Education University of Hong Kong establishes first academic centre dedicated to national security

Published: 
Listen to this article
  • Chairman of university’s council says the centre would be dedicated to ‘imbuing the correct concept of the nation in students’
  • Undergraduates must take classes in digital literacy, national security and legal education, entrepreneurship and national experience from the 2025-26 academic year
SCMP |
Published: 
Comment

Latest Articles

Asking for a Friend: Help! I’ve grown distant from my best friend. How do I tell them?

8 warming foods to try this winter in Hong Kong

Top 5 activities you should do in Hong Kong during winter

The Education University of Hong Kong has established the city’s first academic centre dedicated to national security Photo: EdUHK

Hong Kong’s first academic centre dedicated to national security has been set up by the city’s biggest teacher training institution to ensure students have a strong grasp of the law and related issues.

The Education University of Hong Kong (EdU) launched its National Security and Legal Education Research Centre yesterday. David Wong Yau-kar, chairman of the university’s council, said the centre would be dedicated to imbuing the correct concept of the nation in students.

“[We] have set up this centre as an important platform to proactively promote national education and relevant legal education, imbuing a correct perspective of the nation and the rule of law among our students for them to contribute to the development of Hong Kong and the country,” Wong said at the launch ceremony.

The launch ceremony of the Education University of Hong Kong’s National Security and Legal Education Research Centre. Photo: Jelly Tse

The EdU centre, led by legal academic Professor Gu Minkang, will be responsible for coming up with a compulsory national security and legal education curriculum for undergraduates starting in the 2025-26 academic year.

“In the future, the centre will endeavour to take concrete actions to boost national security education among students and staff, strengthening their basic understanding of the Chinese constitution, the Basic Law and the national security law,” Gu said.

Gu, the centre’s director, said he would also lead it to organise forums on national security education and develop new theory courses and legal education programmes.

Secretary for Justice Paul Lam Ting-kwok said the university played a crucial role in national education.

Education University in Hong Kong to make national security classes compulsory

“In this aspect, the Education University of Hong Kong plays a unique role. On one hand, its students are youngsters in our society, but more importantly, most of them are future teachers at the same time, who would shoulder the important mission of educating our next generation,” Lam said.

Gu is currently associate co-director of the university’s Academy for Applied Policy Studies and Education Futures. He had previously been an associate dean at City University’s law school.

A law graduate of the East China University of Political Science and Law, Gu furthered his studies at Willamette University in Oregon, in the United States.

Legal academic Professor Gu Minkang will lead EdU’s National Security and Legal Education Research Centre. Photo: SCMP

Besides his academic interests in Chinese and European commercial law and criminal justice, Gu is also a council member of semi-official Beijing think tank the Chinese Association of Hong Kong and Macau Studies.

Following an update two years ago on guidelines on teachers’ conduct, students majoring in education have to take mandatory national security classes and complete immersion activities in mainland China.

All Education University undergraduates must take classes in four new areas – digital literacy, national security and legal education, entrepreneurship and national experience – as part of the general education requirement from the 2025-26 academic year. The national education module will account for two credits, compared with one before the revamp.

Hong Kong launches new way to report books suspected of breaching national security law

Under the revised code of conduct, teachers should have a basic knowledge of national history, acquire the “correct understanding” of the constitution, the Basic Law and the national security law and respect the nation’s fundamental regime.

Meanwhile, Secretary for Education Christine Choi Yuk-lin started a visit to Guangzhou and Shenzhen yesterday to officiate at a plaque unveiling ceremony at the first training and exchange base for Hong Kong teachers at South China Normal University.

Sign up for the YP Teachers Newsletter
Get updates for teachers sent directly to your inbox
By registering, you agree to our T&C and Privacy Policy
Comment