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My daughter is studying in SPC (secondary) and she started join the schools since SPK. I can tell you that SPK's interviews has been arranged in the same way for over 10 years. Child is separated with her/his parents during the interview. I agree that few teachers are always looked cool and impatience. However, when you consider that there are over 1100 applicants each year, there are
6 classrooms (or 8?) and assume they continue to interview for 8 hours, each interviewer need to interview approx. 22 children in an hour, that means each child has less than 5 mins time! I also don't like this arrangment, why they don't make it in 2-3 days? However, I understand the pressure of the teachers.
Regarding the selection criteria, I agree some of the parents said that you never know what's their criteria. My elder daughter was admitted to SPK, but my younger daughter was not accepted. We are not catholic, my hubby is a professional. I was a very busy working mum when my elder daughter attended SPK, but I changed to full-time mum when younger daughter interviewed SPK. So, most of the sayings about SPK's selection criteria are not accurate.
My memory towards the SPK faded out already, however, I can say that their primary is a good school in a sense that there are absolutely no prejudice against students from low-income family, poor perfomance students, and non-catholic students.
One mum said that she wants to plan her girl to study overseas, one point for your consideration, St. Paul's secondary is offering GCSE course, their students need to take the GCSE exam in F.4 and some outstanding students enter overseas universities after F.5 by using their good GCSE results. |
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