logo
Hong Kong's DSE 14 years in: pupils' best subjects, worst performers and top schools

Hong Kong's DSE 14 years in: pupils' best subjects, worst performers and top schools

Students in Hong Kong have received their results for the Diploma of Secondary Education Examination (DSE), the local university entrance exams that pupils take after six years of secondary schooling.
This year's exams produced 16 students with perfect scores, a record since the DSE's launch in 2012, including the second 'ultimate top scorer', who achieved the highest marks among all top candidates and the first cross-border high-flier.
While about 130 students have achieved top marks over the past 14 years, there are also thousands who score 'zero' every year. The Post takes a look at the history and some trivia behind the exams.
1. How did the DSE come to be?
Before the DSE was launched in 2012, students took two major university entrance exams: the Hong Kong Certificate of Education Examination (HKCEE) for Form Five pupils and the Hong Kong Advanced Level Examination (HKALE), also known as the A-levels, for Form Seven students.
The last HKCEE was held in 2011 and the final HKALE in 2012, the same year as the first DSE exams. This marked a transition from a British-style education system to a new model, commonly known as the '3+3+4' academic structure – three-year junior secondary, three-year senior secondary and four-year university education.
The change was also made to lessen students' stress as two exams were consolidated into one.
Most DSE subjects are graded on a seven-level scale, from level 1 to 5**. Students who achieve level 5 in a subject are graded as 5, 5* or 5**.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

How Thai monks save trees with sacred saffron rituals
How Thai monks save trees with sacred saffron rituals

South China Morning Post

time17 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

How Thai monks save trees with sacred saffron rituals

On the morning of July 11, three saffron-robed monks and a dozen devotees gathered in a dense forest of Thailand 's Chaiyaphum province. After chanting prayers, they encircled a towering tree, draping it in a vivid orange cloth – the same used to robe ordained monks. Advertisement This was no ordinary Buddhist ritual, but part of a growing practice called tree ordination – a symbolic act that 'ordains' endangered trees as monks to protect them from logging and development. Part spiritual blessing and part environmental activism, the ritual is at the heart of a growing movement among Thailand's 'forest monks', who are tweaking centuries-old traditions to confront modern ecological collapse. 'Buddhists respect monks very much. When they see the yellow robe and shaved head, they show respect ... The yellow robe represents the victory of the Buddha and his teachings. It represents sainthood,' said Venerable Dhamma Caro, a monk at Wat Pa Mahawan in northeastern Thailand, who took part in the tree ordination ceremony. 'When we wrap the tree with this yellow robe, it becomes a monk – 'a saint-tree'. That is why people don't hurt it. In a Buddhist country, if you harm a monk or kill a monk, it is [considered] very, very sinful. That is why we ordain the tree,' he added. 'It is very effective.' Venerable Dhamma Caro says a tree becomes a 'saint-tree' after being wrapped with a saffron robe. Photo: Kim Jung-yeop Roots of the ritual

‘Huge shift': why learning Mandarin is losing its appeal in the West
‘Huge shift': why learning Mandarin is losing its appeal in the West

South China Morning Post

timea day ago

  • South China Morning Post

‘Huge shift': why learning Mandarin is losing its appeal in the West

When Colby Porter began Mandarin classes in sixth grade in Syracuse, New York, he was studying alongside 20 of his peers. By his final year of high school, only two other students remained, and the school had fewer than 25 Mandarin learners in total. Soon after he graduated in 2020, the programme was shut down entirely due to dwindling enrolments and budget cuts during the Covid-19 pandemic The situation at Porter's school is not unusual in the United States and other countries in the Global North. While data is scarce, the available figures suggest that interest in learning Mandarin – once globally hailed as the language of the future – is waning after years of rapid growth. In the US, Mandarin language enrolments in universities were down by 25 per cent in 2021 from their 2013 peak, according to the Modern Language Association's most recent report. Across New Zealand, official data shows a decline in the number of Mandarin learners at secondary school level since 2020. Meanwhile, university students in Britain pursuing Chinese language studies saw a 35 per cent drop in 2023 compared to their 2016 high, according to data from the Higher Education Statistics Agency. And even in some European countries like Germany and France where Mandarin learning continues to grow, its expansion is modest compared to other more popular languages.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store