logo
Record stress levels ahead of DSE results: survey

Record stress levels ahead of DSE results: survey

RTHK2 days ago
Record stress levels ahead of DSE results: survey
A survey by the Hong Kong Federation of Youth Groups (HKFYG) found over half of the 1,456 secondary students interviewed reported significant stress. Photo: RTHK
With Diploma of Secondary Education (DSE) exam results coming out next week, student stress levels have hit a record high since the pandemic, a youth group said on Thursday.
A survey by the Hong Kong Federation of Youth Groups (HKFYG) found over half of the 1,456 secondary students interviewed reported significant stress.
Among form 6 students awaiting DSE results, 52.9 percent reported they were highly stressed, a sharp rise from 41.7 percent last year and a record-high since 2020.
Meanwhile, 57.1 percent of form 5 students preparing for upcoming exams also reported high stress levels.
Andy Chan, supervisor of the HKFYG, said economic uncertainty and shrinking job prospects are weighing on young people's minds.
"In 2020, there was Covid. It meant the whole of society, including students, encountered uncertainty. They didn't know what was happening... Compared to recent research, it's pretty similar because we don't know how the economy will go, will it rebound or steady as right now," he said.
"We found that they feel pretty worried about whether they have good prospects after they make a choice in the Jupas [Joint University Programmes Admissions System], whether they will have a good job after they graduate."
Chan also highlighted growing anxiety about artificial intelligence, with many students fearing their chosen study paths and potential careers could be marginalised or even eliminated by the time they enter the workforce.
In response, he strongly encouraged students to develop contingency plans regardless of their exam results.
Chan also said the HKFYG will enhance its support services next week to provide better assistance for students and parents navigating the stressful period.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

3 in Hong Kong remanded in custody for allegedly seeking secession
3 in Hong Kong remanded in custody for allegedly seeking secession

South China Morning Post

time18 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

3 in Hong Kong remanded in custody for allegedly seeking secession

A 15-year-old boy and two others have been remanded in custody for allegedly conspiring to seek Hong Kong's independence through a Taiwan-based political organisation in breach of the national security law National security police on Friday levelled a charge of conspiring to commit secession under the Beijing-imposed law, a day after announcing their arrests and their alleged roles in the Hong Kong Democratic Independence Union. The 15-year-old Secondary Three student, who cannot be named for legal reasons, courier Chan Tai-sum, 26, and waiter Ng Chi-tung, 25, were arrested between 11am and 4pm on Wednesday on suspicion of conspiracy to subvert state power. Police decided to charge the trio with conspiracy to commit secession after consulting with the Department of Justice. A 47-year-old man also arrested in the action has been released on police bail without charge. According to a charge sheet available for press inspection, the defendants had since November 6 last year conspired with others in an attempt to separate Hong Kong from mainland China and alter the city's legal status or 'surrender' the city to a foreign country.

Hun Sen on cyberscam criticism: 'Revoke Sam Rainsy's citizenship'
Hun Sen on cyberscam criticism: 'Revoke Sam Rainsy's citizenship'

AllAfrica

time20 hours ago

  • AllAfrica

Hun Sen on cyberscam criticism: 'Revoke Sam Rainsy's citizenship'

Hun Sen's family regime in Cambodia is accused of being complicit in cyber scams that use the victims of human trafficking to steal billions of dollars a year online. The response from Hun Sen is a constitutional amendment designed to allow opposition leader Sam Rainsy to be stripped of his Cambodian nationality. On June 28, Sam Rainsy made a statement which he claims explains the real reasons that have pushed Hun Sen to manufacture this year a confrontation between Cambodia and Thailand. The Thai government has been trying to curb the activity of cyber-scam compounds in Cambodia, as well as in Myanmar. Industrial-scale cybercrime in Southeast Asia can no longer be tolerated in Thailand. The scam compounds are a major problem both for the Thai nationals who can be trapped as slaves there and for the wider Thai economy, where tourism has failed to recover to pre-Covid-19 levels. Chinese tourists to Thailand understand the dangers of being abducted to become slaves in cyber-scam compounds, and prefer to avoid the region. Thailand needs to see the issue effectively tackled, regardless of who is its prime minister. But on the issue of organized cybercrime, it seems that Hun Sen has nothing to say. His silence speaks volumes. Hun Sen resorted to anti-Thai rhetoric and propaganda to distract attention from the real issue. The border closures between the two countries that have taken place mean that the estimated 2 million Cambodians who work in Thailand have been paying the price for Hun Sen's smokescreen. Hun Sen's response to Sam Rainsy's statement was to tell Cambodia's minister of justice to find a way to amend the constitution to allow selective cancellations of nationality. The Cambodian constitution states that Khmers shall not be deprived of their nationality, which is also prohibited by the 1991 Paris Peace Agreements on Cambodia. Despite Cambodian government denials, the growing weight of evidence that the Cambodian government is complicit in organized cyber-slavery has become impossible to ignore. Amnesty International in June became the latest organization to identify the Cambodian government as being complicit in cyber-crime. The Amnesty report says that the government has failed to investigate scam compounds, and has 'acquiesced to the torture and other ill-treatment taking place at scamming compounds.' The findings were shared with the government before publication, but there has been no response of substance. The report follows research published by the Humanity Research Consultancy (HRC) in May. The HRC report estimated that cyber-scam income in Cambodia likely totals $12.5 billion to $19 billion per year, or as much as 60% of GDP. 'Transnational fraud is one of Cambodia's many state-abetted criminal interests,' and the scale of the proceeds makes the industry crucial to the survival of the ruling Cambodian People's Party, the HRC says. In April, the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) found that Chinese criminal elements involved in cyber-scamming have obtained Cambodian citizenship allowing them to control property and investment holdings, including islands off the coast of Sihanoukville. The Cambodian government has made no serious attempt to address the findings of Amnesty International, the HRC, or the UNODC, nor to stamp out cyber-scam compounds. Hun Sen has tried for decades to silence Sam Rainsy, who lives in exile in Paris. The grenade attack on a protest march that Sam Rainsy was leading in Phnom Penh in March 1997 left 16 dead and over 100 wounded. The trial in Paris of Cambodian generals Hing Bun Heang and Huy Piseth for their alleged role in the attack opened in the absence of the two accused in March this year. Hun Sen has used the country's politically controlled courts to accumulate over 100 years of jail sentences against Sam Rainsy on various charges, as well as to dissolve in 2017 the opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party. Sam Rainsy co-founded the party with Kem Sokha, who was CNRP leader when it was dissolved. Kem Sokha remains in house detention in Cambodia after conviction on a charge of treason, for which no serious evidence was ever offered. Hun Sen meanwhile has been enacting laws designed to curtail Sam Rainsy's political role. His legislation of 2017 made it impossible for a person sentenced to a prison term to be the leader of a political party. In 2021, he made it impossible for a person with dual nationality to hold the posts of prime minister, president of the national assembly or president of the senate. Sam Rainsy has French and Cambodian nationality. The Cambodian diaspora is spread globally in countries where free speech is the norm, which means that the regime will never be able to silence diasporic criticism. The sooner it can find ways to listen to and work with those who tell uncomfortable truths, the better for Cambodia. The only way that the issue of Cambodian government corruption will go away is for the government to deal with the core of the problem. David Whitehouse is a freelance journalist who has lived in Paris for 30 years. He has both French and British nationality.

Former staff of Hong Kong news outlet Channel C launch new media platform with support of ‘white knight'
Former staff of Hong Kong news outlet Channel C launch new media platform with support of ‘white knight'

HKFP

timea day ago

  • HKFP

Former staff of Hong Kong news outlet Channel C launch new media platform with support of ‘white knight'

A group of former staff from Hong Kong independent media outlet Channel C has launched a new online news platform with the financial support of a 'white knight.' Ronson Chan, a former reporter at Channel C, told HKFP on Thursday that he and some former colleagues had set up a new media outlet called Channel We. The new media outlet published its first story on Facebook, Instagram and Threads on Thursday morning, reporting that Chung Pui-kuen, former chief editor of the defunct outlet Stand News, was released from prison after serving one year and nine months for a sedition conviction. Channel C staff stopped working after the company failed to pay its employees from April 23, Channel We said in a statement. 'After our persistent efforts for over two months, we have finally found a 'white knight' to support us, and therefore we will continue to report on Channel We,' the new news outlet added. Channel We 'produces content that 'we' should care about and delivers information about 'we' Hongkongers,' according to its description on Facebook. Chan, former chair of the Hong Kong Journalists Association and former Stand News journalist, shared a Channel We post on his Facebook page on Thursday. 'We will continue to report news, do live-streaming, and report news about Hongkongers,' Chan wrote in Chinese. Channel C halted operations Channel C was founded by a small group of former Apple Daily employees in July 2021 following the closure of the Hong Kong pro-democracy newspaper. However, Channel C halted operations in April this year after at least one director at its parent company was arrested for allegedly defrauding a government loan programme. The defunct media outlet owes 29 editorial staff members HK$660,000 in salaries, pension contributions, and other miscellaneous expenses, a source familiar with the matter told HKFP.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store