Latest news with #StudyInHongKong


South China Morning Post
5 days ago
- Business
- South China Morning Post
Quality counts as Hong Kong seeks to lure more international students
With no fewer than five universities ranked among the world's top 100, the city is definitely well positioned to nurture the ' Study in Hong Kong ' brand. Hong Kong's proximity to mainland China and long-established overseas links have further reinforced its status as an international education hub. The priority is to cast the net wider to attract the best and brightest from the mainland and overseas to work and study here. Secretary for Education Christine Choi Yuk-lin revealed that applications from non-local students had increased significantly this year, with the numbers almost doubling in some institutions. The city also tapped the opportunities arising from the United States' recent policy changes for international students; four local institutions made at least 36 offers to those affected. This outcome is encouraging. There is room to do more. There were 17,161 non-local students at public universities in 2024-25. This accounts for about 23 per cent of local student places, still short of the 40 per cent allowed. Noting that the quota is still not fully utilised and that some institutions are not yet ready for increasing their intake in terms of staffing and facilities, Choi said she believed that public universities could enrol more quality overseas students to ensure greater diversity on campuses in future. She said the universities had become more mindful of the number of overseas students compared with those from the mainland, Taiwan and Macau, in response to concerns that mainlanders accounted for more than 70 per cent of the non-local intake. But she stressed that picking the best was still the priority and that this would not be sacrificed to ensure greater diversity. Being an international education hub means the city should aim to attract the top students from different countries. Local universities should come up with more quality and up-to-date programmes, such as tech-related majors, to attract talent from around the world.


South China Morning Post
07-06-2025
- Business
- South China Morning Post
Hong Kong delegation promotes city as higher education hub in US and UK
The head of a committee overseeing funding for Hong Kong's public universities has led a delegation to the United States and the United Kingdom to promote the city as a destination for higher education. James Tang Tuck-hong, secretary general of the University Grants Committee, attended a conference in San Diego, California, on May 25, before flying to the UK for another forum in Birmingham. 'During the visit, Professor Tang also met with senior management and prominent scholars from top-tier higher education institutions in the United States and the United Kingdom to exchange views on the latest developments in higher education,' a spokesman for the committee said. Tang's visits came as the government pushes ahead with its 'Study in Hong Kong' campaign, launched in last year's policy address, which targets overseas students, especially those from Southeast Asia and countries under the Belt and Road Initiative. The campaign was launched after city authorities doubled the quota for non-local student intake in the city's eight publicly funded universities to 40 per cent in September last year. After the increase, about 30,000 places are available for non-locals. During the delegation's visit to the US, Tang spoke at the NAFSA Annual Conference and Expo about the strengths of the city's higher education sector and the opportunities it could present to overseas students.