Education of ideal citizens: an ethnographic study of two schools in Hong Kong
dc.contributor.advisor
Mcculloch, Ken
en
dc.contributor.advisor
Brown, Jane
en
dc.contributor.advisor
Munn, Pamela
en
dc.contributor.advisor
Brown, Eric
en
dc.contributor.author
Lee, Dorothy Wing Huen
en
dc.date.accessioned
2015-11-19T11:29:17Z
dc.date.available
2015-11-19T11:29:17Z
dc.date.issued
2015-07-03
dc.description.abstract
Soon after the political handover in 1997, Hong Kong Special Administrative Region
(HKSAR) government had introduced a series of education and curriculum reforms.
Such reforms is said to be proceeded in response to teenagers' lack of national
identification towards their motherland China, and also to the public discourse
addressing the economic challenges and competition in the universal trend of
globalization. Although a few studies had unveiled the underlying values of
Confucianism, neo-liberalism and market ideology under these objectives, how the
new definitions of "ideal citizens" is understood and promoted in the actual school
settings, and how those values influence the process of students' identity construction
and their vision on their life trajectories, remains unknown.
Drawing on the data from an ethnographic research conducted in 2010, this thesis
illustrates how the qualities of an "ideal citizen" propagated in the education and
curriculum reform would be understood and transformed in two very different schools
in Hong Kong. One is a long-established girls' school located in a middle-class district,
which has a reputation of providing "all-rounded" education and nurturing future
woman-leaders; the other one is being considered as a "academically-low band" school
located in remote area, which struggled to survive and started to admit "Non-Chinese
speaking" (NCS) students from Pakistan, Nepal and Philippines three years ago in
order to solve the problem of insufficient intake of local students. Apart from the halfyear
participant-observation in the two campuses, in-depth interviews of the 2 school
principals, 13 teachers, 19 students and 2 alumni of the two schools have also been
conducted. Other school documents including official school magazines, school
reports as well as students’ publications have also been collected as supporting
information.
Due to the different historical background, the school management strategy and most
of all, the composition of students from very different socio-economic and ethnic
backgrounds, the two schools had developed very different ideas and definition of an
"ideal citizen", and thus led to different directions of school policies and expectations
on students. Through the examples of the provision of the “Other learning Experience”
(OLE) and students’ participation patterns in Chapter Five, the different language
policies and students’ ability in languages in Chapter Six, and the process of the
construction of femininities of young girls in Chapter Seven, this study shows how the
problematic of class, gender and ethnics domination still exist under the new context
of education reform. This study also reveals that while Hong Kong policy-maker
claimed that the education reform ‘bears upon the equity and balance of our society',
the socio-economic backgrounds, ethnicity and gender which traditionally being
viewed as factors that differentiate education outcomes in sociological studies are
completely ignored in the reform.
en
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/11764
dc.language.iso
en
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
en
dc.subject
citizenship
en
dc.subject
citizenship education
en
dc.subject
social class
en
dc.subject
cultural capital
en
dc.subject
neo-liberalism
en
dc.subject
education reform
en
dc.title
Education of ideal citizens: an ethnographic study of two schools in Hong Kong
en
dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
en
dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
en
dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
en
Files
Original bundle
1 - 1 of 1
- Name:
- Lee2015.pdf
- Size:
- 2.49 MB
- Format:
- Adobe Portable Document Format
This item appears in the following Collection(s)

