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Education in Hong Kong
OpinionLetters

Letters | Schools need more support to integrate talent visa dependants into Hong Kong

Readers discuss how to help new arrivals settle down in school, urban regeneration, and pet-friendly transport

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Students head off after school in Fortress Hill in 2020. Photo: Dickson Lee
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When asked about the process of transitioning a student from one school to another, I often resort to the same analogy: it’s like repotting a plant. The plant may thrive in its new, larger environment, but there’s always a risk that the roots won’t take hold.

The Post’s report on the challenges faced by the children of Top Talent Pass Scheme and Quality Migrant Admission Scheme visa holders (“‘I felt lost’: mainland Chinese talent children on their struggles to settle in Hong Kong”, July 18) should come as no surprise. Young people encounter a host of obstacles even when moving to a new school within the same city: new teachers, new buildings and, above all, new peers. The complex social dynamics unique to every school environment require careful navigation – a process that can prove difficult even for adults.
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The complexity of these dynamics is multiplied a hundred-fold by the language barriers that many mainland students run into in Hong Kong schools. Disparate educational regimes and subtle cultural differences between the mainland and Hong Kong only exacerbate the situation. School administrators may have experience in integrating a handful of new students each year, but they likely find it overwhelming to do so on the scale described in the report.

We must not assume that students, teachers and schools will simply sort themselves out when they are placed under such strain.

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Instead, schools must receive more direct support to integrate new arrivals seamlessly into communities. We can take lessons from Hong Kong’s many international schools, which regularly welcome large numbers of new students among their ranks.

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