‘These are not the best students’: Continuing education, transnationalisation and Hong Kong’s young adult ‘educational non-elite
Publication date
2014
Authors
Waters, J.
Leung, W.H.M.
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Supervisors
Document Type
Article
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(c) UU Universiteit Utrecht, 2013
Abstract
This paper examines the under-explored relationship between young people’s transitions to
higher education (HE) and the opportunities afforded by transnational education (TNE)
programmes, with a focus on understanding the contemporary situation in Hong Kong. A
fascinating association has developed, over the past decade, between the expansion of TNE
in the territory and the government’s commitment to providing ‘continuing education’. We
explore what this relationship might mean for the young people directly affected by these
new opportunities, by drawing on 70 in-depth interviews with students/graduates. Our
sample is, what Brinton [2011. Lost in Transition: Youth, Work, and Instability in
Postindustrial Japan. New York: Cambridge University Press] has termed (in another
context), Hong Kong’s ‘educational non-elite’. We ask: how does this ‘non-elite’ negotiate
the shifting terrains of educational provision in an era where credentials (particularly at
degree-level) are seen as ‘everything’? Our paper contributes directly to discussions around
young people and (international) education, and considers frankly the specific role that
transnational HE plays in the education/employment transition of thousands of (hitherto
neglected) individuals in contemporary Hong Kong.
Keywords
transnational higher education, young people, Hong Kong, continuing education