Studies was formally brought into existence in November 1967, replacing the former Institutes of Oriental Studies and Modern Asian Studies.

Chinese University of Hong Kong

76. The academic year witnessed many developments in the University, notably the establishment of an Institute of Chinese Studies to carry out research projects, and the opening of a Computing Centre.

A minor course in Electronics was introduced at United College and a two-year evening course for serving teachers at the School of Education. Three administrative offices have been set up: the Buildings Office, the Publications Office, and the Appointments Service.

17.

78. The most significant event was the Ground-Breaking Ceremony on 9th December, 1967, which marked the launching of the University's $160m. campus project at Sha Tin.

The British Council

   79. Six British Council and three Sino-British Fellowship Trust scholarships were awarded in Hong Kong, of which seven went to teachers who undertook further studies in Education and the Teaching of English as a Second Language. Assistance was also given to eight visitors to Britain, of whom six were in the field of Education.

80. 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. The English Language Teaching Centre which was established in 1965-66 was concerned mainly with the provision of refresher courses for teachers and the production of teaching materials.

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       81. A section devoted to the teaching and learning of English as a Second Language was opened in the British Council library in December, 1967. It consists of some 400 books on subjects ranging from Pure Linguistics to Secondary School Courses and contains a good number of simplified and abridged readers.

Liaison

       82. The Department, colleges and schools received several distin- guished visitors from overseas. Among these were The Rt. Hon. Lord SHEPHERD, Minister of State (Commonwealth Office); Commander John PROUD, C.B.E., the retiring Director of C.E.T.O. and his successor T. SINGLETON; A. HANCOCK, an E.T.V. consultant from C.E.T.O.; B. YOUNG, Director of the Nuffield Foundation; A. DICKSON, C.B.E., founder of the Voluntary Service Overseas movement and H. L. ELVIN of the University of London Institute of Education.

SECTION III

COMMENTS ON STATISTICAL TABLES

       83. The information obtained from the 1966 by-census has been brought up to date by using a medium projection estimate of population, which includes all types of immigration as well as natural population increase.

      84. The estimate of population in the relevant age groups at March 1968 is:

Age-group

Total

Percentage of total population

Pre-school

0 - 5

612,600

15.7%

Primary

6 - 11

636,300

16.3%

12 - 14

276,800

7.1%

Secondary

15 - 16

172,300

4.4%

Matriculation

17 - 18

167,700

4.3%

1,865,700

47.8%

85. For purposes of comparison, school enrolment figures for the

same age groups are:

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Primary

Age-group

Pre-primary

Total

Full-time Part-time

5 & under

72,287

29,296

539

102,122

6 - 11

14,134

531,863

10,090

556,087

12 - 14

102,413

11,321

113,734

15 & over

3,262

7,392

10,654

86,421

666,834

29,342 782,597

Secondary

Non-School

Age-group

Certificate

Courses

School Certificate Courses

Matriculation Course

Total

11 & under

174

3,121

3,295

12 - 14

6,401

80,859

87,260

15 - 16

8,310

65,681

510

74,501

17 - 18

7,516

33,841

6,063

47,420

19 & over

9,092

6,157

3,849

19,098

31,493

189,659

10,422

231,574

   86. The total school enrolment up to and including Matriculation level at March 1968 was 1,014,171 (948,650 at March 1967).

Provision of Primary School Places

   87. During the past year 35,830 additional primary places were provided. 31,630 of these places were in government and aided schools including 17,280 in eight schools in new resettlement estates.

   88. In March 1968, a total of 666,834 pupils were attending primary day schools, which is 104.8% of the estimated number of children in the 6-11 age group inclusive. This does not mean, however, that every child between 6 and 11 is in primary school as 134,971 places rep- resenting 20.2% of the total primary day school enrolment were occupied by children outside the primary school age group.

Provision of Secondary School Places

89.

A total of 9,915 secondary school places were provided in new school buildings and extensions during the year under review; 1,630 of these places were in the government and aided sectors. In March 1968, the total enrolment in the field of secondary education represented 37.5% of the estimated population in the 12-18 age group. The corre- sponding percentages for previous years were 35% in 1966-67, 33% in 1965-66 and 32% in 1964-65.

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Progression from Primary to Secondary Education

90. A total of 73.6% of the primary pupils who completed their primary day schooling in July 1967 were admitted into secondary day schools. The corresponding percentages for the years 1966 and 1965 were 73.6% and 72.3% respectively. An analysis of the progression for 1967 is as follows:

(i) Percentage pregression from primary schools to school

certificate courses in:

Government and Aided Schools

Assisted places in Private Schools

Private Schools

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

15.8%

2.3%

51.3%

69.4%

Private Schools

Sub-total

Total ...

2.6%

1.6%

4.2%

73.6%

91. In addition there were 9,925 pupils attending first year secondary courses in night schools and tutorial classes of all types. This number forms 13.2% of all the primary pupils who completed their primary schooling in July 1967.

Student wastage during the School Certificate Course

92. 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. The number of pupils completing the English School Cer- tificate Course in July 1967 represented about 76% of the Form I enrolment five years ago in March. The corresponding figure for the Chinese School Certificate Course was only about 50%.

Progression from Secondary School Certificate Classes to Matriculation

Forms

       93. In September 1967, a total of 31.3% of the students who com- pleted the School Certificate courses in secondary day schools in July

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1967 were admitted to Matriculation classes in Anglo-Chinese secondary and Chinese middle day schools. The corresponding percentages for 1966 & 1965 were 33.2% and 27.5% respectively. The slight drop of this percentage in September 1967 is accounted for by the marked increase in Form V and Middle V enrolment in the school year 1966-67. A breakdown of the percentage for 1967 is as follows:

Percentage progression from School Certificate to Matricula- tion courses in:

Government and Aided School ...

Private Schools

Total

13.8%

17.5%

31.3%

If Anglo-Chinese schools and Chinese middle schools are viewed sep- arately, 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

14.4%

13.4%

27.8%

(ii) Percentage progression from Chinese School Certificate

to Chinese Matriculation courses in:

Government and Aided Schools

Private Schools

...

Total

12.4%

A

28.7%

41.1%

94. In addition 942 students representing 5.2% of all the students completing the English School Certificate course in July 1967 attended first year of the Anglo-Chinese Matriculation course in private night schools. Another 45 students were enrolled in the Chinese Matriculation night course.

TABLE I

NUMBER OF SCHOOLS AND PUPILS

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

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March 1965 to

March 1966

March 1966 to March 1967

March 1967 to

March 1968

Increase Decrease Increase Decrease Increase Decrease

Pre-primary schools

Private Schools

7,985

13,412

19,530

Primary

Government Schools

2,627

602

1,584

Aided Schools

54,859

31,319

30,416

Private Schools

25,679

6,419

5,387

Sub-total (net)

**

31,807

25,502

34,219

Secondary

Government Schools

224

986

884

Aided Schools

3,845

3,828

2,165

Private Schools

15,303

19,186

8,723

Sub-total (net)

18,924

24,000

11,772

Total (net)

58,716

62,914

65,521

Pre-primary Schools

       96. The number of schools increased by 120 during the past year bringing the total number of kindergartens up to 564 on 31st March, 1968. Total enrolment in these schools has gone up by 19,530 or 29.2% from 66,891 in March 1967 to 86,421 in March 1968.

Primary Schools

       97. While enrolment in primary day schools increased by 38,669, enrolment in night schools and special afternoon classes continued to drop. The decrease for the past year was 4,450. Total enrolment in- creased by 34,219. The greatest share of the expansion was in subsidized day schools.

      98. The percentage of primary pupils attending government and aided day schools continues to increase and reached 67.5% in March 1968. This may be compared with 66.9% in March 1967 and with 64.6% in March 1966.

       99. For six consecutive years starting 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 1968, the enrolment was 29,342, compared with 61,559 in March 1962. This is a clear indication that part-time primary education is not regarded as a satisfactory alternative to the full-time primary course. Nevertheless,

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the primary night schools provide educational opportunities for children and adolescents who are or have been unable to attend day primaries.

Secondary Schools

   100. The number of pupils enrolled in school certificate forms in- crease by 10,850 or 6.1% from 178,809 in March 1967 to 189,659 in March 1968. The greatest share of this expansion was in the private sector, and enrolment increase was much greater in Anglo-Chinese secondary schools than in Chinese middle schools. During the past year enrolment in Anglo-Chinese secondary schools went up by 10,508 or 8%. while the corresponding figures for Chinese middle schools were 342 or 0.7%.

   101. The rapid growth in enrolment in matriculation courses during the past three years indicates an increasing demand for matriculation places. The total number of Chinese and Anglo-Chinese matriculation students in day schools in March 1968 was 9,015. This may be compared with 7,634 students in March 1967, with 5,859 students in March 1966, and with 3,515 students in March 1965. The percentage increase in enrolment from March 1965 to March 1968 was 156.9%. During the past year the number of students attending the Anglo-Chinese matric- ulation course in private night schools also increased by 274 or 25.2% to 1,362 in March 1968. At present the Chinese matriculation evening course is provided by only one school; 45 students were enrolled in it at March 1968.

TABLE II

TEACHERS AND TEACHER TRAINING

102. 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 Colleges of Education. In addition to the 557 new non-graduate teachers who successfully completed their training in full-time college courses in 1967, 49 graduates were awarded the Diploma or Certificate in Education of the University of Hong Kong and Chinese University of Hong Kong (28 from the University of Hong Kong and 21 from the Chinese University of Hong Kong) and 488 practising teachers successfully completed the part-time in-service training courses. The comparative figures for 1966-67 were 512, 49 and 705 respectively.

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103. The numbers of applicants for full time courses of teacher training in 1967 were as follows:

Two Year Course

One Year Course

*Special One-Year Course

Number Applied

Number Admitted

540

8,229

50

97

19

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

follows:

Two Year Course

One Year Course

*Special One Year Course

1964

1965

1966

6,208 (765)

9,142 (748)

6,943 (819)

158 (45)

137 (17)

77 (17)

* Admission to this course is restricted to selected students who have successfully completed a suitable four-year course at a post-secondary college, or at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.

       104. There were 913 teachers attending the in-service training course conducted by the three Colleges of Education. The corresponding enrolment for 1966-67 was 1013.

105. There were also 16 teachers in kindergartens attending the two- year in-service training course for kindergarten teachers organized by the Inspectorate.

106. The one-year in-service training courses for teachers of handi- capped children organized by the Special Education Section of the Inspectorate were resumed in November, 1967.

107. There were 10 teachers of physically handicapped children and 3 teachers of deaf children enrolled in courses of training.

Teacher Employment

108. 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 existing 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 95.9% of

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the teachers who qualified from full-time courses at the training colleges in 1967 have now obtained teaching posts. Details of employment obtained by these teachers are as follows:

Employed in Primary Schools Govt. Aided Priv.

Employed in Secondary Schools

Total

Govt. Aided Priv.

Two-Year Course

31

178

13

5

51

40

318

Special One-Year Course

7

2

5

14

One-Year Course

13 157

24

194

Total ...

526

   109. In addition 171 out of 485 teachers, who successfully com- pleted the in-service courses of training in July 1967, obtained employ- ment in aided schools after being regarded as qualified teachers. An additional 252 in-service trained teachers who had qualified in previous years also obtained employment in aided schools.

   110. In recent years there has been an increasing number of un- trained 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

TrainedĮ Being

Untrained

Trained

Untrained

Trained

Feb. 1965

225

61

129

28

7

Feb. 1966

397

60

292

22

23

Feb. 1967

455

98

302

27

28

Feb. 1968

598

103

452

20

23

   111. The salaries paid in private secondary schools to graduate teachers have continued to increase, with the result that larger numbers of untrained graduates from the two universities have shown a willing- ness to accept the conditions of service in these schools. At the beginning of the school year 1967-68, 136 newly qualified graduates of the local universities found teaching posts in private secondary schools; only five of them were trained. Meanwhile 11 trained and 98 untrained newly qualified graduates were employed in government and aided secondary schools.

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Pupil-Teacher Ratio

      112. 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 Teachers

Primary Day Schools

No. of

Trained

Untrained

Total

Pupils

Pupil/Teacher Ratio

Government Schools

2,597

84

2,681

83,436

31.1 (31.1)

Subsidized Schools*...

8,973

1,408

10,381

366,450

35.3 (34.8)

Private Schools

1,490

5,635

7,125

216,948

30.4 (30.7)

Total

13,060

7,127

20,187

666,834

33.0 (32.7)

†(1,590)

No. of Teachers

Secondary Day Schools

No. of

Pupil/ Teacher

Trained

Untrained

Total

Pupils

Ratio

Government Schools

475

156

631

13,921

22.1 (22.5)

Grant Schools

437

417

854

20,704

24.2 (24.2)

Subsidized Schools

327

380

707

19,280

27.3 (28.3)

Private Schools

1,072

4,056

5,128

142,587

27.8 (27.1)

Total

2,311

5,009

7,320

196,492

26.8 (26.6)

+(3,403)

* Including 2 classes in 1 Grant school.

↑ Figures representing University graduates without a professional qualification.

Pupil/Teacher ratios as at March 1967 are shown in brackets.

TABLE III

AGE GROUPS OF PUPILS

      113. The age groups of pupils at various levels of education are given in Table IIIa-d.

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

Night & Tutorial Enrolment % of Total

1.8%

Day

Primary Schools

Enrolment % of Total

Under-age Pupils

29,296

4.4%

539

Pupils aged 6 - 11 Years

531,863

79.8%

10,090

34.4%

Over-age Pupils

105,675

15.8%

18,713

63.8%

Total

666,834

100.0%

29,342

100.0%

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Sch. Cert. Courses

Non-Sch. Cert. Courses

Secondary Schools

Enrolment

% of Total

Enrolment

% of Total

Under-age Pupils

3,121

1.6%

174

0.6%

Pupils aged 12 - 16 Years

146,540

77.3%

14,711

46.7%

Over-age Pupils

39,998

21.1%

16,608

52.7%

Total

189,659

100.0%

31,493

100.0%

115. 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

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

117. In March 1968, the enrolment in technical schools offering courses leading eventually to a school certificate was 6,072. Table IVb contains details of the enrolment in all full-time technical and vocational courses.

TABLE V

EXPENDITURE ON EDUCATION

118. Actual Government expenditure on education for the financial year 1967-68 totalled $294,029,348 as follows:

Recurrent %

$

Non-Recurrent %

$

Administration and Inspection

13,609,304

4.9

145,786

0.7

Government Schools (including new

buildings & furniture and main-

tenance)

74,204,298

27.0

2,762,113

14.1

Grant-in-aid Schools (including new

buildings & furniture)

17,045,904

6.2

1,833,876

9.3

Subsidized Schools (including new

buildings & furniture)

119,263,384

43.5

5,642,936

28.7

Private Schools

7,045,627

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3,386,503 17.3

Grants to Hong Kong University &

Chinese University of Hong Kong

(including Universities Grant

Committee)

41,111,840

15.0

5,874,712 29.9

Other Expenditure

(including

scholarships)

2,103,065

0.8

Total

274,383,422 100.0

19,645,926 100.0

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119. This expenditure as compared with that for the previous year shows an increase of over $21 million, which is due to the continued expansion of education in the Colony, and to the increased grants to the universities. The actual total recurrent expenditure on education was 21% of the actual total public recurrent expenditure of the Colony for 1967-68.

120. The total recurrent expenditure of $4,102,433 on Other Educa- tion shown in Table V is made up as follows:

(a) Evening Institute and Adult Education

(b) Hong Kong Students in the United Kingdom (c) Miscellaneous grants

$3,485,970

595,918

20,545

$4,102,433

       121. The total expenditure of $6,507,050 in respect of teacher training includes an amount of $1,244,400 paid to 1,037 teachers in training as interest-free loans.

122. Building expenditure on Government Schools (with expendi- ture for previous years for reference) is analysed below. The expenditure is included in the total Non-Recurrent Expenditure of the Table.

Previous years'

expenditure

Expenditure

during 1967-68

Total cost as at 31.3.68

$

$

$

Technical College Extension (Classroom)...

1,609 750

320,775

1,930,525

Technical College, Wool Section

699,573

130,487

830,060

Belilios Public School

3,610,163

43,819

3,653,982

Cheung Chau Middle School

287,926

287,926

Heung Yee Kuk Secondary School, Yuen

Long

109,808

1,379 075

1,488,883

Shau Kei Wan Secondary School

2,817,063

17,446

2,834,509

Technical Institute, H.K.

34,000

70,000

104,000

Shau Kei Wan Secondary Technical School

2,386,103

20,018

2,406,121

Peak School

156,060

***

36,440

192,500

Kennedy Town Police School

338,291

5,583

343,874*

Central District & Sir Ellis Kadoorie School

4,707,600

255,461

4,963,061

Yuen Long Primary School ...

111,697

20,599

132,296†

Total

16,580,108

2,587,629

19,167,737

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

Block.

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123. Building subsidies and grants were paid to meet part of the cost of new grant and subsidized school buildings and extensions, and expenditure on major repairs to existing schools. The total building expenditure was as follows:

Grant Schools

Subsidized Schools

Total ...

Building Expenditure during 67-68

New School

Building & Extensions

Major Repairs

to Existing Schools

$1,689,370.58

2

19

5,152,514.29

55

112

$6,841,884.87

57

131

Most of the larger subsidies were grants on a dollar for dollar basis, the other half being paid from contributions made by the school authorities. In the case of big projects, interest-free loans were granted in addition to building subventions. In rural areas, where the villagers were usually unable to contribute more than a small part of the total cost, building subsidies exceeding 50% of the cost were paid.

124. In accordance with the approved policy outlined in the Educa- tion Policy White Paper, Government has continued to give substantial capital assistance towards the cost of constructing and equipping new secondary aided schools. A number of these projects have already been approved, and payment on 80% basis were made in respect of three schools.

   125. Government continued to give assistance in the form of interest- free loans, normally repayable over a period of 11 years, to both private non-profit-making and aided schools. The total payment of loans made during 1967-68 amounted to $6,550,150 being part payment of the total approved loans of $10,593,900 to 17 schools, of which about 34% was for primary education while the rest was for secondary. The particulars of the payment of loans during 1967-68 are listed below:

School

Primary or Secondary

Loan Approved

$

Interest-free Loans:

i.

Beacon Hill School

...

Primary

640,000

ii.

Catholic Primary School (Yau Tong)...

Primary

284,400

iii.

Chung Sing School (Extension)

Yuen Long

Primary

iv.

Concordia Lutheran School (Extension)

Secondary

303,000

V.

Hong Kong International School

Primary/

1,800,000

Secondary

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Payments made

Up to 31.3.67 S

1.4.67- Out- 31.3.68 standing

$

$

640,000

284,400

Nil

Nil

91,000 67,000 24,000 Nil

303,000 Nil

1,662,250

137,750

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School

Primary or Secondary

Loan Approved

Payments made

Up to

31.3.67

1.4.67- 31.3.68 standing

Out-

$

$

$

vi.

Kowloon Tong School (Extension)

Secondary

871,000 770,000

101,000

Nil

(revised)

vii.

Kung Lee Anglo Chinese Secondary

School

Secondary

2,000,000 1,374,000

626,000

Nil

viii.

Savior Lutheran School

Primary

584,000

512,000 72,000

ix.

Sin to School (Extension)

***

Primary

218,500

218,500 Nil

X.

St. Clare's Primary School

Primary

619,000

301,000

318,000 Nil

xi.

St. Joseph's Anglo-Chinese Secondary School (Kwung Tong)

Secondary

729,000 242,000

487,000 Nil

xii.

St. Joseph's Primary School (Morrison

Hill)

Primary

518,000

343,000 175,000

xiii.

St. Stephen's Church Secondary School

Secondary

636,000

636,000 Nil

xiv.

Wah Yan College Kowloon (Extension)

Secondary

90,000

90,000 Nil

XV.

Yaumati Kaifong Welfare Association Primary School

Primary

70,000

70,000

Nil

xvi.

Ying Wa Girls' School ...

xvii.

                          Secondary Yuen Long Lutheran Middle School... Secondary

600,000 554,000 46,000 Nil $40,000 336,000 189,000

15,000

10,593,900 3,644,000 6,550,150 399,750

       126. The total estimated expenditure on education for the financial year 1968-69, excluding provision for pensions, passages, quarters and medical attention is $295,478,700. Funds for the Universities are pro- vided in the expenditure head under the control of the University Grants Committee. The total provision, excluding the grants to the Universities, for 1968-69 is $295,478,700 compared with $280,288,500 for 1967-68.

TABLE VI

      127. Fees paid in Government Schools are credited to general revenue, but aided and private schools retain their fees. Extra subscrip- tions are also retained by schools. Hence the net cost of education to Government was:

Actual Expenditure ...

Less Fees collected in Government Schools

Net Cost

TABLE VII

EXAMINATION RESULTS

$294,029,348

10,234,134

$283,795,214

       128. Table VIIa gives an analysis of the results in the two School Certificate Examinations for the last thirteen years while Table VIIb provides a detailed analysis of results for each individual subject in

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the 1967 English School Certificate Examination and Table VIIc gives an analysis of the 1967 Chinese School Certificate Examination Results.

   129. From Table VIIa it can be seen that in spite of a large increase in the number of candidates who sat for the examination the overall percentage of passes in 1967 in both English and Chinese School Certificate Examinations was very little different from the pre- vious year.

130. Entries for the General Certificate of Education increased from 7,446 in 1966 to 9,357 in 1967. The percentage of passes at both levels increased over the same period from 54.7% to 58.6% at Advanced Level and from 57% to 59.1% at Ordinary Level (See Table VIIe).

   131. Although the number of pupils who sat the Secondary School Entrance Examination was 2,186 more than the 1966 figure, the number of promotions increased by 953. (Table VIIf).

TABLE IX

HONG KONG STUDENTS' UNIT, LONDON

132. There has been an increase of 580 students or approximately 16.9% during the past year.

New arrivals ...

Students leaving the United Kingdom during the past year

1,382

626

   133. There is a steady increase in the numbers of students attending schools in the United Kingdom. From 294 students in 1964 the total has risen to 748 students in 1968.

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

Arts Degree,

Agriculture,

Art and 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.

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TABLE X

ADULT EDUCATION

135. 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 Educa- tion and Practical Background Education, Rural Literacy Classes, Middle School Course and Teachers' Courses in Art, English, Modern Mathematics, Music, Handwork, Gymnastics and Modern Dance.

Total number of classes

Total enrolment

Evening School of Higher Chinese Studies

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

Total number of classes

Total enrolment

Adult Education and Recreation Centres

:

779

19,100

11

311

There are 12 centres and the total membership is approximately 50,000. These figures are not shown in any of the statistical tables as the emphasis is on recreation rather than formal education.

Private Schools

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

TRUSTEE'S Report

ON THE ADMINIstration of the EDUCATION Scholarships FuND

FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31st August, 1967

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, 1967.

2. The year under review has again been one of continued progress. Total assets of the Fund increased by $42,048.09 and at the 31st August, 1967 stood at $389,253.96. Of this figure $353,677.27 (or 90.86%) was represented by sterling and local investments. The principal feature of the Investment Account was the investment of a further donation of $20,000 from Mr. Murjani and 100 shares in Union Water Boat from the donor of the U Sze Wing Scholarship. Of the $20,000, $18,500 was put on 4 years deposit at 8% with Wayfoong Finance Ltd.

         3. Income from investments amounted to $25,167.13 which represents an average yield of 7.12%. The table below summarizes the return on sterling and local investments covering the two Schedules:

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Type of Investment

Sterling

Local

Total

First Schedule

Second Schedule

Investment

Av.

Investment

Income

Av.

Income

Cost

yield

Cost

yield

$

$

%

$

$

%

67,563.93

3,948.85 5.84

26,785.02

1,709.92

6.38

17,621.89

85,185.82

904.02 5.13

4,852.87 5.69

241,706.43

18,604.34 7.69

268,491.45

20,314.26 7.56

   4. During the year, 69 and 95 scholarships were awarded under the First and Second Schedules respectively, all being financed by the investment income and dona- tions received.

   5. Further donations, amounting altogether to $14,000, were received by the Education Scholarship Fund Committee for the establishment of 4 new scholarships, namely, Tsang Fook, Wan Iu Shing, Lam Pak To and Ming Tak Scholarships.

6. Funds are available to meet the existing awards to be made in 1967-68 under the First Schedule Scholarships but there was a shortfall in income in respect of three scholarships under the Second Schedule, i.e. Murjani, Tsang Fook and Ming Tak Scholarships. The deficiencies amounted to about $108, $105 and $112 respectively. However, the donors of these Scholarships have, after the close of the financial year generously made further cash donations of $20,000, $120 and $160 respectively.

7. A sum of $1,750.14 was transferred to the Reserve Fund Account under Section 12(2) of the Education Scholarships Fund Ordinance in respect of the Second Schedule Lo Wan Kwan Scholarship.

    8. The former Second and Third Schedules Scholarships have, in accordance with the amended Education Scholarships Fund Ordinance, been re-named respectively First and Second Schedules.

   9. The accounts for the year ended 31st August, 1967, have been audited by the Director of Audit.

HONG KONG,

15th February, 1968.

W. D. GREGG,

Director of Education,

Trustee of the Education Scholarships Fund.

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33

TYPE

OF

SCHOOL

Government

No. of

Schools

TABLE I a

NUMBER OF SCHOOLS AND PUPILS (BY EDUCATIONAL LEVEL) AS AT 31.3.68

M Male; F

Female

KINDERGARTEN

M.

Enrolment

F.

Total

No. of

Schools

SECONDARY

PRIMARY

MATRICULATION

Re-organized 'Special Secondary' Course

Non-School Certificate

School Certificate Course

Enrolment

Secondary Course

Enrolment

Enrolment

Enrolment

M.

Enrolment

F. Total

107 42,225 41,211 83,436

No. of

Schools

M.

F. Total

No. of

Schools

M.

F.

Total

No. of Schools

M.

F. Total

No. of

Schools

M. F. Total

906 2,305 3,211| |20||

8,278 6,847 15,125 13 1,114 297||1,411

Grant

81

81

22

7,668 10,278 17,946 22 1,350 1,408 2,758

Subsidized.

593193,459 179,970 373,429

81

135

7 2,436 1,059 3,495 27

9,437 5,740 15,177

6 319 154 473

Private

564 46,550 39,871 86,421|

932 131,298 106,933 238,231}

118 12,540 12,112 24,652 246 84,215 57,196| 141,411| 63 4,280 1,500 5,780

Special

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P.M. Class

14

395 604 999

TOTAL. 564 46,550 39,871 86,421||1,647 367,377 328,799 696,176

811 54

135|| 126 15,882 15,476 31,358 315 109,598 80,061 189,659 104 7,063 3,359 10,422

TABLE Iα-Contd.

NUMBER OF SCHOOLS AND PUPILS (BY EDUCATIONAL LEVEL) AS AT 31.3.68

M = Male; F Female

ADULT & FURTHER EDUCATION

Post School Certificate Courses

Adult Education

Total

Number

TYPE

OF

Teacher Training

Technical & Vocational

Other Courses

Academic and General

Technical & Vocational

SCHOOL

Schools

(counted

by edu-

cational

of

Total

Enrolment

Enrolment

No. of

Schools

M.

F. Total

No. of

Schools

Enrolment

M.

Total

No. of

Schools

Enrolment

M.

F. Total

No. of

Schools

Enrolment

M.

F. Total

No. of Schools

Enrolment

level)

M.

F. Total

Government 4

666 1,402 2,068

1,342

116 1,458

Grant

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Subsidized.

Private

Special

P.M. Class

TOTAL.

666 1,402 2,068

1,342 116 1,458

2 3,988 9,597 13,585| 1| 13,177 762 13,939

149

134,233

TT

45

20,785

637

392,709

2,161 1,482|| 3,643| 24 1,620 1,612 3,232 109 7,855 4,311 12,166

2,067

515,536

14

999

1,482 3,643 26 5,608 11,209 16,817 110 21,032 5,073 26,105

2,912

1,064,262

!

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 2,513.

(c) These figures do not include 1,272 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 Iь

ENROLMENT SUMMARY

KINDERGARTEN & PRIMARY

KINDERGARTEN

Type of School

1

2

3

Day

Private

41,781

40,154

4.486

'PRIMARY' (6 year course)

Type of School

1

2

3

4

5

6

Male

TOTAL

Date: 31.3.1968

Male Female Combined

46,550 39,871 86,421

TOTAL

Female Combined

No. of

Schools

564

No. of

Schools

Government..

410

366

380

344

302

289

1,062

1,029

2,091

5

Day

English Schools Subsidized

84

28

27

23

99

63

162

Private

64

55

47

53

60

58

177

160

337

Total: English Schools

558

449

454

420

362

347

1,338

1,252

2,590

7

Government

13,062

6,694

6,368

13,062

102

Grant

40

40

40

1

Subsidized

34,561

18,699

15,862

34,561

451

Private

56,123

29,947 28,685

26,119

22,054

23,989

104,499

82,418

186,917

720

Total: Day

f (Excl. Eng.

Schs.)

56,123

29,947 28,685 26,119 22,054

71,652

129,892 104,688

234,580

1,274

(Incl.Eng. Schs.)|

56,681

30,396

29,139 26,539

22,416

71,999 131,230

105,940

237,170

1,281

Night

Subsidized

1,026

1,155

1,457

1,255

1,249

918

1,847

5,213

7,060

41

(Incl.

Private

***

887

1,256

1,991

4,509

6,080

6,560

9,305

11,978

21,283

163

Tutoria)

Total: Night ..

1,913

2,411

3,448

5,764

7,329

7,478

11,152

17,191

28,343

204

Special P.M. Classes

$70

164

93

114

42

16

395

604

999

14

TOTAL

59,164

32,971

32,680

32,417

29,787

79,493

142,777 123,735

266,

6,512

1,499

'JUNIOR' (New 5 years primary course)

TOTAL

Type of School

1

2

3

4

5

Male Female Combined

No. of

Schools

Day

Government

13,893

14,470

15,224

14,328

10,368

34,469 33,814

68,283

102

Grant

41

41

41

1

Subsidized

83,525

76,993

70,626

57,975

42,527

Private

12,129

5,414

4,894

4,038

3,219

172,814

17,317

TOTAL

109,547 96,877 90,744 76,382

56,114

GRAND TOTAL (Primary & Junior)

(Day)

(Day & Night)

166,228 127,273 119,883 102,921 168,711 129,848 123,424 108,799

78,530 71,999

85,901 79,493

158,832

12,377

224,600 205,064 429,664 355,830 311,004 666,834

331,646

29,694

551

99

753

367,377 328,799 696,176

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SCHOOL CERTIFICATE COURSE

TABLE I 6-Contd.

ENROLMENT SUMMARY

ANGLO-CHINESE

SECONDARY (ACADEMIC)

Date: 31.3.1968

TOTAL

No. of

Type of School

1

2

3

5

6

Male

Female Combined}

Schools

Government..

121

119

124

133

136

295

338

633

Day

English Schools Subsidized

135

76

38

+

98

151

249

Private

58

58

53

50

50

130

139

269

Total: English Schools

314

253

215

183

186

523

628

1,151

3

Government

1,165

1,068

1,061

1,011

962

3,036

2,231

5,267

9

Grant

3,663

3,487 3,412

3,193

2,911

7,511

9,155

16,666

22

Subsidized

2,088

1,909

1,656

1,413

1,035

5,703

2,398

8,101

15

Total: Govt. & Aided

(Excl. Eng. Schs.)...

6,916

6,464

6,129

5,617

4,908

16,250

13,784

30,034

46

Private (Incl. 'Assisted Places')

25,953

22,444

19,463

17,434

13,728

61,582

37,440

99,022

166

(Assisted Places)

(1,198)

(1,041)

(923)

(790)

(593)

(2,685)

(1,860)

(4,545)

(43)

(Excl. Eng.

Total: Day

Schs.)

32,869

28,908 25,592

23,051

18,636

77,832

51,224

129,056

212

(Incl. Eng. Schs.)

33,183

29,161 25,807

23,234

18,822

78,355

51,852 130,207

215

Night

Government

453

389

316

227

200

153

495

1,243

1,738

1

Private

935

757

715

771

739

2,880

1,037

3,917

13

Total: Night

1,388

1,146

1,031

998

939

153

3,375

2,280

5,655

14

TOTAL (Academic)

34,571

30,307 26,838 24,232 19,761

153

81,730

54,132 135,862

229

SECONDARY (TECHNICAL & VOCATIONAL)

TOTAL

No. of

Type of School

1

2

3

4

5

6

Male

Female

Combined

Schools

Day

Government

980

899

863

910

934

3,157

1,429

4,586

Subsidized

85

75

75

69

74

378

378

Total: Govt. & Aided

1,065

974

938

979

1,008

3,535

1,429

4,964

7

Private (Incl. 'Assisted places')

315

199

133

86

44

777

777

1

(Assisted places)

(65)

(52)

(40)

(17)

(12)

(186)

(186)

(1)

TOTAL (Tech. & Voc.)

1,380

1,173

1,071

1,065

1,052

4,312

1,429

5,741

GRAND TOTAL

(Day)

34,563

30,334 26,878

24,299 19,874

82,667 53,281 135,948

223

(Day & Night)

35,951

31,480 27,909

25,297 20,813

153

86,042 55,561 141,603

237

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TABLE I ¿-Contd.

ENROLMENT SUMMARY

CHINESE

SCHOOL CERTIFICATE COURSE

Type of School

Date: 31.3.1968

SECONDARY (ACADEMIC)

TOTAL

No. of

1

2

3

4

3

6

Male

Female

Combined Schools

Day

Government

465

424

423

358

354

1,074

950

2,024

Grant

252

228

284

271

245

157

1,123

1,280

Subsidized

1,386

1,447

1,301

970

814

3,258

2,860

6,118

14

Total: Government & Aided

2,303

2,099

2,008

1,599

1,413

4.489

4,933

9,422

23

Private (Incl. 'Assisted Places')

11,094

7,925

6,433

5,368

4,954

18,134

17,640

35,774

97

(Assisted Places)

(264)

(244)

(257)

(205)

(211)

(227)

(954)

(1,181)

(25)

Total: Day

13,397

10,024

8,441

6,967

6,367

22,623

22,573

43,196

120

Night

Government

262

193

174

93

93

62

221

656

877

Private

395

304

259

275

331

888

712

940

1,652

Total: Night

657

497

433

368

424

150

933

1,596

2,529

3

TOTAL (Academic)

14,054

10,521

8,874

7,335

6,791

150

23,556

24,169

47,725

123

37

SECONDARY (TECHNICAL & VOCATIONAL

Type of School

I

2

3

4

3

6

Male

TOTAL

Female

Combined

No. of

Schools

Day

Government

Subsidized

88

70

71

54

48

Total: Government & Aided

88

70

71

54

48

331

331

Private (Incl. 'Assisted Places') (Assisted Places)

TOTAL (Tech. & Voc.)

88

70

71

48

331

132, |, ཀླ

331

(Day)

13,485

10,094 8,512

7,021

6,415

22,623

22,904 45,527

121

GRAND TOTAL

(Day & Night)

14,142

10,391

8,945

7,389

6,839

150

23,556 24,500 48,056

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TABLE Ib-Contd.

ENROLMENT SUMMARY

MATRICULATION COURSES

MATRICULATION

TOTAL

Type of School

Date: 31.3.1968

No. of

Lower 6

Upper 6

Male

Female

Combined Schools

Government.

44

38

42

40

82

Day

English Schools { Subsidized

Private

28

14

14

28

1

Total: English Schools

72

38

56

$4

110

2

Government

611

486

891

206

1,097

9

ANGLO-CHINESE

Grant

1,587

1,004

1,322

1,269

2,591

22

Subsidized

100

50

111

39

150

2

Private

1,903

698

2,280

321

2,601

20

Excl. Eng. Schs.

4,201

2,238

4,604

1,835

6,439

53

Total: Day

Incl. Eng. Schs.

4,273

2,276

4,660

1,889

6,549

55

Night Private

883

479

990

372

1,362

7

TOTAL

5,156

2,755

5,650

2,261

7,911

1 2

62

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MATRICULATION

Type of School

Middle 6

Male

TOTAL

Female

No. of

Combined

Schools

Day

Government

232

181

51

232

3

Grant

167

28

139

167

4

Subsidized

323

208

115

323

CHINESE

Private

1,744

971

773

1,744

35

Total Day

2,466

1,388

1,078

2,466

48

Night Private

45

25

20

45

1

TOTAL

2,511

1,413

1,098

2,511

49

(Day)

6,739

2,276

6,048

2,967

9,015

GRAND TOTAL

(Day & Night)

7,667

2,755

7,063

3,359

10,422

TABLE Ib-Contd.

ENROLMENT SUMMARY

Day

NON-SCHOOL CERTIFICATE COURSES

Type of School

Government

Date: 31.3.1968

Subsidized

Private

...

TOTAL

135

135

Type of School

1

2

3

4

5

'SPECIAL SECONDARY' FORM

TOTAL

Male

Female Combined]

No. of

Schools

81

54

135

4

81

54

135

4

SECONDARY COURSES

(Modern, Technical, Vocational, Commercial, Tutorial)

TOTAL

Female Combined)

No. of

Schools

6

Male

Day

Government

Subsidized

1,456

1,065

866

32

38

38

2,436

1,059

3,495

Private

115

87

76

58

533

441

97

1,213

1,310

11

ANGLO-

CHINESE

Total: Day

1,571

1,152

942

90

571

479

2,533

2,272

4,805

18

Night Government

(Incl. Private

5,176

4.537

4,021

3,565

3,860

45

11,194

10,010

21,204

92

tutorial)

Total: Night

3.176

4,537

4,021

3,565

3,860

45

11,194

10,010

21,204

92

TOTAL

6,747

5.689 4,963

3,655

4,431

524

13,727 12,282 26,009

110

Type of School

SECONDARY COURSES

(Modern, Technical, Vocational, Commercial, Tutorial)

TOTAL

No. of

Schools

2

3

4

5

6

Male

Female Combined]

Day

Government

Subsidized

Private

690

287

85

781

281

1,062

CHINESE

Total: Day

690

287

85

781

281

1,062

5

Night Government

1,736

979

496

906

2,305

3,211

1

Private

474

271

218

Total: Night

2,210

1,250

714

TOTAL...

2,900

1,537

799

(Day)

2,261 ¦ 1,439

1,027

མན།ཙ།།ྣ

94

19

468

608

1,076

10

94

19

1,374

2,913

4,287

11

94

19

2,155

3,194

5,349

16

90

571

479

3,314

2,553

5,867

GRAND TOTAL

(Day & Night)

9,647 | 7,226

5,762

3,749

4,450

524

15,882

15,476 31,358

39

Digitized by

Google

19

Digitized by

Google

University Graduates or equivalent:

TABLE II a

NUMBER OF TEACHERS IN SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES CLASSIFIED

BY QUALIFICATIONS AS AT 31.3.68

M = Male; F

Female

KIN-

DER-

PRIMARY

SECONDARY

GAR-

TEN

GRAND

TOTAL

Private

Govern-

ment

M. F. M. F.

M.

Grant Subsidized Private

M. F.

Total

Govern-

ment

Grant

Sub-

sidized

Private

Total

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

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

M.

F.

Trained

Untrained

26 79 271 27 30 60 30 44

212 161

601 230

269

411

200 508 388 169 274| 1,042 548 105

88 73 155 122

51 232 176| 250||

*

45 440

82 1,828

222 804 510 1,338 679||2,415 988 3,487 1,596

977

Completed Secondary School Course:

Trained

11

689|| 8211,722||

3,095 5,503 254

10 1,233||

4

6

168

767||4,170| 7,994|| 134 387 1,304 3,476|| 1,476 3,869|

84

79 130 96 64 213 197

522

475 4,703 9,158

7 31

947 578 980

590 2,466 5,692

Untrained

Not Completed Secondary School Course:

Trained

Untrained

127

TOTAL

79 2,188 882|1,799|

6

16 38 132 44 148

8 4 12 12

20 16!

66 291

4,082 6,297 2,276 4,8

223 386 468 2,579 7,240, 12,947| 408 223 386 468 507 200 3,440 1,688 4,741 2,579|| 12,060 17,714

!

NOTE: In addition, there are 315 (M. 144; F. 171) teachers in subsidized night schools, 2,132 (M. 1,490; F. 642) teachers in private tutorial and evening classes and 61 (M. 23; F. 38) teachers in special afternoon classes. The majority of these teachers also teach in day schools.

41

TABLE II a-Contd.

NUMBER OF TEACHERS IN SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES CLASSIFIED

BY QUALIFICATIONS AS AT 31.3.68

M Male; F

Female

POST-SECONDARY TECHNICAL

Govern-

Grant

Subsidized Private

Total

ment

Govern-

ment

POST-SECONDARY TEACHER TRAINING AND GENERAL Grant Subsidized Private

GRAND

TOTAL

Total

M. F. M. F.

M. F. M. F.

M. F.

M. F.

M. F. M. F.

M. F.

M. F.

M. F.

University Graduates or equivalent:

Tratned

Untrained

...

Completed Secondary

School Courses!

Trained

Digitized by

Google

Untrained

Not-Completed

Secondary Course:

Trained

Untrained

14:

1535

14

45

**

13

33 23

a

43

43

25 12

67

221 100

12:

130

114 45

**

21 185 23

23 12 68 13

!

184

34

255

78 367

81

NOTE: In addition, there are 1,713 (M. 1,308; F. 405) 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), 872 (M. 649; F. 223 teachers in private evening colleges and adult classes and 145 (M. 42; F. 103) in special schools.

TOTAL

...

1121

3

Digitized by

Google

42

12

TABLE II b

ENROLMENT IN TEACHER TRAINING COURSES AS AT 31.3.68

Students admitted in September 1967

Total No. of students at March 1968

Students passing final examination 1967

Description of Course

M.

F.

Total

M.

F.

Total

Number % Passed

Two-year Training Course

156

384

540

307

750

1,057

330

100%

One-year Special Training

Course

8

11

19

8

11

19

15

100%

One-year Training Course

14

36

8

50

14

36

50

212

100%

Sub-total

178

431

609

329

797

1,126

557

Full-time Training:

Chinese

English

Part-time Training :

Two-year Secondary Course:

Two-year Primary Course:

23

15

3333

10

33

23

38

mo

36

22283

16

42

22

12

52

23

100%

74

38

100%

Urban (Hong Kong/

Kowloon).

103

260

363

232

Rural...

9

17

26

Two-year Kindergarten

Course

2221

34

360899985

717

384

99.2%

70

43

100%

16

16

One-year Course for teachers

of handicapped children

Sub-total

150

310

160110

3

10

13

337

605

942

488

TOTAL

328

741

1,069

666

1,402

2,068

1,045

TABLE III a

GENERAL EDUCATION: ENROLMENT BY LEVEL OF EDUCATION AND AGE AS AT 31.3.68

DAY SCHOOLS

43

YEAR

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

452

401

9

12

3 and under 4

5,312

4,237

543

465

101

90

18

461

413

5,956

4,792

4 and under 5

5 and under 6

6 and under 7...

7 and under 8

8 and under 9

9 and under 10

10 and under 11

11 and under 12

12 and under 13

13 and over

11,541

9,397

4,344

3,641

475

454

16,360

13,492

4,387

4,210

10,919

9,262

1,138

897

16,444

14,369

724

697

4,826

4,494

589

497

6,139

5,688

153

142

662

668

95

63

910

873

69

41

129

129

12

24

སེམ

41

30

239

200

27

11

5

41

44

:

Digitized by

Google

TOTAL

22,644

19,137

21,456

18,698

2,450

2,036

46,550

39,871

GENERAL EDUCATION:

TABLE III b

ENROLMENT BY LEVEL OF EDUCATION AND AGE AS AT 31.3.68 Day Schools (NOT INCLUDING TUTORIAL Classes)

44

YEAR

JUNIOR & PRIMARY CLASSES

SPECIAL SECONDARY FORM

J.1/P.1

J.2/P.2

J.3/P.3

J.4/P.4

J.5/P.5

P. 6

Total

Sp. F. 1

M.

F. M.

F.

M.

F.

M.

F.

M.

F.

M.

F.

M.

F.

M.

F.

Numbers enrolled in the following age groups:

Under 5

3,711 3,186,

5 and under 6

6 and under 7

11,796, 10,271| 185 134 31,349 28,045, 3,121 2,683 125

5

3,711 3,186

11,986 10,413||

99;

12

13

34,607 30,840||

7 and under 8

8 and under 9

9 and under 10

10 and under 11

11 and under 12

12 and under 13

13 and under 14

176

50

29

29

14 and under 15

8

25

92

34]

15 and over

3

9

15

28,499 27,100 18,669 16,482 2,231 1,828 130 8,606 8,050 26,111| 24,803 12,617 11,344 1,846 1,456 127 1,966 1,974 12,661 11,541 26,315 24,121 9,097 7,821 590 546 4,063 3,570 14,050) 12,387 21,520) 20,216 7,325|| 5,745 2,002 1,493|| 49,550 43,957| 189 1,236 1,059 5,455 4,466 13,435 12,025 15,511| 13,797 9,198 7,545|| 45,011| 39,081 62 367 329 1,991 1,459, 6,109 4,455, 11,680 9,604 14,573 12,139 34,770 28,048|| 16 84 591 406 2,204 1,305 5,047 3,385] 9,470 7,221 17,425 12,425|| 179 111 606 295 1,667 879 3,519 2,418 6,000 3,745 52 43 165] 113 496 274 1,304 786 2,029 1,233

98

12

16

9

49,545 45,517|

87

20

17]

49,327| 45,757||

1,645 1,236

185

109

51,869 46,802

19

20

29

17

185

23

10

TOTAL

81

54

Digitized by

Google

86,779 79,449 66,531 60,742 63,611 56,272 55,124 47,797, 43,514 35,016 40,271 31,728|| 355,830 311,004||

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. 'Sp. F.' refers to a special secondary class in the re-organized system of education.

45

Digitized by

Google

TABLE III b-Contd.

GENERAL EDUCATION: ENROLMENT BY LEVEL OF EDUCATION AND AGE AS AT 31.3.68 NIGHT, TUTORIAL AND SPECIAL AFTERNOON CLASSES

YEAR

J.1/P.1

J.2/P.2

M.

F.

M.

JUNIOR & PRIMARY CLASSES

J.3/P.3

J.4/P.4

J.5/P.5

P. 6

Total

M.

F.

M.

F.

M.

F.

M.

F.

M.

F.

Numbers enrolled in the

following age groups:

Under 5

65

84

65

84

5 and under 6

133

234

12

111

145

245

6 and under 7

168

276

36

7 and under 8

170,

276

88

134

8 and under 9

121

220

123

239

བྷནགླ

30

8

211

343

31

93

125

32 333

14)

10

13

8

9

3241

470

48

46

34

14

19

11

438

655

9 and under 10

78

187

144

333

140

264

179

225

821

51

24

201

647

1,080

1

10 and under 11

46

11 and under 12

32

12 and under 13

12

222

152

131

315

206

427

243

336

235

219

100

82

961

1,331

931

96

270

159

4531

289

475

381

429

435

318

1,392

2,038

i

40:

46

213

138

419

258

594

410

628

500

564

1,364 2,458

13 and under 14

9

25

32

122

104

325

2701

601

441

747

520

773

1,376 2,593

14 and under 15

19

17

66

82

189

273

510

426

776

448

716 1,254 2,276

15 and over

10

25.

23

74

137

202

668

829 1,195 1,282

1,337

1,610 3,370 4,022

TOTAL

852

1,631

748 1,827 1,096

2,445 2,243

3,635 3,217 4,154 3,391

4,103|| 11,547 17,793

1

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.

TABLE III c

GENERAL EDUCATION: ENROLMENT BY LEVEL OF EDUCATION AND AGE AS AT 31.3.68

SECONDARY Schools (School Certificate Forms-ChiINESE AND ANGLO-CHINESE)

SCHOOL CERTIFICATE FORMS-CHINESE AND ANGLO-CHINESE

YEAR

46

MATRICULATION

N

3

6

Total

N

Total

M.

F.

M.

F.

M.

F. M.

F.

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]

178

95

17

N

195

97

1,551

12 and under 13 7,484 13 and under 14 10,483

14

and under 15 6,618

15 and under 16

16 and under 17

17 and under 18]

1,010 101 97 311 39 5,150 1,244 895 135 142 7,668 5,645 4,228 1,018 705 4,784 8,212 6,359 4,491 3,428 935 2,187 1,542 6,016 4,570 7,195 5,794 4,071 3,086 496

TREA

1,683 1,146,

8,898 6,189

132

2

30

17,259 12,763)

807

421 74

20,298 15,452||

158

753 584 363 1,985 1,501 5,219 4,102 6,043 4,664 3,292| 2,212|| 3|| 31 93 487 334 1,959 1,527 4,669 3,604 5,537 3,657 9 19

20,222 15,576|| 17

17,038 12,845|| 275

==

9

171 9

195

9

284 200

12,819 9,234|| 1,365|

818

146 66||| 1,511| 884

18 and under 19

91

39

160

53

19 and under 20|

54

17

88 22 144

301 293 2,071 1,409 4,266 2,840 23 42 63 480

7,112

20 and under 21

17

24

12

25

21 and over

9

31

18

I

32

14

119

22

68

285 2,040 1,077 42 51 81 645 299 42 37) 14 222 80 15 17

2,848

4,676|| 1,760 948

1,515|| 1,119| 533

872 446| 391 107 354 122 110 20

660|300|| 2,420 1,248

673|256||| 1,792 789

404' 82 795 189

134 20 244

40

TOTAL

29,326 20,767 23,997 18,074 20,740 16,114 18,602 14,084 16,799 10,853 134 169|| 109,598 80,061|| 5,037 2,630 2,026,729|| 7,063 3,359

|

Digitized by

Google

47

Digitized by

Total

TABLE III d

ENROLMENT BY LEVEL OF EDUCATION AND AGE AS AT 31.3.68 SECONDARY SCHOOLS (Non School Certificate Courses)

SECONDARY-NON SCHOOL CERTIFICATE COURSES

GENERAL EDUCATION:

YEAR

3

M.

F.

M.

F.

M.

F.

M.

F.

M.

F.

M.

F.

M.

F.

I

Numbers enrolled in the

following age groups:

Under 12

90

64

...

12 and under 13

364

350

13 and under 14

802

791

238

14 and under 15

922

978

511

15 and under 16

815

806

699

16 and under 17

518

592

569

17 and under 18

381

419

501

18 and under 19

242

262

334

༤ ཤྣ སྐྱུ རྞ ༔ མྷི བྷཱུ ྃ

10

9

100

73

36

30

11

7

411

387

265

23

28

12

8

1,075

1,093

492

166

189

25

702

454

4521

86

22

9

1,632 1,702

28

44

2,082 2,083

696

554

515

219

199

78

157

14'

1,939 2,173

465

458

304

271

309

215

342

59

1,827 2,098

329

390

361

342

342

353

480:

155

1,662) 1,929

19 and under 20

208

156

231

153

260

240

305

252

374

383

125

1,381

1,309

20 and under 21

171

115

185

114

224

175

264

216

360

255

901

1,205

965

21 and under 22

145

86

120

112

180

118

221

116

354

227

15

32

1,035

691

22 and over

227

143

221

204

266

187

294

155

520

262

221

1,533

973

1

Google

TOTAL

4,885

4,762 3,655 3,571 2,986

2,776 2,039

1,710 2,290 2,160

15,882) 15,476

Digitized by

Google

48

TABLE IV a

ENROLMENT IN TECHNICAL AND VOCATIONAL DAY SCHOOLS AS AT 31.3.68

Branch of Education

Technical College

Technical Schools

Vocational Schools

Commercial Schools

:

:

No. of

Schools

Government

Enrolment

M.

F. Total

11,342 116 1,458

No. of

Schools

I

6 3,157 1,429 4,586 2

Subsidized

M.

Enrolment

F. Total

No. of Schools

Private

Enrolment

M.

F. Total

No. of

Schools

Total

Enrolment

M. F. Total

11,342 116 1,458

378 331 709 31,214 236 1,450 11 4,749 1,996|| 6,745

1

174

174 4 344 433 777 5 518 433 951

76

76 10 97 825 922 11 97 901

998

TOTAL

7|4,499 1,545 6,044|

4

552 407 959||||| 171,655 1,494 3,149 28 6,706 3,446 10,152

TABLE IV b

ENROLMENT IN TECHNICAL AND VOCATIONAL COURSES OTHER THAN TEACHER TRAINING COURSES FOR THE YEAR 1967 TO 1968

49

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:

Digitized by

Google

HONG KONG TECHNICAL COLLEGE

Higher Diploma (Full-time) courses:

Building Technology (3)

Commerce-Accountancy (3)

111

27

71

138

68

71

111

27

138

Dycing, Printing & Finishing (3)

60

4

64

601

64

Electrical Engineering (3)

181

181

181

181

Mechanical Engineering (3)

87

87

87

87

Production Engineering (3)

74

74

74

74

Surveying (3)

Textile Technology (3)

Wool Technology (3)

Sub-total

763

2583

75

77

75

รา

57

3

60

57

60

50

4

54

50

4

54

43

806

763

43

806

Ordinary Diploma (Full-time) Courses:

Building Technicians (2)

54

58

541

58

Electrical Technicians (2)

112

112

[12]

112

Marine Engineering (2)

65

65

65

65

Mechanical Technicians (2)

54

54

54

54

Textile Technicians (2)

Sub-total

14

14

14

14

299

41

303

299

4

303

Certificate (Full-time) Course:

Commerce-Secretarial (1)

Sub-total

69

69

691

69

819

69

69

69

69

TABLE IV b-Contd.

ENROLMENT IN TECHNICAL AND VOCATIONAL COURSES OTHER THAN TEACHER TRAINING

COURSES FOR THE YEAR 1967 TO 1968

50

Digitized by

Google

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

Pre-Apprentice Course:

Building (1)

TA

Electrical (1) Mechanical (1)

25

38

38

28

28

911

91

25

38

28

TIT

| | | | |

| | | | |

1 1 1 1 1

Sub-total

Craft Course:

Automobile Mechanics (1)

24

24

Bricklaying & Plastering (1)

14

Carpentry and Joinery (1)

21

21

Radio Mechanics (1)

39

39

Sheet Metal Work (1)

Sub-total

Other full-time Courses:

18

18

116

116)

TIL

25

38

28

91

91

24

14

21

39

NINA

18

| | | | |

44148

24

21

39

116

116

B.O.T. 1st class Marine Engineering B.Q.T. 2nd class Marine Engineering

Masters and Mates

Pre-sea Cadets

2263

Radar Maintenance

Radar Observers

10

Radio Officers 1st class P.M.G.

10:

10

Radio Officers 2nd class P.M.G.

22

Welding Course

12

12

2263-0022

16

13

10

10

22

12

2200-0022

220M-OONN

16

10

10

12

Sub-total

98

98

98

98

TABLE IV b-Contd.

ENROLMENT IN TECHNICAL AND VOCATIONAL COURSES OTHER THAN TEACHER TRAINING

COURSES FOR THE YEAR 1967 TO 1968

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

Assistant Factory Inspectors (9 weeks block release)

...

Electrical Engineering (5)

87

Housing Managers (1)

Laboratory Technicians (3)

8336

10

V

87

17

13

30

69

69

8833

10

10

87

87

17.

13

30

69

69

Mechanical Engineering (5)

216

216

216

216

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

83

83

83

83

R.I.C.S. (Intermediate General) (1)

22

22

22

22

Workshop Instructors (11 weeks)...

7

7

7

7

Sub-total

511

13

524

511

13

524

:

Certificate (Part-time Day) Courses:

51

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Google

Part-time Short Courses and Seminars:

1 1 1

Air Survey (3 courses) Bookkeeping (1 course)

64

64

20

20

...

Building Law (2 courses)

126

126

Concrete Practice (4 courses)

116

116

Concrete Technology

course)

20

20

Critical Path Analysis (1 course)

38

38

Cotton Sizing (1 course)

26

26

Carried forward

410

410

I

64

20

126

126

116

116

20

38

* * * * *

64

26

26

410)

410

TABLE IV b-Contd.

ENROLMENT IN TECHNICAL AND VOCATIONAL COURSES OTHER THAN TEACHER TRAINING

COURSES FOR THE YEAR 1967 TO 1968

52

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

Digitized by

Google

Brought forward

410

410

T

Draughtsmanship (6 courses)

173

Dye and Polymer Chem./Colour Physics

(I course)....

22

173

22

First Aid for Laboratory Technicians 3 (1 course)

20

Furniture Management (1 course)

18

Furniture Production (1 course)

28

Hand Power Tools (2 courses)

49

Housing Caretakers (2 courses)

88

Leadwork in Buildings (1 course)

20

Load Factor Method of R.C. Design (1 course).

24

Paint Spraying (2 courses)

33

Pleasure Craft (Engineers) (3 courses)

69

Pleasure Craft (Masters) (6 courses)

138

138

Sanitation (1 course)

19

Site Supervision (2 courses)

54

Statistics and Traffic Analysis (1 course)

17

Traffic Studies (I course)

40

J

Transistor A.M. Receiver Design (2 courses)

49

Transistor F.M. Receiver Design (1 course)

18

T.V. Servicing (1 course)

20

Woodworking Machinery (4 courses)

100

100

* 2 *****8*====*=992 88

22

T

20

18

49

20

24

33

138

2 2 2229 8 8 * * * *

410

410

173

127

22

1

20

18

28

49

49

88

201

20

24

33

69

~ ~ **** SA ASS

23

20

18

24

33

138

19

19

19

54

54

54

17

17

17

40

40;

40

49

49

49

18

18

18

20

20

20

1001

100

Sub-total

1,409

1,409

1,409

1,409

TABLE IV b-Contd.

ENROLMENT IN TECHNICAL AND VOCATIONAL COURSES OTHER THAN TEACHER TRAINING

COURSES FOR THE YEAR 1967 TO 1968

53

Government Schools Subsidized Schools

Private Schools

GRAND TOTAL

Description of Courses Figure in brackets-length in years

M.

F. Total M.

F. Total

M.

Total

M.

F. Total

Part-time Evening Courses:

Department of Building, Surveying and

Structural Engineering

Bricklaying and Plastering (3)

46

46

46

46

Building Organization and Supervision (1)

49

49

49

49

Building Technicians (4)

195

195

195

195

Building Technology (4)

411

411

411

411

Carpentry and Joinery (3)

105

105

105

103

Civil Engineering (4)

190

190

190

190

Concrete Technology (1)

12

12

12

12

Design of Reinforced Concrete and Steel

Structures (1)

21

21

21

21

Furniture Design (3)

48

48

48

48

Health Inspectors (1)

16

16

16

16

Housing Superintendents (1)

37

37

37

37

Inst. Struct. Eng. A & B (2)

181

18

18

18

Land Surveying (1)

129

129

129

129

Painting & Decorating (2)

25

25

25

Plumbing (3)

63

63

63

R.I.C.S. (1)

23

23

23

Sanitary Engineering (1)

56

56

56

Sign Writing (1)

20

20

20

Soil Mechanics (1)

18

18

18

18

Structural Engineering (4)

157

157!

157

1

157

Digitized by

Google

Sub-total

1,639

1,639

T

T

T

1,639

1,639

TABLE IV b-Contd.

ENROLMENT IN TECHNICAL AND VOCATIONAL COURSES OTHER THAN TEACHER TRAINING

COURSES FOR THE YEAR 1967 TO 1968

54

Digitized by

Google

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

Department of Commerce & Management Studies

Accountancy (A.C.C.A.) (5)

155

25

1808

155

25

180

Accountancy (ASA) (5) -

80

6

86

801

6

86

Bookkeeping (3)

282

118

400

282

118

400

Cert. Course in Commerce (2)

4

11

15

4

11

15

Chinese Factory Accounts (2)

67

88

155

67

88

155

Company Secretaryship (4)

63

16

79

63

16

79

Costing (2)

96

24

120

96

241

120

Management Studies (3)

94

94

94

94

Shorthand (6)

30

376

406

30

376

406

Supervisory Studies (1)

53

53

53

Supply Officers (3)

101

101

101

Typewriting (4)

22

22

22

118

53

101

22

Sub-total

1.025

686

1,711

1,025

686 1,711

Department of Electrical Engineering

Electrical Engineering (4)

1,127

1,127

1,127

1,127

Electrical Fitting & Installation (3)

87

87

87

87

Electrical Technicians (4)

236

236

236

236

I.E.E. Part III (2)

27

27

27

27

Radio Servicing (2)

50

50

50

50

Telecommunications (5).

576

576

576

576

T.V. Servicing (2)

11

11

11

11

Sub-total

2,114)

2,114

2,114

2,114

55

Digitized by

Google

TABLE IV b-Contd.

ENROLMENT IN TECHNICAL AND VOCATIONAL COURSES OTHER THAN TEACHER TRAINING

COURSES FOR THE YEAR 1967 TO 1968

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

Department of Industrial & Commercial Design

Basic Design (2)

Commercial Design (2)

33

126

**

11

44

54 180

Sub-total

159

65 224

:

Department of Mathematics & Science

Dental Mechanics (1)

General Applied Statistics (1)

General Course (2)

Industrial Chemistry (4)....

Preliminary Course (2)

Technical Teachers (2)

Workshop Instructors (1)

Sub-total

Department of Mechanical, Production &

Marine Engineering

Automobile Engineering (4)

Automobile Mechanics (4)

Marine Engineering (4)

Mechanical Engineering (4)

Mechanical Engineering Craft Practice (4)

Carried forward

IT

25

39

1,976

124

3,124

34

26

~ || | || |

30

39

1,976

124

3,124

34

26

5,348

5

5,353

96

86

119

660

1191

1,080)

| | | | |

| | | | |

96

86

119

660

119

1,080

I

| | | | |

T

11

1

| | | | |

| | | | |

38 18

159

33;

11

1261

541

#8 13

651

224

44

180

25

30

39

39

1,976

1,976

124

124

3,124)

3,124

34

34

26

26

5,348

5

5,353

96

96

86

86

1191

119

660

660

119

119

1,080

1,080

TABLE IV b-Contd.

ENROLMENT IN TECHNICAL AND VOCATIONAL COURSES OTHER THAN TEACHER TRAINING COURSES FOR THE YEAR 1967 TO 1968

1,080

1,080

108

25

108

25

59

59

15

15

10

10

26

26

830208

1,323

1,323

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

1

| | | | | | │

| | | | | |

Brought forward

1,080

1,080

Mechanical Technicians (4)

108

108

Production Engineering (4)

25

25

Refrigeration (1).

59

59

Sheet Metal Work (4)

15

15

Tool and Die Making (4) Work Study (1)

10

10

26

26

Sub-total

1,323

1,323

56

Digitized by

Google

Department of Nautical Studies

Naval Architecture (4)

Sub-total

771

77

77

77

Department of Textile Industries

Dyeing and Finishing (4)

Knitting (4)

Spinning (4)

Weaving (4)

Sub-total

Total

:

77

2355

84

28

57

UN | 00

| | | | | │_│

| | | | | |

2222

92

28

79

62

77

77

77

77

84

8

92

28

28

77

79

57

62

GRAN

246

15 261

13,218

900 16,118

| | | |

| | | |

| | | |

| | | |

1 1 1 1

1111

246

15

261

15,218

900 16,118

T

T

T

T

57

Digitized by

Google

TABLE IV b-Contd.

ENROLMENT IN TECHNICAL AND VOCATIONAL COURSES OTHER THAN TEACHER TRAINING

COURSES FOR THE YEAR 1967 TO 1968

Description of Courses

MISCELLANEOUS

Full-time:

Technical

Vocational

Commercial

Total

+++

Part-time:

Technical

Vocational

Commercial

Total

SECONDARY

Full-time:

Government Schools

Subsidized Schools

Private Schools

GRAND TOTAL

M.

F. Total M.

F. Total

M.

F. Total

M.

F. Total

1,957

1,958

1.937

11 1,938

1,673

1,387

3,060

1,673

1.387

3,060

538

854

1,392

$38

854 1.392

4,168

2,242

6,410

4.168

2.242 6,410

}

1,305

1,074

3

1.308 1,305

3

1,308

774

1,848 1,074 774

1,848

1,308 1,292

2,600 1.308

1,292

2,600

3,687 2,069 5,756 3,687 2,069 5,756

I

Technical

3,157

1.429 4,586

378

331

709

1,214

236

Vocational

174

174

Commercial

76

76

1,450 4.749 344 433 777 97 825 922

1,996

6,745

518

433

951

97

901

998

Total

3,157

1,429 4,586

552

407

959 1,655

1,494 3.149 5,364

3,330 8,694

GRAND TOTAL

18,375

2,329 20,704

552

407

959 9,510 5,805 15,315 28,437

8,541 36,978

1966-67

Recurrent

Non-Recurrent

TABLE V

ACTUAL EXPENDITURE ON EDUCATION DURING THE YEAR ENDED 31.3.68

Primary Education:

1967-68

Recurrent

Non-Recurrent

Anglo-Chinese Schools English Junior Schools

149,607,608

3,438,711

145,284,494

3,758,245

2,358,389 151,963,997

36,440 3,475,151

2,540,952 147,825,446

156,060 3,914,305

Secondary:

Grammar Schools

Technical Schools

41,793,774

8,942,572

41,657,714

5,922,088

7,384,756 49,178,530

604,625

9,547,197

6,848,785 48,506,499

1,720,759 7,642,847

Technical College

Teacher Training

Post Secondary

Other Education

Universities

Inspectorate

Administration

5,702,835

395,719

5,479,644

2,253,477

6,507,050

4,290

5,850,269

5,674

T:

:

:

:

:

:

2,205,433

3,071

1,530,809

99,971

4,102,433

3,625,616

144,691

41,111,840

7,755,181

5,874,712

30,561,574

3,639,768

84,560

7,315,626

39,859

5,854,123

61,226

4,574,732

Total

GRAND TOTAL

274,383,422

19,645,926

255,270,215

17,740,592

$294,029,348

$273,010,807

58

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Google

TABLE VI

TOTAL RECEIPTS FROM SCHOOL FEES

(1ST APRIL, 1967 to 31st March, 1968)

Day Schools

Evening and Special Afternoon Classes

Schools

Total

School Fees

Extra Subscriptions

School Fees

Extra Subscriptions

Government

Grant ...

Subsidized

Private

$ 8,113,038.80

$ 4,928,385.00

$14,929,630,10

$129,190,601.83

$ 2,121,095.00

$ 10,234,133.80

$ 2,407,249.82

$ 8,400,335.48

$ 2,982,032.04

$ 7,335,634.82

$

61,454.20

$11,440,376,10

$ 55,036.30 $ 23,446,456.08

$161,902.00 | $143,774,911.97

TOTAL

NOTE:

1.

$157,161,655.73

$13,789,617.34

$13,622,925.30

$216,938,30 | $184,791,136,67

'2.

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 Schools

Private Schools

$1,880,916.59

$4,638,351.48

$6,519,268.07

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

1,443

947

63.54

1956

2,416

1,517

62.8

1,548

1,173

75.77

1957

2,958

1,860

62.9

1,852

1,194

65.17

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

5,181

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

1967

18,792

10,630

56.6

6,817

4,556

66.8

59

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TABLE VII b

RESULTS OF EXAMINATION FOR 1966 & 1967

Full Examination

1966

1967

No. of Entrants

14,686

19,232

No. of Candidates Sat

13,977

18,792

No. of Passes

7,872

10,630

No. of Failures

6,105

8,162

Percentage Passed

56.3

56.6

English Language Only

No. of Entrants

3,569

3,651

No. of Candidates Sat

2,706

2,994

No. of Passes

485

719

No. of Failures

2,221

2,275

Percentage Passed

17.9

24.0

ANALYSIS OF ENGLISH SCHOOL CERT. EXAM. RESULTS, 1967

Subject

No. Sat

No. Passed

% Pass (of those who sat)

(F. V

18,711

11,727

LF.VI

:..

:

:

:

:

[F. V

F. V

Mathematics

F. VI

::

::

English Lang. F. VI

{Night Sch.

Chinese Lang. & ƒ F. V

Literature

Chinese History

Geography

History II

Biology

Chemistry

Physics F. VI

17,833 18,008 12,833 13,001 72.1

62.7)

1,296 23,001 1,125

13,571

86.8

59.0

2,994)

719

24.0)

78.9 72.2

15,024

9,931

66.1

13,269

7,372

55.6

10,353

6,049

58.4

14,962

9,021

60.3

10,747

8,228 8,538

7,164

66.7

5,236

292 5,528

63.6

94.2 64.7

11,425

7,817

68.4

317

11,742

269

8,086

68.9

84.9

Add. Mathematics...

Biblical Knowledge

:

1,533

1,055

68.8

6,596

4,457

67.6

Econ. & Pub. Affairs

5,703

2,797

49.0

English Literature ...

1,852

1,440

77.8

60

Digitized by

Google

Subject

TABLE VII b-Contd.

:

:

:

:

:.

:

:

:

No. Sat

No. Passed

% Pass (of those who sat)

414

358

86.5

40

30

75.0

128

83

64.8

57

34

59.6

272

106

39.0

9

6

66.7

2

0

0.0

109

83

76.1

765

601

78.6

358

259

72.3

25

25

100.0

21

20

95.2

265

190

71.7

67

56

83.6

244

196

80.3

97

30

30.9

100

97

97.0

2

0

0.0

14

12

85.7

174

152

87.4

3

3

100.0

3

2

66.7

13

10

76.9

$

5

100.0

4

224

2

42

192 100.0

85.7

100.0

6

4

نیا نیا

3

50.0

3

75.0

8

8

100.0

2

0

0.0

D. S. Cookery

D. S. Needlework

General Science

***

Add. General Science

Art Papers 1, 2 & 3

Art Paper 1, 2 & 4

Art Papers 1, 3 & 4

Dressmaking

Technical Drawing.....

Metalwork

Pottery

Practical Electricity

Woodwork ...

Embroidery

       Principles of Accounts Typewriting & Shorthand...

Music, Papers 1, 2 & 3a

Music, Papers 1, 2 & 3b

Elementary Chinese

French

Dutch

German

Hindi

Indonesian

Burmese

Japanese

       Portuguese Spanish

Thai ...

Urdu

...

...

:

::

61

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Google

TABLE VII c

ANALYSIS OF CHINESE SCHOOL CERTIFICATE RESULTS, 1967

Chinese Language...

English Language ..

Chinese History

World History

Civics

Subject

Geography...

Advanced Mathematics

Ordinary Mathematics

Physics

Chemistry

Biology

Domestic Subjects

Religious Knowledge (Protestant) Religious Knowledge (Catholic)... Religious Knowledge (Buddhist)

Art

Music

Technical Drawing

Dressmaking

Bookkeeping

Typewriting

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

Percent-

Sat

Passed

age Passed

6,746 5,839

86.6

5,836

3,269

56.0

5,591

3,561

63.7

4,976

3,478

69.9

3,432

2,397

69.8

5,024

2,975

59.2

1,773

1,020

57.5

4,745

2,990

63.0

2,422

1,457

60.2

4,162

2,513

60.4

+

6,350

4,140

65.2

167

120

71.8

3,477

2,504

72.0

992

757

76.3

94

80

85.1

928

381

41.1

45

42

93.3

15

12

80.0

8

7

87.5

18

11

61.1

53

38

71.7

RESULTS OF EXAMINATIONS FOR 1966 AND 1967

1966

1967

Number of entrants

Number of candidates sat

Number of passes

Number of failures

6,206

7,505

5,854

6,817

3,866

4,556

1,988

2,261

Percentage passed

66.0

66.8

62

Digitized by

Google

63

Digitized by

Google

TABLE VII d

HONG KONG MATRICULATION EXAMINATION RESULTS

1959

1960

1961

1962

1963

1964

1965

1966

1967

No. of candidates ('O' and 'A'

levels combined)

3,010

3,427

4,281

3,272

3,389

3,675

4,161

No. of candidates at 'A' level only

1,279

1,546 1,935

1,952

1,795

1,782 2,001

2,446

2,235

No. of candidates successfully completing matriculation

requirements

...

578

570

714

865

886

939 1,134 1,258 1,131

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.

1968

THE CHINESE UNIVERSITY OF HONG KONG MATRICULATION EXAMINATION RESULTS

No. of candidates entered

No. of candidates successful

1966

1967

2,183

2,555

3,035

908

1,052

(not yet known)

9,357 8,246

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

23,377

11,454

TABLE VII e

GENERAL CERTIFICATE OF EDUCATION EXAMINATION ANALYSIS OF RESULTS, SUMMER 1967

Number of Candidates entered Number of Candidates sat

+

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

13,095

5.773

1,387

6,786

Number of Passes at O.L.* Number of Certificates awarded

Ordinary Level

Advanced Level

Subject

Entries

Sat Passes

% Passed

Entries Sat Passes

% Passed

Passed

at O.L.*

Principles of Accounts

202

171

134

78.4

Art, Syllabus A

79

69

56

81.2

43

31

17

54.8

10

Biology

2,593

2,106

T

1,396

66.3

Botany

4

2

2

100.0

British Constitution

43

25

10

40.0

Chemistry

Commerce

2,607

2,105

1,760

83.6

41

27

65.9

Cookery

21

21

15

71.4

Needlework

3

2

66.7

Economics

469

337

138

40.9

Elementary Surveying

47

38

30

78.9

English Language

7,574

6,766

2,023

29.9

English Literature 'A'

525

399

258

64.7

English Literature 'B'

34

19

3

15.8

French

199

159

61

38.4

General Science

9

28.5

Geography

1,393

1,013

722

71.3

1,053

Geology

6

3

2

66.6

German

28

15

40.0

History 'A'

377

184

History 'B'

611

477

52.2 46.3

Ancient History

4

Hindi

Malay

Modern Hebrew

Norwegian

Metalwork

Woodwork

TOTAL...

Hist. of Br. Com. & Emp.

Br. Econ. History

   Human Anatomy, P. & H. Italian

Latin, Syll, A

Logic

Pure Mathematics 'A' Pure Mathematics 'B' Add./Further Maths. Applied Mathematics

Pure & Applied Maths.

Music

Physics

Physics-with-Chemistry

Religious Knowledge

Russian

Spanish

Technical Drawing

Zoology

Bahasa Indonesia

Burmese

Chinese/Classical Chin.

Dutch

Japanese/Classical Jap.

2,751

10

122

2,640

ནྡྷསྶ1སིནྡྷཧམིཉྩ1

18རྒྱུུསིདྡྷིམི1 - བྲཱནྟུཡཙྪཱསྶ

- ཙྪཱཙཱུཀེཙི།

2640

0

16.7

50.0

60.3

20

6

30.0

14

37.8

2,095

90.0

2,396

17

100,0

301

78.8

1,441

T

9

81.8

1,818

82.6

1,093

16

33.3

27

58.7

1

100.0

3

75.0

46

39.7

100.0

ུ=སྒྱུ21 | |ཅུ༐ |6༄⌘མྦྷོ་ །།ྣ|ཌ༐ཀླ|ས༠

ཙནྟཱི 1|:ཀྲིཤྩ 8 ནྡྷུ2 1ཊཿ 1:་་ཤྩ 1

473

356

164

46.1

109

11

2

2

100.0

0

73

38

9

23.7

8

861

586

317

54.1

127

407

265

39

14.7

33

37

27

16

59.3

65

38

14

36.8

24

20

7

35.0

720

169

23.5

117

0

508

156

30.7

74

17

5.9

18

2 00 00

50.0

8

37.5

0

1,811

1,005

55.5

222

101

62

61.4

21

1,056

587

55.6

198

62

£ 24

12601

38.7

4

3

0

0

1

789

486

61.6

156

14

7.2

1

0

168

110

65.5

14

11

54.5

1

100.0 95.8

3,637

3,200 2,317 72.4

269

75.0

0

60.0

0

100.0

1

12

11

10

8

100,0

36.4

50.0

23,377 19,329 | 11,454 59.1 13,095

9,856

5,773 58.6 1,387*

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

were awarded a pass at Ordinary.

† These 260 were candidates who had offered Pure Maths, and Applied Maths, and passed

in Maths. 1 and 3, and were therefore awarded a pass in P. & A. Maths.

64

Digitized by

Google

TABLE VIIƒ

SECONDARY SCHOOL ENTRANCE EXAMINATION, 1965, 1966 AND 1967

Sat

Promoted

Scholarships

Type of School

1965

1966 1967 1965 1966 1967 1965 1966 1967

Government

Grant

Subsidized

78 70

13,586 15,067 17,998|| 5,594 6,616

7,891 7,407 7,793 1,707 1,717 1,821

74

31

19

21

36

32

2

7,687)

105 135 149

Private

7,589 7,596 7,380 1,578 1,658

1,540|

23

323535

༄།|༄ པླ

18

20

TOTAL

29,144 30,140 33,245 8,900|10,027 11,080|

160 179 187

TABLE VII g

OVERSEAS EXAMINATIONS, EXCLUDING

TECHNICAL EXAMINATIONS, 1967

Examination

Entered

Sat

University of London General Certificate of Education

University of London External Degrees .......

11,277 119

9,834

100

London Chamber of Commerce

8,529

6,443

Pitman's Shorthand

***

788

720

Pitman's Typewriting

194

178

Cambridge Certificate of Proficiency in English

109

95

Cambridge Lower Certificate in English

54

50

Institute of Bookkeepers

28

21

Chartered Institute of Secretaries

190

141

Association of International Accountants

657

528

Association of Certified and Corporate Accountants

277

212

Institute of Chartered Shipbrokers

15

12

Institute of Fire Engineers

72

60

College of Preceptors A.C.P./L.C.P.

7

Gemmological Association

British Federation of Master Printers

Society of Engineers

Institute of Export

The Australian Institute of Cartographers

Royal Society of Arts (Shorthand)

Institute of Company Accountants

Industrial Transport Association ...

Queensland Agricultural College .

West London College Ordinary National Diploma

Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL)

12 1

1,488

1,427

TOTAL

23,832

19,853

65

Digitized by

Google

TABLE VII h

TECHNICAL EXAMINATIONS RESULTS FOR THE PERIOD

FROM 1.4.67-31.3.68

Technical Examinations

Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors:

General Section

First Examination

Intermediate Examination

Final Examination

Quantity Surveying Section

Intermediate Examination Final Part I Examination Final Part II Examination

Land Surveying Section

First Examination

Intermediate Examination

Final Examination

Institute of Building

Institution of Structural Engineers:

Graduateship

Part A

Part B

...

:

No. Sat

No. Passed

27

16

217

12

11

16

1

700

622

659

292

12

8

0

Not

[available

WAN

2

4

3

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 $1-$3 Mechanical Engineering $1-$3

Higher Certificate:

Electrical Engineering Al Mechanical Engineering

66

12

Not

yet known

===

38

37

11

7

26

525

11

15

[1 (Part A)

:

::

::

Digitized by

3 (Part B) 3 (both

A&B)

2,468

1,833

17

30

=3

11

23

46

Google

42

TABLE VII h-Contd.

Technical Examinations

P.M.G. Certificate in Wireless Telegraphy:

First Class, Part I

First Class, Part II Second Class, Part I

Second Class, Part II

+4

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

TABLE VII i

No. Sat

No. Passed

8

5

24

14

14

5540

8

Flolabo

9

19

11

13

4

16

13

55

28

7

11

3

THE ASSOCIATED BOARD OF THE ROYAL SCHOOLS OF MUSIC

THEORY OF MUSIC EXAMINATION 1967-68 (Previous year's figures in brackets)

Sat

Passed

July 1967

Nov. March 1967 1968

Total

July 1967

Nov. March 1967 1968

Total

Grades I-VIII.

356

480 611 1,447 316 (354) (487) (583) (1,424) (294)

408

(439)

551 1,275 (486) | (1,219)

Grades I-VIII

L.R.S.M.

PRACTICAL EXAMINATION, 1967

:

:

:

67

Sat

Passed

3,885 (4,049)

3,324 (2,017)

63

23

(43)

(14)

Digitized by

Google

TABLE VIII a

UNIVERSITY OF HONG KONG: ENROLMENT BY FACULTIES

ANALYSIS OF STUDENT NUMBERS IN FACULTIES AND THE LANGUAGE SCHOOL-31st March, 1968

Engineering and Architecture

Sub-totals

Faculties

Arts

Science Medicine

Engineer- Architec- ing

Social Language Sciences School

ture

Totals

Sex

Full- Part- time time

M. W. M.

W. M. W. M. W.

M. W.

M. W. M. W.

Courses

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

1101 111

122) 145

151

661

19

5th year/final year B.Sc. Special

ASSER

431 99 21 119

24

17 102 29 70

107 15 70

71

12

701

12

20

1232-

455601

65 48

725

$59

$61

101

99

26

Sub-totals

754

312

538

259

95

113

2,071

Reading for Higher Degrees

Masters (Full-time)

19

12 24 11:

Masters (Part-time)

71

25

16

Doctors (Full-time)

4

Doctors (Part-time)

11

5

2696

20

2

2

147

78

"ཡ མ༥ ་་ ༧༽

12-2

8323

11-3

94

128

20

T

35

28

10

277

68

Digitized by

Google

12975

2,486

Sub-totals

43

2

14

9

23

2

77

Others

External

8

161

T

2

2

Language School

12

30

221

७/

9

16

15

Sub-totals

24

2

2

2

31

61

Sub-totals

TOTALS

488) 4801 284 108 968 392

4541 93 2891

547

931

11 75| 57 431 11

2,245 241 2,486

289

104

132

54

Sub-totals

Reading for Diplomas & Certificates Dip. Ed.

Cert. Ed. (1st year)

Cert. Ed. (2nd year)

Dip. Arch.

Dip. Soc. St.

Dip. Chin. Lang. Cert. Chin. Lang.

Men: 1,726-69.43% Women: 760-30.57%

D.Sc.

Ph.D.

M.Sc. (Eng.)

M.A.

...

M.A. (Ed.)

M.Sc.

M.S.

B.Sc. (Spe.)

M.B., B.S.

B.Sc. (Eng.)

B.A.

B.Sc. (Gen.)

B.Arch. ...

TABLE VIII b

UNIVERSITY OF HONG KONG

DEGREES CONFERRED NOVEMBER, 1967

...

HIGHER DEGREES

...

3

23

1

6

1

FIRST DEGREES

29

78

57

245

68

69

Digitized by Google

18

TABLE VIII c

THE CHINESE UNIVERSITY OF HONG KONG

STUDENT ENROLMENT AS AT 31.3.1968

Ist 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.

70

I. Arts

Digitized by

Google

R.K. and Phil.

Philosophy Fine Arts

Music

TOTAL

by subj. Įby Dept. by Faculty

244

9006

606

379

379

18

a

* 539 A8=-=-833

2 $49 ammnnao

نیا

22

KATRINAN |

899999

22400302nFac3t

5

00

8

2=2

10 00

9 Ana

eve 10

00 t

New hit me h 00 LA LA LA

100mann

نے ںں نے ں ں ں ں نے ں نے ں نے ن

II. Commerce

& Soc.

Science

Econ. & Bus, Adm. Economics

Bus. Management

Acctg. & Finance

Geography

Sociology & Soc. Work Sociology

Social Work Journalism

Nõaw~-awa

ON W LA LA 14 Lad 200 CN

1.

-wõzõnnuaõnaõm

Q0+-+montera ||

|| Nutaõ++AN

|| EuBaus

bungna ||

404

404

783

TABLE VIII c-Contd.

THE CHINESE UNIVERSITY OF HONG KONG

STUDENT ENROLMENT As at 31.3.1968

Faculty

Department

College

1st year 2nd year

M. F. M. F.

III. Science

Mathematics

Physics

Physics &

Electronics

Chemistry

Biology

üzdüz Düzdüz

C.C.

C.C.

N.A.

ن ن ن ن ن ن ن ز ن ن ن )

10

9

10

9

34-2 |

13

-

12

13

18

11

19

10

10

15

13 13

9

2

7

ManONA

9=0=40

3rd year 4th year

M. F. M.

Post-grad.

Sub-total

F.

M. F.

M.

F.

6

14

|-|-

31

26

30

10

4

56

37

66093

32

40

40

43

1

5

12

3

13

|2mma❤

58

16

46

18

64

42

9

51

35

43

37

15

C2969 3*ZERO

TOTAL

by subj. by Dept. by Faculty

37

109

65

148

74

189

78

52

130

576

Chung Chi: Sub-total (by sex)

120

99

(by class)

219

76 64

140

89 77

166

89

90

374 330

179

704

(M)

(F)

New Asia:

Sub-total (by sex) (by class)

106 73

179

93 32

145

121 49

1701

110 50

160†

430 224

654+

1,144

821

GRAND TOTAL

United:

Sub-total (by sex)

89 71

(by class)

160

86 68

154

84 52

1361

81 76

1571

340 267

607+

1,965.

TOTAL

558

439

472

496

1,965

IV. Others: School of Education-Full-time

8

8

8

16

Part-time

10

10

10

Graduate School

39

6

39

6

45

Research Institute Exchange Students

12 4

12

N

TOTAL

121

71

Digitized by

Google

Special Students

N.A.

U.C.

N.A.

Part-time Students

2

T

3

2

3

NOTE: * If the students of the School of Education, the Institute, the Graduate School and the exchange, special and part-time students are included, the grand total will be 2.086.

*Including re-admitted diplomates and pre-University graduates.

B.A.

B.Sc.

B.Comm.

B.S.Sc.

::

TABLE VIII d

THE CHINESE UNIVERSITY OF HONG KONG

DEGREES AND DIPLOMAS CONFERRED, 1967

DEGREES CONFERRED

Dip. A. Dip.Sc. Dip.Comm.

Dip.S.Sc.

DIPLOMAS CONFERRED

212223

72

164

102

79

129

Digitized by

Google

20

1

1

TABLE IX a

NUMBER OF STUDENTS WHO HAVE LEFT HONG KONG FOR

OVERSEAS STUDY DURING RECENT YEARS

YEAR

1963-64

1964-65

1965-66

1966-67

1967-68

U.K.

U.S.A.

Canada

Australia

626

911

327

372

793

794

279

238

1,046

1,012

283

276

1,247

1,111

549

193

1,382

1,414

862

236

TABLE IX b

HONG KONG STUDENTS' UNIT, LONDON

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

Courses

Accountancy

Architecture

Art... Commerce...

Dentistry

Economics... Education

Engineering

G.C.E. Law

Medicine

Meteorology

Music Nursing Science

...

Secretarial ...

Social Science

Textiles

Others

Schoolchildren

:

:

:

:

73

31st March, 1967

31st March,

1968

54

72

42

49

42

35

47

46

8

6

32

34

38

42

364

402

733

1,171

119

120

126

112

2

1

31

29

637

783

110

135

88

102

11

19

16

27

243

251

861

748

3,604

4,184

Digitized by

Google

Private

Total

Enrolment

Enrolment

Enrolment

Total

Total

Total

M.

F.

M.

F.

M.

F.

TABLE X

ADULT EDUCATION: AS AT 31.3.68

Government

General:

Evening School of Higher Chinese

Studies and Private Evening Colleges...

165

146

311 1,246 537

1,783

1,411

683

2,094

English Language.

2,075

2,272

4,347

2,075

2,272

4,347

Chinese (General Subjects)

1,171

1,057

2,228

1,171

1,057

2,228

Music

5

123

128

5

123

128

Art and Crafts

113

228

341

113

228

341

Mathematics

48

35

83

48

35

83

Gymnastics

35

35

35

35

Modern Dance

13

13

13

13

Practical Household Courses

263

5,289

5,552

263

5,289

5,552

Chinese Literacy

113

434

547

374

1,075 1,449

487

1,509

1,996

Sub-total

3,988

9,597

13,585

1,620

1,612

3,232 5,608

11,209 | 16,817

74

Digitized by

Google

Technical and Vocational:

Technical Courses Commercial Courses Part-time Release Courses Other Vocational Courses

Sub-total:

TOTAL

10,906

1,025

1,246

ཆཙུག

85

10,991 3,262

4

3,266 | 14,168

89❘ 14,257

664

1,689 1,846 2,146

3,992 2,871

2,810

5,681

13 1,259

1,246

13

1,259

2,747

2,161

4,908

2,747

2,161

4,908

13,177

762 13,939

7,855

4,311 | 12,166 | 21,032

5,073 | 26,105

:

:

17,165| 10,359 | 27,524 | 9,475 | 5,923 | 15,398 26,640 16,282 42,922

75

Digitized by

TABLE XI

ENROLMENT IN SPECIAL SCHOOLS AS AT 31.3.1968

Type of Schools

Kindergarten

Primary

Secondary

Total

26 (21)

121 (142)

47 (34)

194 (197)

85 (81)

411 (429)

20 (-)

96 (114)

385 (308)

1

I Î

25 (13)

5 (15)

516 (510)

481 (422)

30 (28)

Schools for Blind Children

Schools for Deaf Children

:

:

:

Schools for Physically Handicapped Children

School for the Mentally Handicapped

Google

TOTAL

232 (229)

922 (894)

67 (34)

1,221 (1,157)

NOTE: Last year's figures in brackets.

APPENDIX

EDUCATION SCHOLARSHIPS FUND

ACCOUNTS FOR THE YEAR ENDED

31ST AUGUST, 1967

CONTENTS

Statement

1 Balance Sheet .

Page

76

2

Income and Expenditure Account .

77

3

Second Schedule Scholarships-Balance of Capital and

Reserve Fund Accounts

78

4

Sterling Investments

79

5

Local Investments.

79

6

Deposit at Call

82

76

Digitized by

Google

1965-66

ASSETS

STATEMENT 1

EDUCATION SCHOLARSHIPS FUND BALANCE SHeet as at 31st August, 1967

94,348.95

(75,234.72)

Sterling Investment at cost (Market Value $80,090.07) Local Investment at cost

(Market Value $242,361.28) Cash at Bank

222,928.32

(243,102.38)

23,683.15

1,700.82

4,500.00

44.63

Tax Reclaimable

Deposit with Treasury

Deposit at Call

77

Digitized by

Google

347,205.87

FINANCED AS FOLLOWS:

290,424.42

Capital

29,196.20

Reserve Fund

Suspense Account

27,585.25

347,205.87

Income and Expenditure Account

:

APPENDIX-Contd.

1st Schedule 2nd Schedule

Total

Statement

(or Notes)

$

67,563.93

26,785.02

94,348,95

17,621.89

241,706.43

259,328.32

2,240.81

7,791.25

10,032.06

3,900.00

21,600.00

25,500.00

31.50

13.13

44.63

91,358.13

297,895.83

389,253.96

67,826.24

236,999.14

324,825.38

3

18,042.96 12,903.38

30,946.34

3

5,488.93

91,358.13

160.00

27,833.31

297,895.83

160.00

Note 1

33,322.24

2

389,253.96

D. T. SMITH,

Treasurer.

Education Scholarships Fund.

5th October, 1967.

W. D. GREGG, Director of Education.

Trustee of Education Scholarships Fund.

Note 1: The sum of $160.00 shown under the Suspense Account represents cash donation in respect of Ming Tak Memorial Scholarship for payment of 67-68 awards.

CERTIFICATE OF THE DIRECTOR OF AUDIT

The above Balance Sheet and the accompanying Income and Expenditure Account (together with annexed Statements 3 to 6) have been examined in accordance with Section 9(5) of the Education Scholarships Fund Ordinance. 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 December, 1967.

D. G. BRITTON, Director of Audit.

STATEMENT 2

EDUCATION SCHOLARSHIPS FUND

APPENDIX-Contd.

INCOME AND Expenditure ACCOUNT FOR THE YEAR ENDED 31st August, 1967

Scholarships

SECOND SCHEDULE

Fung Ping Shan

Shiu Hing

Lo Wai Kwan

Ho Wing

Alfred Crook

Balunce 1st Sept. 1966

Income

Amount Available for Awards

Payment of Awards 1966-67

Transferred to Reserve

Balance 31st August 1967

Statement

(or Notes)

$

S

$

$

537.97

454.73

992.70

400.00

592.70

662.79

1,009.61

1,672.40

800.00

872.40

4,386.90

3,463.60

7,850.50

1,500.00

1,750.14

4,600.36

669.88

554.07

1,223.95

400.00

823.95

1,168.26

904.31

2,072.57

800.00

1,272.57

Lau Man Kui

Iu Po Sham

Crozier

Cheung Pui Iu

Cheung Hok Chau

2,686.48

1,310.44

3,996.92

500.00

3,496.92

307.32

176.23

483.55

150.00

333.55

Note 2

1,687.83

1,710.87

3,398.70

1,600.00

1,798.70

Notes 3 & 7

399.42

463.69

863.11

400.00

463.11

338.24

475.22

813.46

300.00

513.46

Williamson

420.96

501.48

922.44

400.00

522.44

Q.C. Centenary J.F. Grose

248.85

406.64

655.49

400.00

255.49

Q.C. Centenary Lo Tze Hoi

511.08

454.54

965.62

400.00

565.62

Q.C. Centenary Lo Min Nung

$11.09

454.54

965.63

400.00

565.63

Q.C. Centenary Pang Kwok Sui

911.58

647.19

1,558.77

400.00

1,158.77

Q.C. Centenary U Sze Wing

243.24

420.10

663.34

240.00

423.34

Note 4

Griffiths Prize

132,00

151.51

283.51

80.00

203.31

Chan Yat Hing.

3,546.63

3,012.28

6,558.91

1,960.00

4,398.91

Lui Kee

Murjani

Tsang Fook

Wan Ju Shing Lam Pak To Ming Tak

2,191.67

1,920.53

4,112.20

1,100.00

3,012.20

837.00

3,192.38

4,029.38

2,400.00

1,629.38

Note 5

95.31

95.31

93.31

18.43

18.43

18.43

8.28

8.28

8.28

8.28

8.28

8.28

22,399.19

21.814.26

44,213.45

14,630.00

1,750.14

27,833.31

FIRST SCHEDULE

Total

5,186.06

27,585.25

4,852.87

10,038.93

4,550.00

5,488.93

Note 6

26,667.13

54,252.38

19,180.00

1,750.14

33,322.24

78

Digitized by

Google

Note 2: Including tax reclaimable of $13.13.

3: Including difference in exchange of $7.12.

4:

5:

6:

7:

An additional scholarship of $160.00 was paid out of the Suspense Account. Including $1,500.00 special cash donation transferred from capital account. Including tax reclaimable of $31.50 and difference in exchange of $9.39.

The amount of cash available for award to be made in 1967-68 is only $981.30 because $817.40 has been reinvested by the Crown Agents.

Notes 2, 3, 5 and 6 relate to the respective amounts under the Income Column; Note 4 relates to the amount under Payment of Awards 1966-67 Column whereas Note 7 relates to the amount under the Balance as at 31.8.67 Column.

APPENDIX-Contd.

STATEMENT 3

EDUCATION SCHOLARSHIPS FUND

SECOND SCHedule Scholarships Capital and Reserve Fund ACCOUNTS

Fung Ping Shan

Shiu Hing ...

Lo Wai Kwan

Ho Wing

***

Alfred Crook

Lau Man Kui

Iu Po Sham

Crozier

Cheung Pui Iu

Cheung Hok Chau

Williamson

Q.C. 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

Tsang Fook

Wan Iu Shing

Lam Pak To

Ming Tak ...

***

:

AS AT 31st August, 1967

Scholarships

Capital Accounts

Reserve Fund

Accounts

$ 6,000.00

$

.

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

8,085.15

2,707.15

15,117.61

4,985.46

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

7,912.08

232.48

4,633.65

-

8,058.91

121.09

:

:

:

8,058.91

121.09

6,475.00

6,940.00

1,525.00

:

:

:

36,792.93

24,225.08

1,203.10

36,000.00

5,000.00

4,000.00

2,500.00

2,500.00

79

$256,999.14

$12,903.38

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STATEMENT 4

EDUCATION SCHOLARSHIPS FUND

STERLING INVESTMENTS AS at 31st August, 1967

APPENDIX-Contd.

Cost

Market Value

STOCKS

Scholarships Concerned Nominal Value

Middle

Local

Sterling

Market

Value

Currency

Rate

Local

Currency

S. Australia 3% 1916 or after

British Guiana 5% 1980-85

1980-84

31% War Loan 1952 or after

First Schedule

£

7,057 5

S d

£

$ d

63,572 14 11

S

£

S d

57,163.93

42

2,964

1

11 47,424.87

Scholarships

do

518 12

9 500 0

8,000.00

67

347 9

9

5,559.80

East Africa High Commission 54%

do

Second Schedule Crozier Scholarships

155 16 7 150 0 0 2,400.00 3,040 12 11,671 1 2 26,785.02

721

112 19

6

1,807.60

52

1,581 2 3

25,297.80

TOTAL

10,772 6 11 5,893 16 I 94,348.95*

5,005 12 7 80,090.07†

* Exchange cost at date of purchase. Converted at 1/3d=$1.-

80

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STATEMENT 5

EDUCATION SCHOLARSHIPS FUND LOCAL INVEStments as at 31st August, 1967

Scholarships Concerned

Market Value

STOCKS

Nominal

Value

Cost

Rate

Value

$

$

34% Rehabilitation Loan 1973-78

First Schedule Scholarships Second 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

do

First Schedule Scholarships Second Schedule Shiu Hing

3,670,00

4,868.50 N9.40

3,449.80

9,450.00

9,818.70 N9.40

8,883.00

1,312

13,120.00

14,687.20

12,332.80

STATEMENT 5-Contd.

APPENDIX-Contd.

Market Value

STOCKS

Scholarships Concerned

Nominal

Value

Cost

Rate

Value

$

34

Shares of $10.- Co., Ltd.

- each in Hong Kong Telephone

Second Schedule-Shiu Hing

340.00

711.00

17.60

598.40

115

do

-Lo Wai Kwan

1,150.00

2,880.10

17.60

2,024.00

306

do

--Ho Wing

3,060.00

6,808.00 17.60

5,385.60

249

do

-Q.C. Lo Tze

Hoi

2,490.00

7,914.63 17.60

4,382.40

249

do

-Q.C. Lo Min

Nung

2,490.00

7,914.65 17.60

4,382.40

300

do

---Murjani

3,000.00

7,622.47 17.60

5,280,00

1,253

12,530.00

33,850.87

22,052.80

1,000 Shares of $7.50 each in Dairy Farm Ice & Cold Storage Co., Ltd.

Second Schedule--Lo Wai Kwan

7,500.00

14,962.80 | N28.90

28,900.00

400

do

200

do

--Lau Man Kui -Q.C. Pang

3,000.00

11,580.00 | N28.90

11,560.00

Kwok Sui

1,500.00

6,475.00 | N28.90

5,780.00

1,600

12,000.00

33,017.80

46,240.00

278

Shares of $10.-

each in Hong Kong Electric Co., Ltd. Second Schedule--Cheung Pui lu

2,780.00

8,395.00 17.60

4,892.80

288

www

do

-Cheung Hok

Chau

2,880.00

8,645.00 17.60

5,068.80

282

53

do

do

--Williamson

2,820.00

7,630.00 17.60

4,963.20

--Chan Yat Hing

530.00

1,203.10 17.60

932.80

901

9,010.00

25,873.10

15,857.60

300

Shares of $7.

each in Union Water Boat Co., Ltd.

Second Schedule-Q.C. U Sze

Wing

2,100.00

6,940.00 | N17.60

5,280.00

387

Shares of $5.-each in The Hong Kong Tram ways Ltd. Second Schedule-Q.C. J. F. Grose

1,935.00

4,626.75 N8.45

3,270.15

150

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

Second Schedule-Griffiths Prize

£50.0.0d

800.00

1,525.00 9.60

1,440.00

81

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STOCKS

STATEMENT 5-Contd.

APPENDIX-Contd.

Market Value

Scholarships Concerned

Nominal

Value

Cost

Rate

Value

110

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

Second Schedule-Alfred Crook

2,750,00

9,550.00 128.50

14,135.00

500

Shares of $10.- each in China Light and Power Co., Lid.

74% Fixed Deposit with the Bank of East Asia Ltd.

Second Schedule-Murjani Second Schedule-Fung Ping Shan

5,000.00

9,211.28 12.50

6,250.00

6.000.00

6,000.00

6.000.00

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

First Schedule Scholarships Second Schedule-Lo Wai Kwan

1,700.00

1,700.00

1,700.00

60.17

60.17

60.17

--Ho Wing

195.53

195.53

195.53

-Alfred Crook

260.00

260.00

260.00

--Lau Man Kui

240.00

240.00

240.00

Williamson

$13.60

$13.60

513.60

--Q.C. Lo Tze

Hoi

265.35

265.35

265.35

--Q.C. Lo Min

Nung

265.35

265.35

265.35

3,500.00

3,500.00

3,500.00

8% Fixed Deposit with Wayfoong Finance Ltd.

Second Schedule-Chan Yat Hing]

36,792.93

36,792.93

36,792.93

-Murjani

18,500.00

18,500.00

18,500.00

-Tsang Fook

5,000.00

$,000.00

5,000.00

-Wan Iu Shing

3,800.00

3,800.00

3,800.00

-Lo Wai Kwan

2,200,00

2,200.00

2,200.00

-Lam Pak To

2,500.00

2,500.00

2,500.00

-Ming Tak

2,500.00

2,500.00

2,500.00

71,292,93

71,292.93

71,292.93

8% Fixed Deposit with Hang Seng Bank Ltd.

Second Schedule--Lui Kee

24,000.00

24,000.00

24,000.00

Total Local Investments

$181,037.93 $259,328.32

$242,361.28

82

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APPENDIX-Contd.

Amount

$ 3,900.00

STATEMENT 6

EDUCATION SCHOLARSHIPS FUND

DEPOSIT AT CALL WITH THE HongKong & Shanghai BANKING CORPORATION

as at 31st AuGUST, 1967

Scholarships

FIRST SCHEDULE

500.00

1,100.00

4,000.00

1,100.00

900.00

3,000.00

200.00

400.00

500.00

:

:

:

:

:

:

4:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:

:..

:

:

:

:.

:

:

:

:

SECOND SCHEDULE:

Fung Ping Shan

Shiu Hing

Lo Wai Kwan

Ho Wing

Alfred Crook

Lau Man Kui

Iu Po Sham

Cheung Pui Iu

Cheung Hok Chau

Williamson

Q.C. J. F. Grose

Q.C. Lo Tze Hoi

:

:

Q.C. Lo Min Nung...

Q.C. Pang Kwok Sui

Q.C. U Sze Wing

Chan Yat Hing

Lui Kee

Murjani

Wan Iu Shing

Total

:

:

:

:

:

:

T

:

:

:..

:

:

:

:

:

:.

F

:

:

:

:

83

500.00

200.00

500.00

500.00

:

:

:

600.00

400.00

4,500.00

1,000.00

1,500.00

200.00

$25,500.00

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1

1

I

1


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