Subsidised Hong Kong schools eligible for up to HK$300,000 in new government funding to boost national education
- Principals suggested the supplemental funds could be used to pay for talks by experts, or even to take students to watch patriotic films
- The money will be drawn from the Quality Education Fund, set up in 1997 to improve standards in local classrooms

In a circular to schools on Monday evening, the Education Bureau announced that government-subsidised kindergartens, primary and secondary schools could apply for money from the Quality Education Fund to launch two-year programmes to promote national identity and security, as well as media and information literacy.
The bureau reminded schools to ensure all knowledge and materials in their programmes were “correct, objective and neutral”, and that the organisations and individuals providing the proposed services were credible and experienced, adding that a record of all written materials should be kept.
Disbursements under the fund are capped at HK$300,000 for primary, secondary and special education schools, while kindergartens can receive up to HK$150,000. Applications opened on Monday, and will run until the end of January.
The fund was established in 1998 with an initial investment of HK$5 billion to support community initiatives that promote quality education.
Dr Wong Ching-yung, principal of Scientia Secondary School, said his school might use the resources to invite speakers to deliver talks on national education, or to book a cinema for students to watch the new film Battle at Lake Changjin – a mainland China-produced action epic about the heroism of People’s Liberation Army soldiers fighting against the Americans during the Korean war.