English Schools Foundation


The English Schools Foundation is an organisation that runs 22 educational institutions, all of which are international schools, in Hong Kong. It is the largest English-medium organisation of international schools in Hong Kong. It was founded in 1967 with the passage of the English Schools Foundation Ordinance, under which it is mandated to provide "without regard to race or religion, a modern liberal education through the medium of the English language".
The foundation receives an ongoing subvention from the Hong Kong Government. It is also funded through a tuition fee. In the 2017–2018 academic year, these fees stood at HK$89,200–106,500 per annum for primary school students and HK$122,900 per annum for Years 7–11 secondary school students.
Although all of the ESF schools are comprehensive and non-selective, students in the foundation have generally done well academically, with 90% of their graduates going to different universities around the world.
The schools have progressively improved their facilities, especially in ICT with the help of donations from Parent Teacher Associations.
The current chief executive of the English Schools Foundation is Belinda Greer.

Schools

Schools that are part of ESF include:

Admissions

ESF schools are non-selective. However, students must demonstrate sufficient English language skills so that they can benefit from the foundation's English-medium learning environment. Applicants are placed on a waiting list, and will be invited to an interview or assessment when vacancies become available. They will be required to complete age-appropriate assessments to determine if they can engage with an English medium curriculum.
Starting from August 2022, ESF will become an all-through educational system. This means that children who join K1 from August 2020 will be guaranteed a place at an ESF primary school, then a secondary school up until Year 13, if they can benefit from a mainstream, English-medium education.
Each September, children in K1, Year 1 and Year 7 go through a central application procedure in the year before admission. Applications are made online, on the online admission system. The applications are then sorted by priority category, and then each school makes an interview list based on the parent's preferences, availability and Education Bureau requirements. For other applications received throughout the year, they are processed and also placed on the school's waiting list.
Children in kindergarten are assessed based on a play visit in December of each year. The play visit allows the school to observe the children, talk with the parents, and determine if the school is appropriate for the child. For applications to primary and secondary school, students will be invited for an interview and assessment when new places become available. If the student is successful, a place will be offered subject to availability.
Applications to Year 12 for the IB Diploma programme have special requirements: the student must have either achieved or been predicted 5 grade C's or above, completed the IB Middle Years programme, or completed an equivalent national qualification. Other students will be considered on a case-by-case basis.
With the exception of Discovery College and Renaissance College, all ESF primary and secondary schools only accept students that are in the school's zone. However, ESF kindergartens are not zoned.
ESF has provisions for students that have special educational needs. After SEN students go through the application procedure and are accepted, a moderation team will observe the student, and make recommendations on whether to apply for a learning support place, or a place at the Jockey Club Sarah Roe School.

Academics

Its schools have traditionally provided a curriculum based on the British curriculum, but the organisation has transitioned to a more international curriculum from the International Baccalaureate, starting with changing the Year 12 and 13 programme from the British GCE A-Levels to the International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme. As at 2017–18, 20 ESF schools are authorised as International Baccalaureate World Schools, including four kindergartens, nine primary schools, five secondary schools and the two all-through schools. The new ESF Tung Chung International Kindergarten which opened in August 2016 is now an IB Candidate School.

Early years

All five of ESF's kindergartens follow the IB Primary Years Programme, designed for students aged between 3 and 5. The curriculum encourages children to learn through inquiry and hands-on experiences. It is focused on early literacy and numeracy, as well as Mandarin Chinese which is integrated into the curriculum. At Abacus kindergarten, there is a choice between an English steam and a bilingual, English and Mandarin stream.

Primary education

ESF primary schools follow the IB Primary Years Programme, and cater to students from Year 1 to Year 6. The PYP centres on the development of the whole child and provides for children's academic, social, physical, emotional and cultural needs. Students learn the PYP's six transdisciplinary themes, and develop and understanding of concepts, which allows them to make connections both within the subject, and to other subjects. Students are taught using an inquiry-based approach, and are encouraged to be curious and to interact to issues locally and globally. In addition, all students are taught Chinese and the four skills: listening, speaking, reading and writing. They also learn about Chinese culture, and their history and society.

Secondary education

The curriculum of ESF secondary schools is based on the IB Middle Years Programme between Year 7 to 9. At Years 10 to 11, students follow a curriculum designed by the school, that leads to IGCSE and GCSE qualifications, with the exception of Discovery College and Renaissance college which follow the MYP. At Years 12 and 13, students can either take the IB Diploma programme, or an applied learning pathway such as BTEC or the IB Career-related programme. Students study a range of subjects such as English, mathematics, science, the humanities, creative and performing arts, design technology and an additional language at an appropriate level.

Examination results

The ESF has received one of its best mean IB Diploma scores amongst its 969 students graduating in the class of 2017 in its history, at a 36 out of a possible 45. Fifteen of these students received a perfect score of 45, which fewer than 0.01% of IB Diploma students receive. There were 218 perfect scorers in 2017 worldwide. In 2019, 23 students from ESF received the maximum score of 45 points, out of 259 students worldwide. In that year, 97% of students obtained the full IB Diploma, and the mean score was 35.6.
In 2019, 78 Year 13 students completed an applied learning pathway. For the BTEC Level 3 subsidiary diploma, 66% of entries were awarded with a distinction and above and 91% a merit or above. For the BTEC Level 3 Diploma, 73% were awarded a double distinction, and 90% a double merit or above.
In May of 2019, 1,000 students completed the IGCSE/GCSE programme. For exams using the A*-G system, 27% of students obtained A* and 95% obtained A*-C, and for exams using the 9-1 system, 47% of students obtained a grade 9 or 8, and 95% obtained grades from 9 to 4. This was the eleventh consecutive year that more than half of students attained either an A or an A* grade.
For Discovery College and Renaissance College which take the IB Middle Years programme, the mean grade per subject was 5.6 points, higher than the worldwide average of 4.5 points. The mean number of total points per student was 50.6 points out of a maximum possible score of 63 points.

Higher education destinations

Between 2014 and 2018, the most popular university destinations were the UK, Hong Kong, the USA, Canada and Australia. The top five university destinations were the University of Hong Kong, CUHK, the University of British Columbia, HKUST, and the University of Toronto.

Student demographics

The ethnic groups of the foundations' students include local residents of Hong Kong, Europeans and other nearby regional countries. the students came from over 60 countries; the ESF schools, except kindergartens, are required to have at least 70% of their students hold foreign passports.
, ESF had a total of 17,700 students, of whom 70% had parents who were permanent residents of Hong Kong. The total number of students in 2013 was 13,000 and the same percentage had permanent resident parents.

Governance

The ESF Board of Governors manages ESF's affairs and maintains its educational standards. Its main responsibilities include working with the Chief Executive Officer to establish the foundation's strategic direction, review the overall curriculum strategy for all schools, and ensure the efficient use of resources.
Every ESF school has a school council. The school councils' main responsibilities are to work with the principal to establish the strategic direction for the school; to approve the school's curriculum that aligns with the curriculum strategy approved by the Board of Governors; and to approve the allocation of the school’s annual budget.
ESF was established by government ordinance in 1967. There were no amendments to the ordinance until 2008, when an amendment to the ESF Ordinance was passed by LegCo in March 2018.
In response to shortcomings in governance that were highlighted by the LegCo in January 2005, the ESF carried out an extensive consultation process to produce an amended ordinance, which provide for a number of changes to the governance and management of ESF. Some of these are in response to the shortcomings identified by the Public Accounts Committee. The most substantial changes were to the structure and composition of ESF's governing body and committees, including the creation of a new Board of Governors to replace the Foundation.

Government subsidy debate

Unlike most other international schools in Hong Kong, schools run by the ESF receive an ongoing subsidy from the Hong Kong Government. The reason for this is historical and lies in the foundation's statutory basis. Before the Handover of 1997, it was generally accepted that this subsidy was fair and that the foundation had a reason to be subsidised.
There has been controversy regarding subsidies to the foundation. The fiscal deficit suffered by the Hong Kong Government following the Asian Financial Crisis forced the government to cut costs. There were also allegations that the foundation has misused funds on entertainment and over-extravagant recruitment procedures. A report criticising the ESF's use of funds was published by the Hong Kong Government in November 2002, resulting in a continuing debate about whether the subsidy should be cut or even suspended. The subvention was cut for several years in line with a general reduction in government expenditure and then frozen.
The ESF has recently addressed concerns about governance by putting forward a new Ordinance that will change the way the organisation operates. The foundation imposed a refundable capital levy of HK$25,000 per student in 2011.
The changes culminate in the phasing out of government's annual subsidy with effect from 2016, tapering to zero in 2028–29. After a comprehensive internal review of financing needs, the foundation decided to introduce one-off non-refundable levy starting in the 2015/16 school year. The will be set at HK$38,000 for first-year students for, with lesser amount for those joining higher age groups – HK$3,800 will be charged for Year 13 entrants. The ESF expects to raise an extra HK$50 million every year through the levy, for the replacement of schools.
In 2014 government subvention comprised 17.7% of ESF's operating income. Tuition fees made up 74% while the balance was generated through interest income, renting out property, and other minor sources of income.

Controversies

The ESF was involved in the controversial 2015 Hong Kong heavy metal in drinking water incidents.
Amid the scandal in September 2015, ESF tested the water in its schools, collecting over 300 samples. Four of the ESF schools were found to have a high amount of lead in their water supplies. The news was announced through the ESF newsletter. It stated that one sample found in each of King George V School, Sha Tin College, South Island School and West Island School was found to have a higher amount of lead than the government's guidelines, and that all the other schools had water that passed the inspection.
The newsletter did not specify where the source of the water containing high lead were in those schools. The individual schools have halted the use of those water sources pending an investigation.