Fewer Hong Kong students secure university spots, top 3 choices through admissions system
- An education consultant attributes decline to more applicants attaining the minimum entry requirements
Fewer Hong Kong students have won a university place in the city or received an offer from their top three choices through the central allocation system this year.
Ng Po-shing, a consultant at student guidance centre Hok Yau Club, said the increase in those hitting the minimum requirement included a higher success rate in citizenship and social development, a core subject in the Diploma of Secondary Education exams.
“When more students attain the minimum requirement, it also means more people will compete for university places,” he said.
Among the 39,634 applicants who joined the Joint University Programmes Admissions System (JUPAS), 15,776, or 39.8 per cent, were offered a place, figures showed.
This includes undergraduate courses offered by the eight public universities, self-financed bachelor programmes at Hong Kong Metropolitan University or a Higher Diploma programme at the Education University of Hong Kong.