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Explainer | Hong Kong kindergartens explained: are they the root of city’s education ills?

  • With infants undergoing admissions interviews at just three years old, the rigorous approach to education begins long before children reach the schools usually blamed for it

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Illustration: Brian Wang

Is a happy childhood still possible in Hong Kong? Long days, homework overload and a pressure-cooker-like education system have many calling childhood in the city a nightmare.

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Critics have consistently hit out at a culture that promotes rote learning and exams over actual life skills. Two studies last year found half of teachers and secondary students showed signs of depression.

Some point to the tradition of “monster parents”, a worrying archetype of Hong Kong referring to people who put their children through hard grind to produce the best grades.

So where does it all start? Perhaps the problem begins at the preschool level. City Weekend examines.

Kindergartens usually take in children from the age of three, for three years before a child enters primary school at six. Photo: Handout
Kindergartens usually take in children from the age of three, for three years before a child enters primary school at six. Photo: Handout
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Surviving the system

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