How smart are smart schools in Hong Kong?
How far would a local school go to make its students smarter?
Take Salesians of Don Bosco Ng Siu Mui Secondary School, a boy school in Kwai Hing that went the extra mile to stimulate the young mind with innovation and technology.
Right, every educational institution is talking about coding and artificial intelligence courses for science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM). But not everyone is like Ng Siu Mui Secondary School that organised a seminar with Amazon Web Services on Chat GPT, Artificial intelligence and Web 3.0 for its teenagers three months ago.
Ng Siu Mui is also one of the early schools in using software to power its lighting and air-conditioner in its school hall, classroom, balcony and front gate by a company interestingly named Peoples Smart Living that provides a one-button solution saving some manpower.
No doubt it was the first local school to introduce three robots to provide hand sanitizer, measure temperature and offer words of encouragement to students during the DSE examination periods during the pandemic.
To say Ng Siu Mui is a school might be an understatement. It is part of a community that integrates technology into real life which I had the privilege of visiting recently, although I have to admit it is not a very accessible location by public transport.
But that does not stop the school’s aspiration to be innovative. This year, it came up with a new project “Gerontech Park”, an extended classroom that mocked a home setting to show students the skills to take care of the elderly at home. The project won the support of the Quality Education Fund, which put in HK$1.58 million in hopes to cultivate kindness toward senior citizens at a young age.
The room is equipped with smart sensors that could detect if an elderly might have fallen to the floor over an extended period. It also included a smart medicine dispenser its students developed that can distinguish up to 10 types of medicines to help the elderly better manage their prescribed medication.
Principal Li Kin-man, the mastermind behind all these innovative initiatives, said aging is an important issue in Hong Kong and that’s why his school took this social issue as an indispensable element in the curriculum via academic learning, extracurricular activities and volunteer services.
Li is never short of new ideas on his campus. In fact, he is looking for a new solution that will make gardening easier, more efficient and more engaging with students.
Smart city starts with smart school. “Any smart solution will have to be user-friendly, affordable and above all, benefit students. We hope to stimulate their imagination of the future society,” said Principal Li.
-- Contact us at [email protected]
-
Integration of GIS and BIM can drive development of smart city Dr. Winnie Tang
The China Association for Geospatial Industry and Sciences (“the CAGIS”) released the Top Ten Highlights of China's Geographic Information Industry in 2023, which provides much inspiration. The
-
Equip young people for the future Dr. Winnie Tang
In late February, the inaugural flight of an air taxi from Shenzhen Shekou Cruise Homeport to Zhuhai Jiuzhou Port took only 20 minutes with an estimated one-way ticket price of 200 to 300 yuan per
-
Are we raising a generation of leaders, or of followers? Brian YS Wong
The essence of education is defined not by the facts it imparts, but the potential knowledge it inspires students to individually pursue on their own. Put it this way – the ideal form of education
-
The urgent need for reforms to sex education in Hong Kong Sharon Chau
Nearly one in every four university students (23%) in Hong Kong has been sexually harassed, according to a 2019 report published by the Equal Opportunities Commission (EOC). A 2019 study found that
-
STEAM should be linked to real life Dr. Winnie Tang
In the 2017 Policy Address, STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) education was proposed as one of the eight major directions to promote I&T development. Since then, funding has