
Hong Kong DSE pupils ‘not affected by rising number of private candidates'
The Hong Kong Examinations and Assessment Authority's defence coincides with calls from lawmakers for more stringent regulations over collaboration between local private secondary schools and mainland institutions. Some have speculated that mainland students taking the Hong Kong exams had been drilled at tutorial schools across the border.
The Legislative Council is expected to discuss possible abuses in the operations of some private schools early next month, with the development of such institutions offering a formal curriculum on the agenda.
Tsung Tsin Middle School's operations have been suspended Photo: Jelly Tse
According to the authority, an additional 764 day school candidates – Hong Kong students – met the general entrance requirements for admission to the city's eight public universities this year, a 0.1 percentage point increase over 2024.
'This indicates that the performance of day school candidates was not affected by the increase in the number of private candidates,' an authority spokeswoman said.
She added that all 2025 Diploma of Secondary Education (DSE) candidates had met the registration requirements for taking the exams.
The DSE adopted standards-referenced reporting to indicate candidates' performance and exam results, which did not involve comparing their performance with others, she said.
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