TY - JOUR
T1 - Values and the new civics curriculum in Hong Kong
T2 - ethnic minority students negotiate identities
AU - Zhao, Zhenzhou
AU - Kennedy, Kerry J.
AU - Majumder, Fahmida
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 National Institute of Education, Singapore.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Under Chinese sovereignty since 1997, Hong Kong has a history of encouraging the development of Chinese values and national identity both in schools and among the local population generally. Anti-China protests in 2019 indicated that this goal remained problematic. Subsequently the school curriculum was revamped to make the foci of Chinese values and national identity more explicit. At the school level a compulsory senior secondary subject, Citizenship and Social Development (CSD), was introduced for this purpose. Yet there is a question about the relevance of this enhanced approach to national identity building for the city’s ethnic minorities who comprise some 3% of the school population. This study, therefore, explored how a group of ethnic minority students, who are among the first and second batch of students in the new CSD subject, responded to its focus and values. Data was drawn from two sources: the CSD curriculum documents and interviews with a sample of 20 ethnic minority students from different backgrounds. Our findings revealed that the students’ personal citizenship and cultural values exerted an influence in understanding themselves in Chinese contexts. The study concludes with an assessment of the implications of the results for the ongoing curriculum development of CSD.
AB - Under Chinese sovereignty since 1997, Hong Kong has a history of encouraging the development of Chinese values and national identity both in schools and among the local population generally. Anti-China protests in 2019 indicated that this goal remained problematic. Subsequently the school curriculum was revamped to make the foci of Chinese values and national identity more explicit. At the school level a compulsory senior secondary subject, Citizenship and Social Development (CSD), was introduced for this purpose. Yet there is a question about the relevance of this enhanced approach to national identity building for the city’s ethnic minorities who comprise some 3% of the school population. This study, therefore, explored how a group of ethnic minority students, who are among the first and second batch of students in the new CSD subject, responded to its focus and values. Data was drawn from two sources: the CSD curriculum documents and interviews with a sample of 20 ethnic minority students from different backgrounds. Our findings revealed that the students’ personal citizenship and cultural values exerted an influence in understanding themselves in Chinese contexts. The study concludes with an assessment of the implications of the results for the ongoing curriculum development of CSD.
KW - Citizenship
KW - curriculum
KW - diversity
KW - ethnic minorities
KW - Hong Kong
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105012839097
U2 - 10.1080/02188791.2025.2540015
DO - 10.1080/02188791.2025.2540015
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105012839097
SN - 0218-8791
JO - Asia Pacific Journal of Education
JF - Asia Pacific Journal of Education
ER -