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Published by: Harvard Kennedy School
Published in: 2000
Length: 8 pages

Abstract

When the government of Hong Kong moves to change the language of secondary school instruction from English to Chinese, it confronts the fact that the overwhelming majority of parents, although themselves Chinese-speaking, believe that an English-based education will provide greater long-run economic opportunity for their children. Armed with research showing that using Chinese as the "medium of instruction" will significantly improve classroom discussion and learning, Hong Kong''s Education Department must embark on a strategy to convince the public to accept the idea. Specifically, because school assignments are based on a list of preferences submitted by parents, the government hopes that parents will not concentrate their requests on a relatively small group of "English-medium" schools, which will be allowed to continue. Such a clustering of requests could potentially lead to a chaotic assignment process in which many families come a way disappointed. This case is designed to allow for discussion of the most effective communication/persuasion strategy for the Hong Kong government to pursue. For those interested in a substantive discussion of the design of the transition to Chinese-medium schools in Hong Kong, see case #1502.0 "Firm Guidance": Changing Hong Kong''s Medium of Instruction.

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Abstract

When the government of Hong Kong moves to change the language of secondary school instruction from English to Chinese, it confronts the fact that the overwhelming majority of parents, although themselves Chinese-speaking, believe that an English-based education will provide greater long-run economic opportunity for their children. Armed with research showing that using Chinese as the "medium of instruction" will significantly improve classroom discussion and learning, Hong Kong''s Education Department must embark on a strategy to convince the public to accept the idea. Specifically, because school assignments are based on a list of preferences submitted by parents, the government hopes that parents will not concentrate their requests on a relatively small group of "English-medium" schools, which will be allowed to continue. Such a clustering of requests could potentially lead to a chaotic assignment process in which many families come a way disappointed. This case is designed to allow for discussion of the most effective communication/persuasion strategy for the Hong Kong government to pursue. For those interested in a substantive discussion of the design of the transition to Chinese-medium schools in Hong Kong, see case #1502.0 "Firm Guidance": Changing Hong Kong''s Medium of Instruction.

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