Korean International School of Hong Kong
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Korean International School of Hong Kong | |
Location | |
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55 Lei King Road, Sai Wan Ho HKG |
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Coordinates | |
Information | |
Principal | Peter Leesinsky (English section) Jo-young Woo (Korean section) |
Students | ~400 |
Type | International, co-educational |
Grades | Grades 1 to 12 |
Established | 1988 |
Homepage | http://www.kis.edu.hk/ |
Korean International School of Hong Kong | |||||||||||
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Chinese name | |||||||||||
Traditional Chinese: | 香港韓國國際學校 | ||||||||||
Simplified Chinese: | 香港韩国国际学校 | ||||||||||
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Korean name | |||||||||||
Hangul: | 홍콩한국국제학교 | ||||||||||
Hanja: | 香港韓國國際學校 | ||||||||||
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The Korean International School of Hong Kong is an international school located in Lei King Wan, Sai Wan Ho, Hong Kong. It is located near the Tai Koo Shing area, which is home to a large number of Hong Kong's Korean families.[citation needed] It was founded in March 1988.[1]
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[edit] School structure and curriculum
The Korean International School is divided into two sections based on medium of instruction: the Korean section teachings in Korean, while the international section, established in 1994, teaches in English.[1] Each section has its own principal; Peter Leesinsky heads the international section, while Jo-young Woo heads the Korean section. Students in the international section are required to take Mandarin Chinese or Korean as their second language course.[citation needed] It is one of the few overseas Korean educational institutions which also accepts non-Korean students. Due to competition with other international schools in Hong Kong, its student body size decreased by roughly 260 students since 2004; as a result, they fired around 50 of their teachers. As of 2006, it enrolled 402 students. Roughly 5% of its ₩4 billion operating budget is subsidised by the South Korean government.[2]
The school is a member of the Cambridge International Primary Programme and a registered Cambridge Centre. The international section delivers the British National Curriculum for students from grades 1 to 9. The IGCSE Curriculum is offered for the students in grades 10 and 11, while the AS Curriculum is offered for the students in grade 12. The school has a swimming pool, tennis court, renovated gymnasium and two soft-surface playing fields - a soccerball field and a basketball court. It also features a science lab with an integrated computer area linked to the Internet, as well as two computer labs open to students of all classes. Within the school, students are divided into four "houses", each of which has a different color to distinguish them: Cougars (yellow), Eagles (red until 2005; blue thereafter), Lions (blue until 2005; red thereafter), and Pandas (green).
[edit] Investigation
In June 2006, the Korean International School's managing organisation, the Korean Residents' Association, was investigated by the Independent Commission Against Corruption; their office was searched, and one board member was charged with having received HK$100,000 in bribes related to the renegotiation of a real estate management company's contract and sentenced to eight months' imprisonment.[3][4] Local Koreans felt shaken by the investigations and expressed their loss of confidence in the managing organisation as a result.[2]
[edit] School song
The school song is called "The KIS Song". It is sung at school events, such as Sports Day and Merit Awards Assembly.
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[edit] References
- ^ a b "홍콩한국국제학교 (Korean International School of Hong Kong)", National Institute for International Education Development, Republic of Korea, 2005. Retrieved on 2007-08-27. (Korean)
- ^ a b "홍콩 한인학교 간부 비리로 수감, 교민사회 '술렁' (Hong Kong Korean school board investigated, Korean residents 'shaken')", AnyChina News, 22 June 2006. Retrieved on 2007-08-27. (Korean)
- ^ Choi, Hyeong-gyu. "부패에 둔감한 홍콩 한인회 (Hong Kong Korean association insensitive to bribery)", JoongAng Ilbo, 21 June 2006. Retrieved on 2007-08-27. (Korean) Archived from the original on 2007-08-10.
- ^ "School officer took bribe from cleaning contractor", South China Morning Post, 16 June 2006. Retrieved on 2007-08-27.