Buddhist Fat Ho Memorial College Explained

Buddhist Fat Ho Memorial College
Native Name:Chinese: 佛教筏可紀念中學
Country:Hong Kong

Buddhist Fat Ho Memorial College is a co-educational secondary school in Hong Kong. The school opened in 1977 and as of 2016 had approximately 350 students.[1] It is run by the Hong Kong Buddhist Association and sponsored by Po Lin Monastery.[2] It is a Direct Subsidy Scheme institution that charges tuition fees. Students can pick between English or Cantonese as their medium of instruction. Situated in Tai O, it is the first co-ed secondary school on Lantau Island.

Around 2009 the school had annual losses of $5 million HKD with 280 students. In hopes of "reduc[ing] annual losses" the school a Direct Subsidy Scheme (DSS) school. According to Elaine Yau of the South China Morning Post, financial performance improved subsequently during the principalship of Eric Yuon Fuk-lung, thanks in part to significant staffing cuts.[3]

Buddhist Fat Ho Memorial College's motto is "Enlighten with Wisdom, Manifest with Compassion and Pursue kindness and virtue".[4] The school is founded on the Buddhist value that everyone has an equal right to learn.[5]

Student body

Elaine Yau wrote in 2015 that "a number of students come from troubled families or have a chequered past".[3] In 2021 a student was a finalist for South China Morning Post's and the Hong Kong Jockey Club's Hong Kong Student of the Year Award.[6]

Facilities

The Po Lin Monastery has a boarding house with spaces for thirty students.[3]

External links

22.2519°N 113.8663°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Zhao. Shirley. School passes the popularity test. South China Morning Post. 7 February 2014 . South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd.. 21 August 2014.
  2. Web site: Buddhist Fat Ho Memorial College . Hong Kong Buddhist Association . 15 April 2014 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20150924030649/http://www.hkbuddhist.org/service/esh_sec04.html . 24 September 2015 . dmy-all .
  3. Web site: Yau. Elaine. Tough love: how failing school in remote Hong Kong village became a success story. South China Morning Post. 2015-04-06. 2020-08-17.
  4. Web site: School Information. www.chsc.hk
  5. Web site: SUPPORT THE STUDENTS OF TAI O, LANTAU ISLAND. www.translantau.com
  6. Web site: Ho-Him. Chan. Making strides: Hong Kong student fights low self-esteem to improve herself and help others. South China Morning Post. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd.. 2021-08-10. 2021-07-15.