Public schools lack funds to implement digital teaching methods
Slow internet access and lack of resources mean some schools left behind
Children today are no strangers to digital learning. At Baptist Rainbow Primary School in Wong Tai Sin, tablet computers are even a fixture in Primary One classes.
Doing alphabet matching exercises on iPads has become a routine, with teachers picking and displaying answers on a big screen in the classroom to help students learn.
The school of about 190 students has its own online learning platform, 80 tablet computers, a digital library of more than 8,000 e-books and a room dedicated to three-dimensional printing.
Upper primary students are learning app design as well as aerial photography for capturing city footage in general education classes. The school is also preparing for a series of new initiatives, including a flipped classroom whereby students first watch digitally recorded lectures at home, then discuss them with their peers and teachers online before doing presentations in class.
All these efforts are intended to nurture tech-savvy graduates for the future workforce.
"Creativity will be very important 20 years from now," principal Chu Tsz-wing says.