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CHAPTER 1
Introduction–
Studies of Immigrant Minority Education
"It is natural that you may encounter some difficulties at the start when you move into a
new community. You are all young and adaptive, and with the benefit of the induction
services provided, I am sure you would be able to settle into Hong Kong quickly, just as
I did many years ago."
Mrs. Anson Chan, the ex-Chief Secretary of the HKSAR Government, encouraged the
new arrival children by making her migration to Hong Kong from Shanghai in the
1940’s comparable to the present new arrival children’s experience1.
The Background
Throughout human history, people from various ethnicities and cultures migrate to look
for more life chances and hence better lives. People desire to settle down in a decent
place, yet not all places are satisfactory for settlement, therefore they migrate. Owing
to the outcomes brought about by industrialization since the 18th century, many
opportunities and advancement were concentrated in cities and in “developed
1 See the April 10, 2000 press release by the HKSAR Government entitled “Acting CE visits new arrival
services centre” on the government’s web site http:www.info.gov.hk. Mrs. Anson Chan, who was the
Acting Chief Executive that time, visited the Head O ffice of the International Social Services (ISS) Hong
Kong Branch, a non-government organisation providing services for new arrivals.
3
countries”. People migrate from the periphery to the developed countries, or more
exactly, to the developed nation-states. There are more than 130 million migrants
worldwide nowadays. Immigration is rapidly transforming the postindustrial world.
Hong Kong is also a city founded on migrations. Immigration, as well as emigration,
has been a prominent feature of Hong Kong society. Some may describe Hong Kong as
a “refugee society”. Many people, especially Chinese from inland provinces, treat
Hong Kong as home as well as a springboard to better life chances, or a gateway to a
better world. Migrants constitute a substantial portion of the society.
Yet people do not migrate as freely as they want. Governments formulate their own
immigration policy for their own reasons. For HKSAR Government, there have been
sets of immigration policy to deal with the influx of Mainland Chinese into Hong Kong.
These immigration policies facilitate people’s pursuit for better life chances on one
hand, but have created social problems and interfere with the destinies of many
individuals on the other. To have much more empathy with the Chinese immigrants, a
historical overview of immigration control is necessary. (Tong2, 2001)
In the early part of the 20th century, there was no territorial boundary between Mainland
China and Hong Kong. Residents from Guangdong were allowed to migrate freely to
Hong Kong, as well as back to the mainland. The governments of the two lands were
happy not to enforce any sort of immigration control.
2 Timothy Tong is the Deputy Secretary for Security of HKSAR Government.
4
Social problems, however, demanded control. Due to the political and economic
upheavals in the Communist Mainland as well as the Japanese Occupation in the 1930s,
a swift influx of Mainland residents to Hong Kong occurred in the 1940s. This influx
put enormous pressure on the provision of social services and created many sorts of
social problems. Since 1950 the Chinese Government has therefore regulated exit from
the Mainland through a permit system which then was known as the One-way Permit
(OWP) scheme. A formal territorial boundary between Mainland China and Hong
Kong has then been set up.
In the 1950s, 50 permits were issued per day to Mainlanders who might want to look for
a better future in Hong Kong. By the late 1970s, the daily quota for OWP was increased
to 75 when the number of residents from many parts of China wishing to settle in Hong
Kong kept escalating.
After the signing of the Sino-British Joint Declaration in 1984 between British and
Chinese governments, the colonial Hong Kong government had been busy with Hong
Kong’s reintegration with Mainland China. The social and economic boundaries
between Hong Kong and Mainland China became blurred, and there were more
frequent migrations across the border. In response to this increase in migrations, the
daily OWP quota was increased from 75 to 105 in 1993.
Currently, the social environment of the mainland, especially that of Southern China,
has also attracted many Hong Kong people to work and live there. Most of these people
are recent arrivals and are working in lower class jobs. Among these people, many of
male who may wish to marry women from where they work or have leisure in China as
they are more “attractive” in the eyes of Mainland women than in the eyes of Hong
5
Kong women.
From July 1, 1995 onwards, the intake of persons holding ‘single-transit permit’ has
been raised to 150 per day, with a view to facilitating the admission of a large number of
long-separated spouses and children born to Hong Kong permanent residents who
would be eligible for right of abode under Article 24(2)(3) of the Basic Law. The 150
quotas are allocated with the following priority: (Tong, 2001: 3)
1. A daily sub-quota of 60 children of all ages who are eligible for right of abode in
Hong Kong
2. A sub-quota of 30 for long-separated spouses (those separated from their spouses in
Hong Kong for more than 10 years)
3. An unspecified sub-quota of 60 for other OWP applicants
In accordance with the HKSAR government’s statistics (Tong, 2001), there are about
54750 new arrivals, which constitutes 0.8% of the population, every year. And since
the resumption of sovereignty in 1997, some 197,600 persons, including 85,412
eligible children and more than 80,600 separated spouses have entered Hong Kong for
settlement.
The above figures show that more than half of the new arrivals are school age children.
The decision of the Court of Final Appeal concerning the new arrivals issue on January
29, 1999 affirmed that the “eligible children” have the right of abode in the territory
under the Basic Law and the right must not be restricted by reason of the Mainland’s
one-way permit quota system. Later on June 26, 1999, the National People’s Congress
standing committee interpreted some Basic Law provisions and estimated that the
number of mainlanders eligible to settle in Hong Kong was 170,000.
6
The new immigrant or new arrival schoolchildren spent most of their childhood,
including education, in Mainland China. Owing to different systems of mainland
education and those of Hong Kong, as well as the different socio-historic backgrounds
of children of the two places, immigration unquestionably becomes one of the
determinants of the quality of their schooling as well as their school performance.
Their adaptation to Hong Kong schooling has happened to be a concern of many local
educators and social workers, as evidenced by a great deal of local surveys and
discussions undertaken by those front- line workers.
The social implications of new arrivals into Hong Kong have been the split- family
structure, making the new arrivals unable to live under the same roof with their parents
and spouse (Kuah, 1999). As a result of the immigration policies, a normal family has
become split into two sub-family structures, each living across the border of the other.
Family reunion, therefore, remains the single most important goal of the policy on
cross-boundary immigration control and regulation. For the betterment of immigration
policy, “family reunion will continue to be facilitated at a pace with which
socio-economic infrastructure and resources can cope”. (Tong, 2001:18)
In post-colonial Hong Kong, the historical, social and economic ties between the
HKSAR and the Mainland have become closer. There has always been a high level of
mobility of residents across the boundary. An average of 304,000 persons travel to and
from the Mainland every day (Tong, 2001). The volume of cross-boundary traffic has
risen at an annual rate of 12% over the past five years (Tong, 2001). Immigrations from
Mainland China will continue to transform the post-colonial Hong Kong and its various
sectors, including education.
7
Local Studies of New Arrival Students
Immigration has become a social issue when the influx of people impacted significantly
on the society, or more specifically on the government’s policy bureaus and service
departments. The Home Affairs Bureau shares the role of administering the
coordination and delivery of new arrival services provided by various Government
departments and non governmental organizations (NGOs); the Education Department
is to offer education services for new arrival students; whereas the Social Welfare
Department comes to serve new arrival families and individuals to promote
self-reliance in their adaptation to Hong Kong society. And the Labour Department is
involved for the various employment services for the new arrivals. Many NGOs are
actively giving their helping hands on the front line, as well as to evaluate the
government’s services and polices regarding immigration.
Studies on new arrivals, or new immigrants as called in colonial period, were conducted
mostly by NGOs and government departments in order to gauge predominantly the
service needs of the new arrivals. Literature on new arrivals can be found from the
early 1980s onwards. The early 1980s is the period when the discourse and
construction of the “HongKongese” identity were triggered. One study conducted in
that period aims at getting a general picture about how the two ‘social groups’ of people
i.e. the new immigrants and the local citizens view one another (Chinese University
Student Union, 1982). Later in the mid 1980s some local social service agencies came
8
to serve the new arrivals and they were concerned about the profile of the arrivals and
the problems they faced in adaptation. The research areas of these studies are very
similar, in spite of the difference in report topics. These studies are predominantly
surveys which identify the new arrivals’ adaptation problems faced in the adaptation
process and hence their pertinent service needs in general. The studies furthermore
evaluate the services provision and development as well as related government polic ies.
Some explore the supportive network of the new arrivals also (Hong Kong Council of
Social Service, 1982, quoted by International Social Service, 1997; Hong Kong
Council of Social Service and Lingnan College, 1985).
As the services provided by the NGOs and governments have been specified, so were
their studies. Although general surveys on new arrivals as a whole prevailed
(International Social Service Hong Kong Branch, 1997), studies in the 1990s had a kind
of specification with respect to their client groups. Some welfare agencies did more
studies on children, students and working youths (Chan, 1999; Chan, Yip, Yuen, 1997;
Choi, Kim, Lee,1999; Ho, 1999; The Hong Kong Federation of Youth Groups, 1995),
some on women (Chung, 1996; Lau, 1995), and some on families (Ho, 1999; The Hong
Kong Federation of Youth Groups, 1999). The Home Affairs Branch, the Education
Department and the Statistics Department of the HKSAR Government started keeping
the updated figures on new arrivals’ profile since the 1990s. Despite the uncritical
positivistic nature, studies conducted within these two decades do contribute to future
immigration researches by providing a brief profile of this migration of Chinese people
to the territory.
In these survey reports, new arriva l children are commonly seen as one social group in
9
Hong Kong society as they share similar socio-historic background with one another,
notably their experience of adapting to Hong Kong schooling. In the academic year of
1999/2000, there were 17,518 newly admitted students at primary level, whereas 2,614
were at secondary level3. Respectively, these students constituted 3.56% and 0.58% of
the total school enrollment. According to a quantitative research conducted by
International Social Service (Hong Kong Branch) in 1997, the majority of new arrivals
(63.3%) are from Guangdong, followed by Fukien (17.7%) as the commonest origin of
new arrivals4.
According to this research, 39.4% of 999 respondents live in public housing and their
median monthly family income is HK$9920 (the sample size is 921 families)
(International Social Service, 1997). Interestingly, many new arrival children perceive
that they are from the middle class even though their monthly family income can hardly
justify their perception. It is mainly because they claim so simply with reference to
their life in the mainland where some of their parents are not offered a full-time job.
However in the same family, the parents’ perception of class to which they belong is
one or two levels lower than what their children perceive. The new arrival children, by
the way, are comparatively more conscious of their family’s economic well being than
local children are. (The Hong Kong Federation of Youth Groups, 1995)
What new arrival children share most in common are probably the problems they
encounter when they are adapting to the schooling in Hong Kong. Their problems are
3 These figures include children newly admitted to local ordinary day schools (i.e. excluding
international schools, schools operated under English Schools Foundation (ESF), special schools and
evening schools).
10
summarized as follows: (Hong Kong Council of Social Services, 1999)
1. Overage (i.e. the “age-gap” with counterparts) in class
2. Inadequate proficiency in English, Cantonese and in using “traditional Chinese
characters”
3. Discrimination in schools
4. Family cannot offer help regarding children’s studies
5. Social life of low quality, as leisure time is used for staying at home or tutorial
6. For children aged 15 or above (who cannot enjoy free compulsory education), they
need to be very self-motivated to utilize the available information and resources with
a view to furthering their studies.
Notwithstanding the problems as summarized above, (Hong Kong Council of Social
Services, 1999) immigrant status (that is whether people voluntarily immigrate or not)
is the only one of the many factors that influences the school-adaptation patterns of
immigrant minorities. (Ogbu, 1991) New arrival children see education as an asset to
climb up the social ladder, so they are keen to grasp any opportunity for education.
(The Hong Kong Federation of Youth Groups, 1995; 1999) These research findings are
consistent with the general argument that voluntary immigrant minority youths by and
large like schooling and have positive attitudes about their teachers. The youths’
motivation and determination help them much in adapting to the host society, including
school demands.
The adaptation problems which new arrival children face come from the inequalities
they encounter. Such inequalities can be categorized into the unequal situation they
4 The sample size of the survey is 999 new arrivals from various age groups.
11
face in respect of age, daily use of language and possession of social capital as
compared with their counterparts from the mainstream.
Age
Overage in class is a serious pedagogic problem as we can see from statements made by
the HKSAR Education Department in the Survey on Children from the Mainland Newly
Admitted to Schools. The statements say:
When compared with the primary pupils as a whole, considerable higher
proportion of the newly admitted pupils from the mainland were found to be
over-aged. While over-aged pupils constituted about 18% of all primary pupils,
the proportion of over-aged pupils was as high as 77.6% among newly admitted
pupils from the mainland (HKSAR Education Department, 2000)
Similarly, in secondary schools 84.9% of the newly admitted pupils from the mainland
are overaged whereas only 27.4% of the total secondary school population are
over-aged. Over the past five years, the overage problem in both primary and
secondary schools become more serious.
Being oddly over-aged in class poses great psychological distress to the new arrival
children. One interviewee of a qualitative research conducted by the Hong Kong
Federation of Youth Groups remarked:
“I’m too ‘mature’ to repeat primary six. I am very pessimistic. I really regret that
I didn’t study English well in the past… ” (The Hong Kong Federation of Youth
Groups, 1995)
In this research, 18 out of 43 interviewees need to be downgraded one level, while 10
have to be downgraded two levels. They feel very shameful because their value has
12
depreciated. Worse still, they feel the pressure to perform better than their counterparts.
But they will not be proud of their better performance as they sense that they deserve to
do better in others’ eyes. They are supposed to be big brothers or sisters in class.
One reason for this problem is timing. It is not fit for the children to start school
immediately when they arrive at Hong Kong. Another point is that the new arrival
children do not mind being downgraded to lower forms at all as long as they can still be
admitted to schools. It is because they want to acquire a stronger foundation of English.
All in all, the reasons for repeat or being downgraded are many, and the main one is the
new arrivals’ poor level of English.
Language
Though new arrival children should not be termed as a ‘language minority’ (because
their mother tongue is Chinese also), changes in language usage do lead to
communication barriers and hence adaptation problems. There are briefly three aspects
of language change:
1. Using traditioal characters instead of simplified characters
2. Speaking Cantonese, or speaking in Hong Kong accent
3. Using English in studies and in school
13
Using English is the biggest obstacle in adaptation among the above three language
changes. According to the comments made by teachers, 56.1% of newly admitted
primary pupils from the mainland are weak in English, whereas for newly admitted
secondary students from the mainland the figure is 51.9%. (HKSAR Education
Department, 2000)
From the new arrival students’ point of view, 73.6% of the 360 respondents in a study
expressed that English was the most difficult subject5. (International Social Service,
Hong Kong Branch, 1997) Consistently enough, their first priority need is English
tuition class, while the centralized school place allocation system and comprehensive
adaptation programmes follow as the second and third most urgent needs respectively.
(The Hong Kong Federation of Youth Groups, 1995)
Social Capital: Family, Peers and the Support System
Teenagers are in the stage of self- identity seeking and they can not “form” their own
self- identity by themselves alone. They need others’ recognition and appreciation to
construct a positive self- identity. According to developmental psychologists, teenagers
need to expand their support system from family to peers (Rice, 2002). Yet their lack of
social capital limits the choice of ‘others’ they have and weakens the support for theses
people.
The social capital that children may possess depends much on their family and ethnic
background. Newly arrived parents, notably the mothers from mainland, need a period
5 In the same study, Chinese was seen as the second most difficult subject, with only 3.7% of the respondents commented as such.
14
of time to settle down in Hong Kong and most of them need to work for long hours daily.
In terms of time and knowledge, they are unable to provide emotional support for their
children. In bringing up their children, new arrivals pay the most attention to not
exposing the ir children to bad influences, as parents are skeptical of the new
environment of Hong Kong. Their skepticism can be illustrated by a parent who was
very prudent in responding to a researcher’s invitation for interview conducted by the
Hong Kong Federation of Youth Groups (1995). This parent asked whether he might
suffer any loss if he accepted the invitation.
Parents are also skeptical about allowing children to join social functions or to use
community services. Community networks and relations therefore may play only a
minor role in the school adaptations of these minority children. What parents expect
from their children most, whether in inland or in Hong Kong, is studying hard at school.
It is especially the case for staying in Hong Kong where better educational
opportunities are provided. One parent stated that it was the global trend that higher
educational level was demanded (The Hong Kong Federation of Youth Groups, 1995).
New arrivals do not have many relatives in Hong Kong. One of their main activities in
leisure time is visiting their homeland regularly. Hence the support system of new
arrival children is at stake. They seldom seek help from parents when they have
problems, even though they know that their parents love them. In the meantime, owing
to their age, language and ethnic origin perhaps, they can hardly gain peer support from
their counterparts in class. So they usually make friends with the other new arrivals of
similar age. Good academic results can be an asset to develop fr iendship with
classmates, but it can also lead to jealousy and prejudice. (The Hong Kong Federation
of Youth Groups, 1995)
15
Social capital is the central concept of this thesis. We will look at this concept in more
detail in the theoretical review section and this concept will be extensively used in
conceptual analysis.
The Children’s Experience
Personal experience can change a person’s perception towards something, and his value
system as well. It is therefore important to describe and discuss the adaptation
experience of new arrival children, starting from the time when they first came to Hong
Kong and sought a place in school.
When new arrival children are looking for a place in school, they often face many
rejections and these bad experiences are likely to effect their adaptation in the future.
To account for this phenomenon, we can study the policy issue in this regard. In the
process of placement, Education Department simply acts as an agency for vacancy
information, whereas decisions on admission rest in the hands of the principals of
individual schools. And most schools do not welcome new arrival children at all as
these children may increase the workload of the school. Therefore, the new arrival
children are frequently discriminated by the staff of some schools when they are
applying for admission to these schools.
There are various examples of the school’s unfair treatment of the new arrival children,
and several are provided below (The Hong Kong Federation of Youth Groups, 1995).
Example 1: Once the staff had known that those who looked for school places were new
immigrants, they would lie that there was no place
Example 2: When a parent was consulting a principal of one famous school for school
16
place, the principal responded, ”if I give you an offer, that means my school will have
one repeater. Do you think I will consider your application?”
Example 3: When a parent was asking for application details at a school’s help desk,
one staff commented bluntly: “you new immigrants should not be considered for
admission”
In another case, a newly arrived child commented that they were treated like refugees in
school place hunting. Under such circumstances, the children’s self-esteem will be
badly affected especially if the school hunting duration is too long. In some cases, new
arrival children have to stay at home for half a year or so, awaiting a place in schools.
Yet, compared with local schoolchildren, the new arrivals share a more positive attitude
towards schooling. They understand one can hardly find a job without good
educational qualifications, so they treasure education which to them is an important
asset to climb up the social ladder. Academic achievement is treated by the new arrival
children as such a big issue that it has been attributed many meanings. Academic
achievement is about their future, their self-esteem, their recognition from others and
their responsibility for the family as well. One student experienced that when s/he
came first in class, both teachers and classmates treated her/him better (The Hong Kong
Federation of Youth Groups, 1995). Schools also offer a site for them to establish
social network with others (The Hong Kong Federation of Youth Groups, 1995).
From the limited qualitative findings in the local literature on new arrivals (The Hong
Kong Federation of Youth Groups, 1995 which spares part the of report to qualitative
findings), we can see that the new arrival students indeed attribute individual meanings
to their individual experiences in the host society. And we can expect that there are
17
many new arrival students who view themselves in a way very different from how the
local population and agencies view them. Government departments and
non-government organizations, for instance, try to offer them help. Their interest is to
identify these new arrivals’ service needs and to locate those in need. Yet in this needs
identifying and “needy people” searching process, the relationship between “a helper”
and “a client with needs and problems” is formed. “New Arrival Students” would then
be easily perceived as “Problem New Arrival Students”. Further, when these new
arrival students are asked to fill in questionnaires as required by their teachers or
welfare workers, their voices can hardly be fully and freely represented yet their
identity as needy students is reinforced.
For effective and efficient provision of service, it is understandable that the government
departments and NGOs would like to get quantitative data through repetitive surveys
which see the new arrivals as one distinct social group. However, from the experience
of many teachers and researchers (or ethnographers) who have really talked or worked
with the new arrival students, we cannot justifiably consider all new arrival students as
a homogeneous social category (for example HKSAR Education Department, 2000;
International Social Service, 1997). Some new arrival students, for example, are not
easily distinguishable from the local born students. Some new arrival students are so
different from other new arrival students that it is unreasonable to view them as coming
from the same group. This difference among new arrival students makes inadequate
many services and polices which target the new arrival students as a whole. It also
renders superficial many of the generalizations made by the survey studies of new
arrival students.
General surveys or researches to investigate new arrival children as one group of
18
schoolchildren have yet to tell the complexities within these children. It is obvious that,
however, ethnographic studies on new arrival children can inform people what these
children share in common with one another, as well as how individuals’ identity and
experiences, perception of future opportunities and school performance make them
distinct. Sociological insights of this kind are helpful to enrich the local studies which
have focused on surveys of the new arrivals. Legislators and policy enforcers should
also listen to the new arrivals’ voice more so as to enhance the cultural sensitivity of the
immigration policies and “assimilation packages” and hence truly empower the new
arrivals.
Sociological researches on new arrival students are indeed rare. One pioneer study
conducted by Leung entitled The Making of School Success and Failure: The Case of
the New Immigrant Students from Mainland China provides a good start for this stream
of qualitative research to be carried on. The study investigates the variability of school
performance among new arrival students with reference to socio-cultural factors. It
finds that the new arrival students’ school success is largely determined by the students’
past school experiences and student identity in interaction with their present
socio-cultural environment, especially that of the school. Arguing from the
interactionist perspective, Leung suggests that student perceptions within the school
context count more than any sort of structural determinants in the larger society in
influencing the new arrival students’ performance. He maintains that such perceptions
and self-confidence within the context of the school are more relevant than their beliefs
about the opportunity structure of the present society in accounting for the school
success and failure of the new arrivals. The quotations made in the last part of Leung’s
study reflect the methodological and theoretical ground of this present research.
19
“This analysis leads us to re-emphasize a need for attention to the individual
qualities of learners and their learning. It is important to recognize and ‘hear’
pupils’ individual perspectives … This process is particularly important where a
child’s identity is distinct from, or in tension with, those of the mainstream peer or
school culture … The interaction of socio-cultural contexts and learners is highly
complex but extremely powerful … Individual capabilities are related to
perceptions and self-confidence in particular social contexts” (Pollard and Filer,
1999, p.166; quoted by Leung)
Theoretical Explanations of Differential School Performance
In modern societies, education is held to be the social institution that allows capable
and hardworking people to gain their educational credentials which lead to better life
chances and economic rewards. In actuality, school performance however is
attributable not only to students’ differential input of effort but also many other social
and cultural factors. Educational inequalities occur in various contexts which lead to
differential school performance. Some theoretical explanations originating from
critical educational studies are now reviewed to account for the differential school
performance of minority students and among minority groups.
Education as Class Reproduction
Informed by a commitment to equality of educational access as well as curricular
knowledge in the 1970s, scholars like Althusser, Bernstein, and Apple suggest that
school actually worsens social inequalities (Levinson, Foley, Holland, 1996). Althusser
even argues that schools are among the most powerful “ideological state apparatuses”
20
of modern capitalism. As what these scholars claimed are a far cry from the common
view at that time that education promoted social mobility, their views have been
described as the “new sociology of education”.
By the end of the 1970s, “reproduction theory” emerged. The theory helps explain how
schools serve to reproduce rather than transform existing structural inequalities.
According to this theory, education is seen to pose little or no effect on social mobility.
Education as Cultural Reproduction
Later on some social theorists found it necessary to refine and modify the reproduction
theory. Following the theme of reproduction theory, another band of reproductionists,
namely cultural reproductionists, put culture into their theoretical analysis and put
forward the notion of cultural reproduction.
The leading figure of this school of reproductionists is Pierre Bourdieu. Furthering
the structural Marxist formulation, Bourdieu and Passeron (1977) developed the
concept of “cultural capital” and brought out cultural reproduction. Here cultural
capital refers to a sort of symbolic credit, for instance “taste” and “intelligence” which
are acquired through learning to embody and endorse signs of social standing. Such
cultural capital is held to lead to better school performance, which in term contributes to
the attainment of advanced academic credentials. Good tastes and high brow life
styles – or high culture – is capital in the sense that it helps those who possess it to
acquire benefits and privileges.
In essence Bourdieu’s arguments are as follows. This acquisition of high culture is
important to education, as schools are where the value and content of the elite groups’
21
high culture are reproduced. In schools, the values and lifestyles of the elite groups are
important ingredients of school curricular knowledge and official school culture.
On the basis of the above arguments, we can assume that minority and immigrant
students posses less cultural capital than the children from the mainstream social
groups. These immigrant minority students can be expected to face more difficulties
and barriers in their school education. In response, these students cannot help but tend
to develop a “sense of their social limits”, which becomes permanently marked in their
own “habitus”. The students then tend to question their own abilities when they are
accompanying others with greater cultural capital and of higher social standing.
This reproductionist explanation is seemingly inadequate, however. When the concept
of reproduction is being critically assessed, we can find several inadequacies. The
class-dominant perspective of reproduction theory assumes that class structure is the
main determinant of students’ life chances. This explanation neglects the meso-level
and micro- level analyses in schools and classrooms. Both students and teachers indeed
can formulate their own coping strategies to deal with the official school demands and
with one another.
Empirically, it is not rare that a number of high achievers of many countries are from
working class or minority backgrounds. We will see, for instance, that one of the high
achievers of the present study is sharing a flat with his neighbours and his parents are
doing working class jobs. More significantly, the case that American Vietnamese who
tend to have relatively low incomes show high rates of academic success also
substantiates this claim (Bankston, Caldas, and Zhou, 1997). To take a further look at
22
such phenomena, we will soon turn to researches using cultural difference to explain
the differential educational achievement of immigrant minorities.
Social Capital and School Performance
Yet before we turn to the discussion on cultural difference explanation, we now take a
look on the concept of social capital. As stated in the section of local studies review,
social capital is the central concept of this thesis. In this section, we will briefly state
how “social capital” is understood in this context, and how it has been used in
sociological studies of student performance.
Over decades, there was a great deal of sociologists studying the conception of social
capital and using it for social organizations studies. One of the renowned ones is James
S. Coleman. Coleman (1990; quoted by Schneider, 2002) sees social capital as a set of
relational ties that facilitates action. He defines social capital as inhering in the
structure of relations between persons and among persons. Schneider (2002) defines
social capital from Coleman’s perspective as, “the social capital that comes about
through relational exchanges helps to generate trust by establishing expectations, and
creating and enforcing norms.”
Through the generation of norms and trust, social capital is formed. This formation of
networks is to promote individual and collective interests like socio-economic
advancement, civic engagement, or any kinds of personal well being. As social capital
is created through relational ties; the denser and closer these ties are, more likely the
information which acts as a basis for action will be communicated. The strength of
social capital in a community depends upon the degree to which associates share norms
and values and are capable of moderating self- interests for the common good
23
(Schneider, 2002:545).
James Coleman (1988) in his thesis “Social Capital in the Creation of Human Capital”
claims that one important effect of social capital is on the creation of human capital in
the next generation. This effect is brought about through the institution of family. The
human capital creation process can be analyzed in two ways; one is through the social
capital in the family while the other one is through social capital outside the family.
Coleman (1988) suggests that “family background”, being an analytic variable, is in
fact comprised of three components: financial capital, human capital, and social capital.
Human capital refers to parents’ education and it provides the potential for a cognitive
environment for the child that aids learning. Social capital of the family is the relations
between children and parents. Social capital within the family that gives the child
access to the adults’ human capital depends both on the physical presence of adults in
the family and on the attention given by the adults to the child. If the human capital
possessed by parents is not complemented by social capital embodied in family
relations, it is irrelevant to the child’s educational growth.
By providing encouragement and support for children’s learning and by involving
themselves in learning activities, parents influence their children’s school performance
positively (Epstein, 1987; quoted by Hao and Bonstead-Bruns, 1998). Coleman and
Hoffer (1987) claims that a family with functional deficiency is the one in absence of
strong relations between children and parents, despite their physical presence in the
household.
Social capital outside the family, or between-family social capital as suggested by Hao
24
and Bonstead-Bruns (1998), is generated from the relationships between the family and
other social institutions. Trustworthiness in an ethnic community and ethnic solidarity
give rise to trust, enabling efficient distribution of economic and educational resources
and among the members. Zhou and Bankston (1998) in their study of a Vietnamese
community in New Orleans find out that preserving traditional ethnic values enables
immigrant to integrate socially and to maintain solidarity in an ethnic community
surrounded by undesirable neighbourhoods. Ethnic solidarity is especially important in
the context where immigrants just newly arrive at the host society.
In her article “Social Capital in Chinatown”, Zhou (2000) examines how the process of
adaptation of young Chinese Americans is affected by tangible forms of social relations
between the community, immigrant families, and the younger generations. Chinatown
serves as the basis of social capital that facilitates, rather than inhibits, the assimilation
of immigrant children in the expected directions. In furthering her claim that
Chinatown acts as a source of social capital, she says,
[Chinatown community does] not only makes resources available to parents and
children but serves to direct children’s behaviours. This type of social capital
helps many of Chinatown’s children to overcome intense adjustment difficulties
and unfavourable conditions, such as linguistic and social isolation, bicultural
conflicts, poverty, gang subculture, and close proximity to other underprivileged
minority neighbourhoods and to ensure successful adaptation. (Zhou, 2000:333)
Ethnic support provides impetus to academic success. Furthermore maintenance of
literacy in native language also provides a form of social capital that contributes
positively to academic achievement. Stanton-Salazar and Dornbusch (1995) (quoted
by Wong, 2002) found that bilingual students were more likely to obtain the necessary
25
forms of institutional support to advance their school performance and their life
chances.
The Cultural Difference Explanation
Ethnographic researches inform educational anthropologists and sociologists of the
disproportionate school failure of some ethnic and racial minorities but the success of
others. The cultural difference approach was then adopted to explain the phenomenon.
By studying “differences”, “discontinuities”, “conflicts”, and “mismatches” as well as
“similarities” between the mainstream school culture and the cultures of ethnic
minorities, the educational performance of minority groups can be better understood
(Levinson and Holland, 1996).
Some ethnic groups’ culture repertories place high value on education. Take the
example of Chinese Americans. The traditional Confucian Chinese culture is very
much compatible with the middle-class mainstream culture of American schools.
Hence the Chinese Americans have disproportionate school success. Chinese parents
also expect a lot from their children in school performance, for the pursuit of family
honour. As a way to show their respect and love to the parents, Chinese children like to
submit themselves to their parents’ expectation. They are hence usually highly
motivated and diligent students.
The problem with the above explanation is that the same ethnic group can have
different school performance when they are in different countries and different contexts.
For example, the cultural difference explanation fails to account for the case that
Korean Americans in the Untied States perform better than Korean Japanese in Japan
(De Vos 1978,1992; Lee, 1991). Adopting class analysis, Lee (1991) notes that social
26
class differences distinguish the Koreans in Japan from the Koreans in America. Class
background influences the Korean students’ perspectives on schooling. However,
Gibson (1991) maintains that socioeconomic status cannot explain the school
achievement patterns of the West Indian, Central American, and Mexican children in
her study. She suggests that these minority children do better than “their
socio-economic condition would seem to justify”. The applicability of social and
cultural reproduction theories to immigrant minorities is again questioned. Yet on the
other hand, as we have seen, the cultural difference explanation has its own loopholes.
The Cultural Ecology Theory
Instead of using the cultural traits of minority ethnic groups to explain their educational
performance, John Ogbu (Ogbu, 1978, 1987, 1991, 1997; Gibson and Ogbu, 1991) has
developed a comprehensive framework to explain differential school performance
among various ethnic minority groups with reference to the socio-cultural contexts they
face. This framework attempts to explain the differential school performance of
different ethnic groups in the same context, the differential performance of the same
ethnic group in different contexts, as well as the within-group variability in academic
achievement.
In Ogbu’s framework, immigrant minorities may differ from one another in that their
ways of becoming minorities are not the same. Some migrate to a new place
voluntarily for better life chances for themselves and their children. “Voluntary
minorities”, as they are termed, usually have high hopes in the host society. They
choose to “make the deal” so they are willing to pay the price of immigration which
includes discrimination and barriers on their path of getting ahead. Those hardships
may be anticipated before they step on the land of the host society yet because it is a
27
land of hope they face the hardships positively. In looking back at their even worse
times in their homeland, they often find discrimination and other barriers for getting
ahead in the host society to be simply the necessary cost for greater gains. In Ogbu’s
terms, voluntary minorities in this sense have a positive dual frame of reference. In
addition, they have a folk theory of success which holds that education plus hard work is
a hopeful means to climb up the “social ladder”. Ogbu also points out that voluntary
immigrants often take pride in their own cultural identity which insulates them from a
sense of inferiority to the mainstream groups.
In contrast, “involuntary minorities” are groups involuntarily incorporated into the host
society through conquest, colonization, or slavery. Owing to their history of
subordination and oppression, the involuntary minorities do not think that the host
society does them justice or gives them hope. In actuality and in the minorities’ belief,
the social institutions in the host society, including education, do not offer them fair
opportunities for socio-economic advancement. The involuntary minorities do not
think that educational credentials afford them equal access to good jobs or equal
chances for promotion. To the oppressed, excelling at school symbolizes behaving like
the mainstream “oppressors”. A decent life therefore means sustaining an oppositional
identity rather than pursuing academic achievement. The minority peer group respect
their counterparts who reject or resist school learning; and reject those who comply
with the school authority.
Empirically, voluntary minority students perform better at school than involuntary
minority students of similar social-class backgrounds. It is the outcome of differential
perceptions towards schooling and teachers. Voluntary immigrants – who Ogbu also
refers to as immigrant minorities - by and large place high value on schooling and show
28
deference towards their teachers. In return, teachers like teaching immigrant students
who have a sense of purpose and direction. The students’ positive attitude put them into
an advantageous position in the classroom. (Gibson, 1991) The contrary applies to
involuntary minority students in their perception of schooling and teachers, and
therefore in their treatment by teachers and in school performance.
Voluntary minority students’ positive attitude toward the host society’s social
institutions is due not to their “whole-hearted” deference to the host society and
mainstream culture but to their instrumental view on schooling. Voluntary minority
students attain good school performance not because they have assimilated the
mainstream culture but because they have strong home cultures and a positive sense of
ethnic identities. Indeed, minority cultures and identities help students’ adaptation.
Gibson (1991) builds on Ogbu’s framework and points out that the kind of acculturation
adopted by voluntary minority students is an additive acculturation. They see
acculturation as additive rather than subtractive and believe that education can
empower them for greater participation in the host society, in honour of their ethnic
communities. Given the support from the ir strong ethnic identities and from their
family, voluntary immigrant students can develop an attitude of hope to transcend the
discriminations and barriers in their adaptation process.
However, involuntary minority students adopt a subtractive view of acculturation. As
the involuntary minority student perceive it, their acculturation process is subtractive in
the sense that acculturation leads to a loss of ethnic culture and identities. They in
general feel that they have to forgo either school achievement or ethnic identity and
peer recognition. They often choose to retain their ethnic identity and pride and peer
recognition, at the expense of school achievement.
29
Many educators today advocate multiculturalism which champions minority ethnic
cultures and identities as a source of social and cultural capital (Bankston III; Caldas;
Zhou, 1997), which serves to empower minority students in school adaptation. In
contrast, an educational policy of assimilation assumes that minority students will
attain good school performance if they integrate themselves fully into the mainstream
culture. Such assimilation policy demands the students to abandon their ethnic identity.
But a more workable educational policy is the one that supports and maintains
multiculturalism. Positive acculturation, or accommodation, is a better way out than
assimilation.
By and large, immigration is about parents’ hope for their children. Many scholars on
immigration analyze why and how these parents migrate and pay little attention to the
wishes of their children. The assumption that children think in the same way as their
parents regarding immigration is too casually drawn.
Some Recent Theoretical Developments: Identity and Adaptation
The American educational anthropologist M.M. Suarez-Orozco understands well the
above inadequacy and has conducted a study focusing on the children of immigrants.
His study dwells on these immigrant children’s experiences at school for he claims,
“What is going on in the school environment is a good place to start trying to
understand the problems facing the ethnic minorities. It is precisely in schools where
many of the problems seem to begin.” (Suarez-Orozco, 1990:267) As part of his
five-year longitudinal study – the Harvard Immigration Project, he published the book
entitled Children of Immigration.
30
Suarez-Orozco (1990) also critiques Ogbu’s theoretical framework. He comments that
the “voluntary minority” against “involuntary minority” categories are “heuristic
typologies” in explaining minority students’ differential school performance. Children
are usually powerless in family migration decisions and have few ideas about the host
society’s opportunity structure, so it is not appropriate and justifiable to put minority
children either in voluntary minority or involuntary minority categories.
Suarez-Orozco also critiques the typologies as “deterministic and self-perpetuating
entities”. I may here use some of the findings in my study to illustrate the point. I met a
high achiever who claims that he was not willing to come to Hong Kong at the very
beginning but he changed his view after he has accommodated to the school life.
Another student who was originally a “voluntary minority” later regretted when he
discovered that Hong Kong education was not as good as his father had told him.
Both school success and school failure are determined by many variables during the
students’ immigration experience. Carola Suarez-Orozco and Marcelo M
Suarez-Orozco (2001) suggest that there are multiple pathways that structure the
“immigrants’ journeys into their new home”. These categories of adaptation pathways
are useful for conceptualizing the experiences of immigrant students and explaining
their schooling outcomes.
When the t raditional "straight-line assimilation" theory6 no longer holds, it is necessary
to understand how different types of ethnic identity influence the immigrant children’s
schooling experience and their subsequent adaptation to the host society. The Orozcos
6 The theory states that immigrants will experience upward social mobility and achieve educational and economic parity with the natives when they become more assimilated into the mainstream society and lose their own cultural traits (Suarez-Orozco & Suarez-Orozco, 2001).
31
categorize three different types of identity; they are “ethnic flight”, "adversarial
identities" and "transcultural (or bicultural) identities". Immigrants adopting an "ethnic
flight" style of identity are those who abandon their own ethnic identity and imitate the
dominant group. They strongly identify with the dominant mainstream culture and are
willing to play the game of climbing the social ladder. However, immigrants choosing
this identity have to pay their social and emotional costs. This adaptation pathway may
lead to “ethnic betrayal”, marginalization and exclusion. There are also hidden costs of
unresolved shame, doubt, and self-hatred. “Issues of shame and self-doubt are
interwoven in situations of cultural dislocation, ethnic prejudice, and social mobility.”
(Suarez-Orozco & Suarez-Orozco, 2001)
But identification with peers and with one’s own social or ethnic group can avoid the
danger of anomie and psychological alienation. Hence some immigrants choose to
adopt "adversarial identities". Immigrants with "adversarial identities" construct their
identity in opposition to the mainstream culture and its institutions. Students who find
themselves structurally marginalized and culturally disparaged are more likely to
construct identities around rejecting the institutions of the dominant culture. They tend
to have problems in school. Like Gibson’s idea of subtractive acculturation,
immigrants with "adversarial identities" equate embracing aspects of dominant culture
with giving up one’s own ethnic identity.
"Transcultural (or bicultural) identities" enable immigrants to develop adaptive
competence in both and many cultures. “They creatively fuse aspects of the parental
tradition and the new culture in a process of transculturation that blends two systems
that are at once their own and foreign.” (Suarez-Orozco & Suarez-Orozco, 2001:113)
Bicultural individuals as creative agents who easily communicate and make friends
with members of their own ethnic group and with people of other cultures. They do not
32
view success as complying with the mainstream society but as a way to “pay back”
their family and ethnic community.
Focus of the Present Study
The present study is based on the belief that to understand the new arrival students, it is
important to listen to their voices, and on the basis of their own accounts, to describe
and interpret their experience of adaptation to their new socio-cultural setting. This
research is to study the new arrival students’ experiences of immigration, to investigate
how socio-cultural factors interact in ways that lead to divergent pathways of
adaptation, and subsequently to explain their differential school performance.
Throughout the thesis, many a concept and theory reviewed previously will be used in a
flexible manner for any appropriate analysis. Cultural ecology theory and the concepts
of social capital and cultural capital are the major ones.
Migration brings along lots of changes, and these changes bring opportunities and
challenges. People need motivation and hope to keep going ahead for the opportunities
and to overcome the challenges. Part of the motivation comes from the opportunity
structure in the host society, but in the last analysis it is the individual who has to
become motivated. With hope and support, people can be motivated and adapt well and
transcend socio-cultural barriers. Without hope and support, immigration simply
means alienation, discriminations and hardships. I will therefore use hope and support
as two major themes to understand our interviewees‘ various adaptation experiences
and to explain their differential school performance as well as psychological
well-being.
33
CHAPTER 2
The Immigration Experience and Adaptations
“One night, I received a phone call from my mother and she told me to go to Hong
Kong immediately after two days. I was extremely shocked and at once packed up my
stuffs. When I was on the way to Hong Kong, I had too many things to think about. All
were about lives and happenings in the homeland. I sometimes cried at night after I
had arrived here.”
A male new arrival student who could not choose but migrate for family reunion thus
expressed his ambivalent feelings about immigration.
People have ambivalent feelings about changes. On one hand, people look forward to
the change for the better, whereas on the other hand they fear that changes may bring
too many uncertainties and challenges that may make life difficult.
Immigration, being a major life decision, costs much as it brings many changes.
Immigrants, especially immigrant children, who follow their parents to migrate, face an
uncertain future with the potential for both gains and losses. The impact of
immigration on new arrival students depends on the changes they are to experience and
their subsequent adaptation to the changes. People have to adapt to survive or at least to
satisfy their basic personal needs when the socio-cultural and institutional environment
changes. (LeVine, 1982:153)
As mentioned in the previous chapter, new arrival students cannot be seen as one
34
homogeneous group of students. They are different from one another in that the
changes they need to face are different and hence the subsequent identities they form
may be different. These students have come to a society with socio-cultural settings
different from their homeland’s. Broadly speaking, they experience changes, or
challenges, in their language, lifestyles, and identities. Perhaps one most fundamental
change for these students is the change in family relationships and family life.
Almost all of the new arrival students migrate to Hong Kong for the sake of family
reunion, so there is a change in family life. Their families were a splitted one but now
they are in union with their families. In most cases, they have lived their childhood in
a mother-centred family in the Mainland. The mother is mainlander while the father is
working in a lower-class job in Hong Kong. The mother usually gives birth to her
children in the Mainland and plans to migrate to Hong Kong with the children thereafter.
Both mother and children apply for the one-way permit at the same time, yet their
applications are however not approved simultaneously. Usually, the children have to be
left in the care of grandparents or relatives in the Mainland, or the children may have to
live in a father-centred family in Hong Kong. In the latter case, the children are often
neglected as most fathers have little time to spend with their children due to their job.
Also, during the family migration process, the children are often separated from their
siblings; some come to Hong Kong, some stay behind to wait their turn.
Yet the children usually enjoy their family life after reunion, as they can receive love
and care both from the father and the mother. To the children this change is
consequently a good change. This change in family life gives the students impetus to
do well at school so as to pay back the parents’ love. For instance, Cheung who is one
of the interviewees of this research, remarks that the family warmth he is enjoying due
35
to immigration motivates him to work harder.
HT(interviewer): Did your family life change much after you have come to Hong Kong?
Cheung: I don’t need to take care of myself much in Hong Kong. In the past, one time
when I was sick in the school hostel in Shenzhen, I was in so much pain. I could not
help but cried. But now my mother takes care of me when I am sick and supports me in
my studies.
HT: Does this better family life affect your academic results?
Cheung: A little bit. I do want to study well to get a good job and then take good care of
my parents in the future.
Family reunion, all the same, means leaving ones’ closest friends and relatives, as well
as familiar places and lifestyle of the homeland. Immigration brings along gains and
losses; it brings along ambivalent feelings indeed. Family reunion is a good change on
the one hand, yet it incurs some loss on the other hand. It involves an emotional cost
that new arrival students need to manage, not always easily, as the following example
illustrates.
Chiu is a high achiever in Fukien Secondary School. During the interview, he said that
he had adapted to the school and also the society after he had adapted to the teaching
styles of Hong Kong teachers. But still his feelings about immigration were mixed.
HT: Whom did you live with in the homeland?
Chiu: I lived with my grandmother and played with my cousins.
HT: Do you miss them now?
Chiu: Yes.
HT: If you could choose again, would you choose to come to Hong Kong? Or would
you like to live with your grandmother and cousins in the homeland?
36
Chiu: It’s really good if they can come. But in fact they can’t come. I do miss them. If I
were given a choice, I would still come here.
HT: Why?
Chiu: (He thinks for a while) I don’t know.
HT: Is it because of family reunion?
Chiu: Perhaps.
Not all interviewees experience the pain of separation. Another high achiever named
Man finds his adaptation process “smooth”. He has assimilated into the Hong Kong
mainstream culture and society without missing his homeland Zhong Zhan much. Man
came to Hong Kong only because his mother needed to select one between two of her
sons to come. Finally Man was chosen by drawing lots. He obeyed yet he was not so
willing to leave his homeland. His attitude has however changed over time.
HT: You mentioned that you were not willing to come to Hong Kong at first but did your
attitude change over time?
Man: Now I think immigration is not a big change as I can visit my homeland several
times a year. Immigration doesn’t make much difference. Also my homeland is just
nearby.
HT: Has your ethnic identity changed after you have moved to Hong Kong?
Man: Not at all. In fact, Zhong Zhan and Hong Kong are similar in culture.
It can be seen that new arrival students often differ in their experiences and perceptions
after they arrived in the host society. Because of this, they have various paths of
adaptation. It is mainly the extent of cultural difference they encounter in the host
society that accounts for these different adaptations. In general, students coming from
origins with insignificant cultural difference from the host society have an “easier”
37
adaptation than those from origins with greater cultural difference. Culture, comprising
beliefs, ideas, values and norms, is deeply embedded in the personality of the people
those who share that culture. People’s everyday behaviours are mainly grounded in
culture. Hence, what by and large shapes and structures the students’ adaptation is the
cultural difference which they face in the host society.
Culture and Identity: The Importance of Ethnic Support Networks
Although it is argued that Hong Kong people share a kind of “Hong Kong culture”,
there are various ethnic cultures in the society. Kuah and Wong (2001) suggest that
people speaking the same dialect share a similar culture as well as similar ethnic
identity, and form their own ethnic community. They view dialect associations as
“cultural and identity brokers” that help new arrivals adapt to the mainstream
Cantonese culture on one hand, and maintain the bond with their homeland culture on
the other. This idea of “cultural and identity brokers” can illustrate how cultural
difference, or ethnic difference, to a significant extent determines which adaptation
paths the new arrivals adopt.
In their research article entitled Dialect and Territory-Based Associations: Cultural and
Identity Brokers in Hong Kong, Kuah and Wong (2001) highlight the role which dialect
and ethnic culture play in the new arrivals’ social and cultural lives in Hong Kong. The
article says,
” Even as Hong Kong proclaims itself to be a multicultural society in which all
groups are free to express their own ethnicity and cultural identity, there
continues to be what Guldin terms as ‘Cantonese chauvinism’ in the
38
interrelationship between the Cantonese-speaking and other dialect groups.”
(Kuah and Wong, 2001:205)
In this regard new arrivals have to ensure their mastery of Cantonese so as to adapt to
the society of “Cantonese chauvinism”. Nevertheless, their “submission” to the host
society may be instrumental. The new arrivals remain highly conscious of their dialect
and ethnic identity. Thus, in trying to meet the new arrivals’ needs, the Hong Kong
Government and the non governmental organizations (NGOs) have to seek help from
the dialect associations (tongxiang hui) which can offer opportunities for the new
arrivals to socialize and interact with people who speak the same dialect (Kuah and
Wong, 2001:205).
In this regard, we can expect dialect and ethnic culture to be important in structuring the
new arrival students’ adaptations to the host society. New arrivals were born in their
homeland, learnt their dialect as mother tongue, chatted with peers in their dialect and
were brought up with them in the ethnic culture. The ethnic culture has been deeply
embedded in the students’ personality. Giddens (2001) points out that people’s
behaviours are influenced, to a significant extent, by the cultural settings in which they
were born and come to maturity.
Hence owing to the change of socio-cultural environment due to immigration, social
identity and self identity, or personal identity, becomes the main challenge in the
process of adaptation to the host society. Students, especially those who face linguistic
change, will become more conscious of their own dialect. If they cannot receive ethnic
support during their adaptation process, their social identity and self identity are at
stake. Ethnic support does not only provide social support for the students to fare better
in the social structures, it also offer a field for their cultural capital to be activated
39
(Lareau and Horvat, 1999). New arrival students may face identity frustration if the
support for them is not adequate and appropriate. Identity frustration can affect their
psychological well-being and dampen their motivation to do well at school. We can
briefly consider the case of Wai as an illustration.
Wai had high hopes in Hong Kong’s education originally. While he was adapting to life
in the new society, he encountered too many cultural and value conflicts that made him
regret having come to Hong Kong. Without adequate support from the school and
community, he cannot accommodate into Hong Kong society and cannot keep his
ethnic identity. Immigration has brought him identity frustration and he is in the social
condition of anomie.
HT: What do your homeland neighbours think about you after your family has come to
Hong Kong?
Wai: I think I am still a Chiu Chow person but I have a problem. I can’t speak the
CORRECT Chiu Chow dialect. Meanwhile I can’t speak Cantonese. So I don’t know
any dialect.
HT: What do you think about this situation?
Wai: I don’t think it’s a great problem but it does bring me some disadvantages. For
instance, I would get my marks deducted in all oral exams.
HT: Is English oral exam included? Is it because your accent is not so westernized?
Wai: (He laughs) Exactly. I thought that I could do alright in HKCEE last year but it’s
not so (only a E grade). It should be due to my accent.
HT: Do you think you are fairly treated?
Wai: I can’t say if it’s fair or not. I feel that it’s a bit unfair to me but I accept my fate.
Things are not what you want them to be. If you need to talk about fairness, you will
find it impossible to define fairness.
40
HT: When did you find you lost your Chiu Chow accent?
Wai: My neighbours told me so when I first came back to homeland for a visit. They
also said that I had changed to become “Hong Kong Yan”.
Over time, cultural capital is turned into a habitus, or durable schemes of perception
and action (permanent dispositions) (Madigan, 2002) Accent is one of these schemes.
When we listen to the voices of the new arrival students more carefully or more
sociologically, we discover that the language and social adaptation courses provided by
the Government and various agencies to help the new arrivals to assimilate do not get to
the heart of the problems that these students care about most. Underneath the linguistic,
academic and peer relations problems are the issues of culture and identity. As will be
demonstrated later in the present study, the degree of proximity of the new arrival
students’ ethnic culture and Hong Kong mainstream culture is a strong factor affecting
their path of adaptation and involvement in school work. In his article “The Forms of
Capital” Bourdieu (1986) claims that
“.. the scholastic yield from educational actions depends on the cultural capital
previously invested by the family. Moreover, the economic and social yield of
the educational qualification depends on the social capital, again inherited,
which can be used to back it up.” (Bourdieu, 1986:48)
Along with the themes of hope and support mentioned in the last chapter, linguistic and
cultural differences are the other theme central to the understanding of the new arrival
students’ differential adaptation pathways and differential school performance.
It is on the basis of these themes as well as the theories and concepts previously
reviewed (especially the concepts of social capital and cultural capital) that I have
constructed the conceptual framework for the present study of the new arrival students’
41
adaptation and school performance in Hong Kong.
Modes of Adaptations: The Conceptual Framework of the Research
Putting the two themes hope and support as well as linguistic and cultural differences
on two axes, I have constructed the table below. Here we have four modes of
adaptations, namely transitional adaptation, instrumental adaptation, bicultural
adaptation/ accommodative adaptation and marginality. They are used to describe and
analyze the various pathways that the new arrival students undertake in Hong Kong.
These adaptation pathways are the ideal types in Weber’s sense; and as such they do not
provide accurate representations of the reality. Nevertheless they offer a valuable
conceptual tool to make sense of and understand the new arrival students’ adaptation
experiences.
42
Table 1: Modes of Adaptation
Students experiencing
insignificant linguistic
and cultural differences
Students experiencing
significant linguistic and
cultural differences
Receiving sufficient
support and with hope
Transitional Adaptation With Ethnic Support:
Bicultural Adaptation
With Non-ethnic Support:
Accommodative Adaptation
Receiving insufficient
support and without hope
Instrumental Adaptation Marginality
Transitional Adaptation
For Transitional Adaptation, adaptation means simply transition involving some
“technical” adaptations to the change in social structural variables such as an
educational system and a curriculum which differ from those of the homeland. Positive
perceptions and hope towards the opportunity (i.e. educational and occupational)
structure of the host society motivate the students to overcome the structural barriers.
Linguistic and cultural proximity with the mainstream society enables the students to
receive support and recognition from peers, teachers and the local community easily.
Having undergone the process of adaptation, these new arrival students can assimilate
well into the mainstream society. They are just like the locally-borns both in their own
eyes and from the views of their teachers and peers. They do not find “Hong Kong
identity versus their homeland identity” a big issue.
Students experiencing insignificant linguistic and cultural differences, say those from
Cantonese-speaking origins with similar culture as Hong Kong culture; and are
enjoying support and recognition from their peer group, school or local community
43
generally view the Hong Kong society, especially its opportunity structure, positively.
Immigration means a “hopeful” change to them and it has a positive effect on the
students’ motivation to do well at school. Family reunion can also be viewed in a
positive light.
Instrumental Adaptation
Students adopting Instrumental Adaptation are those from linguistic and cultural
backgrounds similar to those of Hong Kong but they do not receive, or have not yet
received, sufficient support from the host society. Their “cold” experience upon their
arrival to Hong Kong, sometimes even a discriminative ones, makes difficult the
formation of positive perception toward Hong Kong society and its future. They are
skeptical about taking root in Hong Kong whole-heartedly. Given the close ties
between Hong Kong and the Mainland, they tend not to see post-colonial Hong Kong
and other places in China as too culturally and socially distinct. These students tend to
justify their immigration experiences by perceiving their migration to Hong Kong
instrumentally. They view the ample educational opportunities afforded by Hong Kong
and the high transferability educational credentials gained in Hong Kong as a good
justification for their hardships along their adaptation process. They view Hong Kong
less hopefully than students adopting the Transitional Adaptation, but they see
immigration as an instrument, for achieving a good education and perhaps thereafter
getting a decent salary from a Hong Kong job, for the sake of their future
socio-economic advancement.
Their adaptation is termed Instrumental Adaptation because their concern is about how
they can utilize the opportunities available during their stay in Hong Kong. It is a
flexible adaptation strategy and they try to make use of what they find attractive in both
44
Hong Kong and their homeland. They may consider having a lifestyle such as working
hard for a job in Hong Kong during weekdays and enjoying life during week-ends back
in their homeland or other places in the Mainland.
Accommodative Adaptation
Students adopting Accommodative Adaptation are those coming from linguistic and
cultural origins different from those of Hong Kong but have sufficient support from
peers, schools, religious organizations or local community centres in Hong Kong.
These support sources are not ethnic in nature but they provide social, academic and
emotional support to the new arrival students in need.
These students are helped to accommodate to social life in Hong Kong, but their ethnic
identity, their attachment to their places of origin, and their ambivalent feelings about
immigration are seldom taken care of. They tend to develop a mono-ethnic perception
of Hong Kong culture and society and feel that they are culturally marginalized as
compared with the mainstream students. Although they receive support and acceptance
from the mainstream society, they find their value system not fully compatible with that
of their Hong Kong peers. But they are confident that the Hong Kong opportunity
structure can better their welfare. They adopt the accommodative adaptation pathway
as they can accommodate to the social structures; but they hold the view that the Hong
Kong lifestyle is less desirable than their lifestyle in the homeland. Owing to their
cultural experience in Hong Kong, they do not perceive Hong Kong as a home that
accommodates their own values.
However, for students experiencing significant linguistic and cultural differences in
Hong Kong, yet receiving support and recognition from schools with a similar ethnic
45
background or from their ethnic community, their perception of “cultural Hong Kong”
is positive. These students adopt another kind of adaptation, that is Bicultural
Adaptation.
Bicultural Adaptation
Adapting in a supportive socio-cultural context, students experiencing linguistic and
cultural differences adapt to Hong Kong biculturally. The students’ experiences in the
contexts of such “ethnic” schools or communities give them the perception that Hong
Kong can accommodate their va lues and ethnic culture. They view Hong Kong as
“multicultural” more than the students of Accommodative Adaptation do. Instead of
assimilating fully into Hong Kong society, students adopting Bicultural Adaptation find
it comfortable to have high achievements in the mainstream society on one hand while
keeping their ethnic identity and way of life on the other. This adaptation is a kind of
“additive acculturation” (Gibson, 1991). These students consider Hong Kong their new
home.
Marginality
Students who are marginalized in their adaptation experiences usually lose motivation
in learning and interest in the opportunity structure of the host society. They miss their
life in the homeland and find it superior to the life in Hong Kong but they are powerless
to decide where they can stay. They feel as if they had no norms to follow and no goals
to pursue. They feel powerless, normless and aimless due to immigration. Using
Durkheim’s term, they are in the social condition of “anomie”. The cause of this
condition is a lack of support, love and care, and the consequences are depression,
deviant behaviour and other kinds of psychological disturbance. Students experiencing
significant linguistic and cultural differences in Hong Kong, and yet receiving
46
insufficient support and recognition from peers, school and family. By and large fail to
adapt positively to the host society and find themselves in the situation of anomie. Such
“marginalized” students often suffer from low self-esteem and this has a negative
impact on their student identity. The consequence is usually poor performance in
school.
The above mentioned is a brief description of the different modes of adaptation. We
will discuss this typology in more details in chapter 7. Now we move from conceptual
and theoretical issues to matters relating to methodology and research design.
Methodology and Research Design: Some Theoretical Considerations
This research is an interpretive research. It is framed and implemented in the domain of
symbolic interactionism which sees human behaviours as a series of interactions,
especially the interactions in terms of symbols. The ground of symbolic interactionism
is that people have the ability to think and interpret as well as to attribute meanings.
The variations of human behaviours depend much on the meanings individuals attribute
to actions, people and events. In the view of interactionists, culture is composed of
symbols. Rather than responding to something by instinct, people respond to them by
the “significant symbols” which are learnt through socialization. Many symbols are
shared and this enables smooth social interactions. These learned symbols collectively
make up a culture or subculture.
Notwithstanding its focus on individuals, symbolic interactionism is not solely a
psychological process. Thomas (1928) explains that “it is the interpretation that counts
47
as far as outcomes are concerned, and therefore man’s thoughts and rationality, not
instinct, nor the ‘objective’ reality of the situation.” (quoted by Woods, 1977:24). This
is a process determined by social factors, psychological factors and self- indication
process. (Woods, 1977)
In summary, there are three basic postulates in symbolic interaction. (Woods, 1977)
Firstly, people inhabit two diffe rent worlds, which are the “natural”
world and the social world. In the “natural” world, people are seen as organisms of
drives and instincts, and the external world can exist independently of them. The social
world comprises symbols that enable people to give meanings to objects. The social
world is the world of subjective meanings and it is the domain where people act
towards things based on the meanings of the things they attribute.
Secondly, people’s actions are not due to one single meaning attributed. Action results
from a continuous process of meaning attribution. Such a process is also a process of
negotiation, rather than a “summation” of all meanings involved.
What is meant by “negotiation process" leads to the third postulate. The process of
meaning attribution necessarily takes place in a social context. Each individual
regulates his action to that of others, which means everyone has certain “roles” with
respect to other people in the context. Being dynamic, this concept of “role” entails the
construction of how others intend to act in a certain situation, and how the individual
might act, or react as a result.
As symbolic interactionists’ interest lies in the process of subjective meaning
attributions, there is no way for the researcher to investigate the subjectivity of certain
48
groups of people without getting close to those people. Ethnography hence evolves as
one of the symbolic interactionists’ research method.
Ethnography refers to the study of a way of life. Ethnographers get close to the people
they intend to study by talking, dining and living with them in certain circumstances.
One reason why sociological research is unable to get a true-to-life picture of people’s
lives is that these people being studied are too conscious of “being researched” in the
course of data collection. They will act like the subjects to be researched, rather than
act naturally as in everyday life. Yet the longer the researcher stays and engages in
more in-depth talk with them, the more likely those being studied will forget about the
researcher’s presence and the more likely they are to act naturally. Ethnography is
therefore an effective way for studying culture and identity, at least for listening to
people talking about life histories and lifestyles. Ethnography also enhances the
researcher’s empathic insights and ability to comprehend the meanings in the subject’s
actions. Researching students’ experiences is one of the main tasks of school
ethnographies.
In ethnographic research, the kind of data generated are not completely under the
researcher’s control. The strength of ethnography does not lie in testing hypotheses or
an “a prior” theory. Ethnographers produce theories which are grounded in the data and
in the real social world; they attempt to generate theories from the observations and to
ground them in the facts.
In respect of fieldwork, both observations and interviews are commonly adopted by
ethnographers for data collection. Such interviews are usually “unstructured” and
“in-depth”, aiming at probing stories, views, values and feelings. Ethnographers hope
49
to immerse themselves in data and to gain some “insights”. Ethnography as a kind of
“qualitative” research is crucial in sociology because it is claimed that qualitative
research may be practiced as an exercise in the use of the sociological imagination
(Mills,1959).
A Brief Account of My Fieldwork
Informed and inspired by symbolic interactionism, I attempted to implement the
research as an ethnographic study. Since most of the previous studies on new arrival
students simply provide statistic figures and a very general picture about the students, I
could not derive from them a good understanding of how the students’ adaptations
differ from or resemble each other. Neither could I find a starting point for explaining
the differential school performance among them. To overcome my research problems,
some preliminary studies were hence carried out in pursuit of the most appropriate
method for researching the students’ experiences.
I was first invited by a social worker friend, who was working in a special school for
recently arrived students, to a civic education camp. The social worker team of the
school attempted to instill the civic consciousness of being a “good Hong Kong citizen”
through many kinds of games in the camp. I acted as an “overt” participant observer,
sitting aside whilst doing observation. I observed that the students were playing
joyfully and actively together, sometimes causing troubles that kept the teachers busy
with maintaining the order. They were more eager to win the games than to pay
attention to what were taught. When the students were not involved in the “official”
games, they would speak to each other in a dialect that I did not understand (it should be
50
Fukienese). Although the campsite was on Hong Kong Island, I felt that I was in a
milieu other than in Hong Kong. I was indeed a foreigner in that unique community.
Having stayed in the camp for a half day, I found my visit interesting. But keeping my
“status” overt, I can only observe the students’ behaviours outwardly but could not
understand why they behaved as such. Without “coming out” and talking with them, I
could not know their inner (and ambivalent) feelings about immigration, the ir life
histories, perceptions, adaptation strategies and what was in their heart. My conclusion
from the visit was that observation alone could not answer my research inquiries.
I did another observation later in another context teaching basic English to ten Form
one new arrival students in classroom. Again I did not cover up my identity as a student
researcher. I taught them English once a week for a month in a special tutorial class. I
could develop a teacher-student relationship with them so I could get closer to the
students. I talked with them about English and also their school life. Inconsistent with
the claim made by many survey reports, not all the new arrival students were motivated
in learning. In that particular context I could clearly see the gender difference in
learning motivation; in spite of their weak foundation in English, the girls were
especially attentive in class while the boys just enjoyed playing or doing their own
things (just like my teaching experience in a mainstream class before). Male students
considered English very boring and difficult and their concern was much more on
making themselves somebody in class. One time when Christmas was approaching, I
taught them some vocabularies about Christmas. Immediately after the class, one boy
came to the blackboard and wrote the words “Merry Christmas” many times like
signing his name until there was no more space on the board. That inspiring teaching
experience informed me of the importance of taking gender into the explanation of
51
differential adaptations and school performance. Still, without talking with them in
more depth, I could not know the meanings attributed to being playful, being attentive
or signing “Merry Christmas” on the blackboard in that context.
I tried to find some new arrival students with whom I could really sit down and talk
thereafter. I later found two female secondary school students through an internet
friend. We had a meeting in a fast food restaurant but because it was my first time
meeting them, we were not able to talk freely and naturally. The two girls were
conscious of being interviewed (in order to help their friend to help me). I tried to ask
them questions one by one, in the presence of my internet friend and the other girl. I
obtained some brief ideas about their immigration experiences, discovering that they
were in many ways different from their Hong Kong counterparts such as their
perceptions of Hong Kong society, their school performance, and their outlook in life. I
could not ask more in-depth questions, and they were not so willing to reveal more
personal feelings, owing to the presence of the two other persons. I started evaluating
my research methods after that interview experience.
Whilst evaluating my research methods, I went through a collection of articles (Fukien
Secondary School, 2000) which new arrival students wrote concerning immigration.
The book was indeed a collection of feelings and experiences, filled with hopes and
frustrations, as well as laughers and tears. Every new arrival student’s adaptation
experience is a unique story. This convinced me again that to understand these new
arrival students’ adaptation to Hong Kong, I have to study them individually and tell
their many stories by conducting one-to-one in depth interviews.
As conversation is made between two individuals in one-to-one interviews, it is easier
52
to build rapport, as well as to ensure confidentiality. Respondents can concentrate on
the interview as there is no other interviewee who may distract them. One-to-one
interviews also allow the interview to be in-depth. The unique characteristics of
one-to-one in-depth interviews can be illustrated by the following citations from Chan’s
(1996) Making Gender: Schools, Families and Young Girls in Hong Kong which is a
study based on in-depth interviews of twelve schoolgirls.
“I feel so glad and relaxed.
Why?
I am so happy that I can speak out my feelings, my worries and my anxieties.
Can you share these with your family, or your teachers, or your friends?
No, I won’t. They won’t listen, and they cannot understand.”
While I was on the field talking with the new arrival students, at the end of the
interviews some students thanked me for giving them the chance to express their inner
feelings, as they had too few opportunities to share their thoughts and feelings about the
immigration issue. I came to realize that ethnographers not only listen and study, they
can also provide a venue for the respondents to release their frustrations and voice their
innermost feelings.
Compared with participant observation which is very time-consuming, interviews can
usually cover a wider variety of subjects in less time. In-depth interviews also generate
data from the perspectives of social actors; in our case the experiences and feeling of
the new arrival students from their viewpoints. New hypotheses and theories not
anticipated or otherwise thought of may be generated through this data collection
method.
Interviews can take many forms and can be classified into structured interviews,
53
unstructured ones, and “semi-structured” ones. In practice, yet, all interviews should
be termed as semi-structured as they are different from one another by the degree to
which they are structured. To determine how “structured” an interview is, we need to
see the extent to which the interviewer sets and follows the interview agenda. In a
completely structured interview, the interviewer simply takes the role of asking
questions pre set in a questionnaire and guiding the interviewee to answer. In more
unstructured interviews, the conversation can develop naturally unless the interviewees
talk about something outside the scope of the interview’s concern.
I finally chose to use semi-structured in-depth interviews to probe the new arrival
students’ feelings, views, and perceptions about immigration in one-to-one meetings.
Twelve students aged from 13 to 187 were selected for the interviews which were
conducted from December 2000 to November 2001. The students taking part in the
research are all secondary school students; except two of them who are from primary
school. Their arrival time varies from half a year to 9 years. Two more students who
have arrived for about 10 years were also studied in order to explore the factor of time
on adaptation experiences. These 14 respondents were all from working class family
background.
I was referred to these students by their teachers and social welfare workers. For the
sake of the students’ personal safety, the teachers did not refer female students to me (a
male researcher) who would talk with them personally. Hence these 14 cases turned out
to be all boys. This is in a way a limitation of this research, yet on the other hand, this
limitation enabled me to eliminate the variable of gender to simplify the analysis. The
7 Too young students from primary schools should not be chosen as the respondents should be reflexive
and eloquent in talking about schooling experiences.
54
table below tabulates the basic information of the 14 new arrival students involved in
this study.
Table 2: Basic Information of the Respondents
Student’s
Name
Years of
Arrival
Ethnic Origin Age Present Level of
Education
School Performance
Ping 2 years Shan Mei, Canton 15 Secondary 4 Excellent
Shing 3 years Hoi Ping, Canton 15 Secondary 1 Excellent
Chiu 3 years Fukein 15 Secondary 3 Excellent
Cheong 4 years Kong Mun, Canton 15 Secondary 4 Excellent
Man 5 years Chun Shan, Canton 16 Secondary 4 Excellent
Kin 5 years Chiu Chow, Canton 16 Secondary 4 Good
Wing 3 months Shen Zhen, Canton 18 Secondary 3 Average
Ka 3 years Fukein 15 Secondary 3 Below Average
Wai 9 years Chiu Chow 18 Secondary 6 Below Average
Kim 1.5 years Hoi Fung, Canton 15 Primary 5 Poor
Yung 1.5 years Hoi Fung, Canton 14 Primary 5 Poor
Wah 7 years Guongzhou 11 Secondary 1 Good
Ban 11 years Fukein 15 Secondary 3 Average
Shan 11 years Chu Hoi 13 Secondary 1 Poor
In the interviews, I employed a “strategy” to warm up the interviews such as a chit-chat,
and also to build rapport with the students. I would let our conversation flow from
where it started at the beginning of the interview, with a view to listening to the
students’ particular concerns in school life. The interview questions were not
structured and yet I made sure some areas would be covered. All the questions were
about changes due to immigration and the meanings which the students attributed to
those changes. Those changes included the changes in peers, school, family,
perceptions towards the opportunity structure of the society, language used, identities
55
and also school performance. A clear plan was kept in my mind to see what had not
been mentioned and what questions I should raise before the interviews ended. In every
interview I requested the permission to tape-record the interviews, and fortunately I had
the permission from all of the students. Transcripts were done soon after the interviews
for data analysis.
Limitations of this Research Method
Hall and William (1970; quoted by Haralambos and Holborn, 2000:1016) claim that
retrospective studies which ask people to report on past events in their lives rely upon
unreliable or deceptive human memories. “Human beings naturally seek for causes
and may unconsciously fabricate or exaggerate something to account for the present
state of affairs.” (Haralambos and Holborn, 2000:1016) Data obtained from interviews
are all what interviewees say, and the accuracy of the data can hardly be controlled.
The response given in interviews may not be accurate and may not reflect the real
behaviour of the interviewees.
Interviews are in fact a kind of social context. It is likely that interviewees define an
interview by the type of interview that they perceive, and also by the interviewer’s age,
ethnicity, language, accent, gender, or even clothing. Interview questions are
responded to according to the way the interview situation is defined.
“Interview bias” may also result in that the interviewer directs the interviewee towards
giving certain types of response. Interviewees then respond to what interviewer wants
to hear rather than express what they truly believe. In the present research, when I
56
asked some “difficult” questions which were not about their everyday life, say
questions about opportunity structure, the students would respond as if they were
assessed in an oral exam. Here I quote one example from my interview with a
respondent named Kin. I was raising a “difficult” question about getting ahead in Hong
Kong society.
HT: What factors do you think are essential for a person to become successful in Hong
Kong?
Kin: Haha.. Such a difficult question! I think both the social environment and one’s
own ability are essential. In fact if one has the ability, he can make money in Hong
Kong easily. Hong Kong provides lots of opportunities than mainland does, whether
educational or occupational opportunities.
On top of that, this research can hardly claim to produce any generalization about the
new arrival students’ adaptations and school performance, for the sample is small and
unrepresentative. As a preliminary study of immigrant children from Mainland China,
this research attempts to offer insights and hypotheses on factors leading to different
types of adaptations and differential school performance. Certain kinds of new arrival
students such as those who are deviant, and those not from working class background
are not studied in this research. Survey studies with a large representative sample
would be necessary if we intend to make generalizations. Longitudinal studies can also
provide more accurate data over time.
In this research, I started with a preliminary conceptual framework which offered me
some guide in the first stage of data collection. I continued to refine and modify this
conceptual framework in the process of collecting data. Finally, I came up with a
consolidated conceptual framework for data interpretation on the basis of the data and
57
transcripts which I had prepared. In other words the process of data collection and
construction of an analytic framework in this research has been an interaction between
two, with each informing the other. I am going to present the 14 case studies according
to the following framework in the forthcoming chapters.
Analytic Framework
As the analytic framework develops through an exchange with the data, the 14 cases
can be neatly categorized in the framework as follows:
Table 3: The Analytic Framework
Students experiencing
insignificant linguistic
and cultural differences
Students experiencing
significant linguistic and
cultural differences
Receiving sufficient
support and with hope
Man , Shing, Shan, Wah
(Transitional Adaptation)
Chiu
(With Ethnic Support:
Bicultural Adaptation)
Cheong, Kin, Ping
(With Non-ethnic support:
Accommodative Adaptation)
Receiving insufficient
support and without
hope
Wing
(Instrumental Adaptation)
Wai, Ka, Kim, Yung, Ban
(Marginality)
Now we will come to the next section of this thesis. Chapters 3 to 6 will examine the 14
cases with reference to the conceptual framework, as well as elaborate on what these
four types of adaptation are about. I will go through the se four types and the cases in
each type in the following sequence: transitional adaptation, instrumental adaptation,
58
bicultural adaptation, accommodative adaptation and finally marginality. We will look
at transitional adaptation in the next chapter.
59
CHAPTER 3
Passage to a New Home - Transitional Adaptation
Among the five modes of adaptation in this thesis, “transitional adaptation” can be seen
as an “easy” type of adaptation. To students undergoing transitional adaptation,
adaptation means a process that simply takes time. They, after an “adaptation period”,
will get themselves well into the culture and society of Hong Kong. After all they are
willing to stay behind in Hong Kong for family reunion and for their future. In this
chapter, I will illustrate what this type of adaptation is about in terms of the adaptation
experiences and perceptions of the students undergoing transitional adaptation.
Generally they are students from families speaking Cantonese and from a homeland
with a culture proximal to that of Hong Kong. Cultural proximity as one form of
cultural capital enables them, over time, to have easy access to information channels,
networks with institutional agents, and many kinds of institutional help in the host
society. In other words, these students possess both social capital and cultural capital.
In Hong Kong they are able to activate these capitals, that is to convert the capitals for
their welfare or for accumulation of capitals in other forms, including economic capital.
Here the concepts of social capital and cultural capital are the main analytic tool used to
understand how the students’ socio-cultural background make their adaptation
“transitional”. The cultural ecological framework will also be reviewed with reference
to these cases of transitional adaptation.
60
The Two Cases of Transitional Adaptation: Man and Shing
Among our 14 respondents, Man and Shing are the two new arrival students who
undergo transitional adaptation. They share many things in common: they came from a
Cantonese-speaking “homeland” background (though they have their dialects); they
have closer relationship with both parents after family reunion; they have made many
good friends (including local born peers) in Hong Kong; they receive adequate support
from the school; they excel academically; and they are actively involved in school
activities. After a certain period of “transition” time, they felt that they had already
adapted to Hong Kong.
Man8, who is a Form 4 student, attains the best school results as compared with the
other 13 respondents. Studying in a band-one “English as medium of instruction” (EMI)
school in Homantin, Kowloon, he came first in class from Form one to Form three. In
Man’s case, it seems that family or class background is not a prime factor in
determining school performance. Man’s academic success is certainly not due to a well
off family background. Instead, both of his parents have low status jobs. His father is a
construction worker while his mother is an assistant of a shop near his home. All three
members of his family are living in a rented room, with other homeland neighbours
(tung heung) in the same flat. When he was asked about his family monthly income, he
could hardly tell as his father’s salary was not stable.
John Ogbu (1978, 1987, 1991, 1997; Gibson and Ogbu, 1991) claims in his cultural
8 In a very strict sense, Man is not a new arrival because he had been in Hong Kong for about five years at the time of the interview. But without other easily available respondents, he is included in our discussion and he should be qualified “marginally” as a new arrival in this thesis. Also in the interview, not only his present perceptions but many of his adaptation experiences were recalled.
61
ecology theory that “immigrant minorities” migrate to a new place voluntarily for
better life chances and they have high hopes in the host society. They choose to “make
the deal” so they are willing to pay the price of immigration which includes
discrimination and barriers on their path of getting ahead. They have a positive dual
frame of reference in that in looking back at their even worse times in the homeland,
they often find discrimination and other barriers for getting ahead in the host society to
be simply the necessary costs for greater gains. In their folk theory of success,
immigrant minorities believes that education plus hard work is an instrument to realize
socio-economic advancement for themselves.
However Man excels in school not because he chose to come to Hong Kong voluntarily
and planned to achieve success at the very beginning. His immigration decision was
involuntary but interesting.
HT: Why did you come to Hong Kong?
Man: My mother made an application for me to migrate here. She was only allowed to
bring one child so she brought me.
HT: Why did she bring you?
Man: It is because both my younger brother and I were not eager to come. Then we
were told to draw lots and I was selected.
Man was not so willing to come Hong Kong at first as he did not want to leave his
homeland and come alone. Yet his attitude was changing over time during his
“transitional” adaptation.
Man: Now I think it’s not a big deal as I visit my homeland several times a year. There’s
not much difference. Also my homeland is so nearby.
HT: If you could choose again, would you choose to move to Hong Kong?
Man: It’s hard to imagine if I have choice; either my younger brother or I was to come… .
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But I may choose to come as I could have a chance to see how Hong Kong looked like.
Man’s smooth adaptation and outstanding school performance can be accounted for by
the social capital which he gained during his adaptation process. Arriving in July 1996,
Man sought help from the Education Department for a school place. He found no
difficulty in getting a school place in a band one primary school. As his English
standard was lower than his Hong Kong counterparts, he accepted having to study
primary six again. Yet when his primary school teachers knew that he was a new arrival,
they gave him free tuition in English. Closer relationship with both parents especially
reunion with his father also offers great encouragement to Man in his studies.
Although Man can hardly be defined as immigrant minority (as he did not come to
Hong Kong voluntarily), he possesses a positive dual frame of reference (Ogbu, 1978,
1987, 1991, 1997). He compares Hong Kong favourably with his homeland and thinks
that Hong Kong provides more educational and occupational opportunities. He
believes that through schooling he can enrich himself and acquire more skills for his
future career. As a science student, he plans to work in the computer-related fields in
Hong Kong. He plans to stay in his present school until his A-level (which is an open
examination for university admission in Hong Kong) and then go to university.
His academic results have not changed much over time. The greatest change was in
primary six, shortly after he had arrived in Hong Kong in July 1996. Despite the fact
that he came first in class in the homeland, he ranked only around 90th among about 250
primary six pupils in his first “Hong Kong examination”. Improvement however
followed after that sudden drop in performance. He could manage to come 14th in the
next examination. When he was promoted to Form one, he came first again in the form.
63
He said that he needed to keep his excellent academic results as he was clear that his
main competitors were several local born students.
Man is studying well with a clear and realistic goal in future academic success. He
hopes that he can get 6 or 7 “As” in the Hong Kong School Certificate Examination.
When I asked why he did not aim at straight “As”, he explained that he did not expect to
get an “A” in English as he was not very good at it. Although he is not hoping for an
“A” in English, he is devoting more effort to reading and listening. Man has a strong
sense of belonging to his present school and finds it a nice school that can help him
attain future academic success.
Overall speaking, he is happy with his schooling in Hong Kong. One merit about Hong
Kong education that he finds is the many extra-curricular activities organized in school.
Man is also an all-round student and he actively participates in extracurricular activities.
He is a school prefect, as well as a committee member of Art Club and Orienteering
Club. Man has several very good friends in his class. They play ball games together
and live in the same district. Some of his good friends are local born students, some are
new arrivals. He finds his Hong Kong friends as good as his old friends in the Mainland.
He does have good friends with whom he can talk deeply, for example about goals and
visions in life. Having fully assimilated into a mainstream peer group, which is
conforming and well-behaved, Man is enjoying recognition and support from his
friends and classmates. He remarks also that his peer group has positive influence on
his academic results as good peers can study together and encourage one another.
He however criticizes the Hong Kong examination system as encouraging students to
learn only for tackling examinations. All the same, he manages to get excellent results
64
in examination.
Shing, aged 15, is another student who has assimilated well into Hong Kong society
and has adapted well to his peers and the school here. He came to Hong Kong in 1998,
and he said that he had adapted to Hong Kong society within six months upon his
arrival. After three years of smooth adaptation, he was ranked within the top ten in his
Form one class when I met him for research interview in 2001. Shing has a positive
student identity and a very strong sense of belonging to his school.
Just like the majority of other new arrival students, Shing immigrated to Hong Kong for
family reunion. His family is of a decent socio-economic background, living in a
self-owned flat in Tai Kok Tsui, Kowloon. His father is a postman at Radio Television
Hong Kong (the radio and television station of HKSAR government) whist his mother
is working as a cook. He comments on his family life after arrival that he is now with
his father and grandparents who love him and yet are strict with him. Having promoted
to secondary school, Shing as the only son in the family has been expected and
pressured by his loving parents to do well at school.
As he can speak Cantonese and his cultural background is close to that of his Hong
Kong peers, he can make friends easily and gain support as well as recognition from
them. “I feel Hong Kong friends are better than the Mainland’s. I can get to know more
friends in Hong Kong than in the Mainland as there were not so many activities for
making friends in the homeland,” he remarked in our interview conversation.
Colourful peer group life facilitates and enriches his transitional adaptation.
Shing made his friends in basketball grounds and his church. He has been going to
65
church for two years since he came to Hong Kong but he made his best friends at school.
Friends help him in his studies too, as he said, “I find it really hard to study without
friends around.” He believes that friends can encourage one another in studying and
they learn more things through discussion. When he encounters studying problems, he
will ask peers for solutions. He still keeps in touch with his homeland friends
meanwhile.
Having briefed the socio-cultural background of Man and Shing, we are now going to
understand their “transitional adaptation” by investigating the possession and
activation of both social capital and cultural capital in their adaptation in family, school,
peers and other community life such as the church. The relationship between
transitional adaptation and good school performance will also be examined.
Within-family social capital
In J. S. Coleman’s (1988) renowned thesis “Social Capital in the Creation of Human
Capital”, he points out that one important effect of social capital is the creation of
human capital in the next generation. Here social capital refers to the “within-family
social capital” which provides children access to the parents’ human capital. The
success of this transmission of human capital depends both on the physical presence of
adults in the family and on the parents’ attention given to the children (Coleman, 1988).
Parents can exert positive influence on their children’s school performance by
providing opportunities, encouragement, and support and by involving themselves in
learning activities. (Epstein, 1987; quoted by Hao and Bonstead-Bruns, 1998)
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Many new arrival students come to Hong Kong for family reunion and the majority of
them come to meet their fathers. In the cases of Man and Shing, they both enjoy the
closer relationship with parents upon arrival (for example Man chats with his father
more in Hong Kong) and they experience “family warmth”. In spite of the fact that
they may not fully assimilate into every part of the Hong Kong lifestyle, they are very
delighted about the warmer family life in Hong Kong, with closer ties with parents and
other family members. In other words, due to immigration they are offered greater
within-family social capital. The following records what Man said about how he
benefited from family reunion.
HT: Do you think your role in family has changed?
Man: There’s no big change. I chat with my father more in Hong Kong.
HT: Do you rely on your family more as your father is in Hong Kong?
Man: Yes, to some extent.
HT: Do your parents have great expectation on you?
Man: Not really, but they encourage me to work in a computer profession.
HT: Do they reward you for your good results?
Man: They will praise me. They seldom blame me.
Social capital embraces social relations that can constitute useful capital resources for
individuals (Coleman, 1988), including capital resources for making school success.
Coleman constructs three forms of social capital which consist of
1. Obligations, expectations, and trustworthiness
2. Information Channels
3. Norms and effective sanctions
He states that “if A does something for B and trusts B to reciprocate in the future, this
establishes an expectation in A and an obligation on the part of B.” (Coleman, 1988:84)
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The relationship between new arrivals students and their parents after family reunion
can be seen in the same way. Man’s parents encourage him to work in a computer
profession. By seldom blaming him yet praising him for good results, his close
relationship with parents is reinforced. On the other hand, Shing views his family life
after arrival as having a father and grandparents who love him and yet are strict with
him. He as the only son has been subject to the high expectations and pressure from his
beloved parents especially when he reached secondary school. The parents of Man and
Shing had high expectations on their sons and therefore the sons feel obliged to study
hard.
Within-family social capital is about the transmission of human capital from parents to
their children. Because of the rich within-family social capital Man possess, his
father’s human capital can be effectively transmitted to him; as such this explains his
excellent school performance. Although his father has only completed primary school
and is now working as a construction worker, he possesses much human capital in that
he has a sound knowledge of science and a strong learning motivation. Man in the
interview said that his father would do further studies if he had the money to afford it.
Man’s father always encourages Man to study more.
Man’s good relationship with his brothers also motivates him to study well. His elder
brother is now studying at Tung Nam University (in the Mainland) while his younger
brother is studying in a famous secondary school in Chung Shan (in the Mainland), and
will go to university next year. This culture of learning in Man’s family offers him
cultural capital for adaptation to Hong Kong school. Having known the outstanding
academic achievement he made, I asked him which his best subjects were. He
answered “Mathematics and Physics” and added, “Indeed my family members like my
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father and cousins are all good at science and mathematics.” With cultural capital he
excelled in Mainland schools, he thus adapted easily to the Hong Kong curriculum and
is now making academic success in Hong Kong.
Cultural capital is essential for achieving success in school, and it is more essential for
students from low socio-economic status family background. Stanton-Salazar and
Dornbusch (1995) claim that
“Among working-class and low-income minority youths, cultural information,
including language assimilation, status expectations, and school performance, is
important for predicting which students are most likely to form supportive
relations with institutional agents. Cultural information is more important than
mere socioeconomic status.”
Compared with other types of adaptations, trans itional adaptation is one in which new
arrival students adapt extremely well. Man and Shing’s good command of Cantonese,
expectations from their parents, and good school performance work as their cultural
capital, enabling them to transcend class inequalities and form supportive relations with
institutional agents for the attainment of social capital. In the following sections, we
will see how their supportive relations with peers, school and local community can
benefit them in the adaptation process.
Social Network with Peers
For new immigrants such as the students in this study, the building of social capital
depends on the formation of supportive relationships between minorities and
institutional agents. Institutional agents are individuals who have the capacity to
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transmit institutional resources and opportunities, say information about the school
curriculum, tactics for tackling teachers’ assessments etc. There are a handful of groups
which act like institutional agents. The most important ones are teachers, social welfare
workers and community leaders. Peers, especially the mainstream and middle-class
peers, who usually have more informational resources, are one significant and
influential kind of institutional agents. In a developmental psychologists’ sense, it is
pointed out that adolescents will shift the sources of their social and emotional support
from family to peers (Rice, 2001). The social network of new arrival students with
peers therefore plays a major role in determining the students’ path of adaptation.
Man and Shing can speak Cantonese with the correct “Cantonese accent”. Among the
14 cases of this study, it is found that in learning Cantonese upon their arrival some new
arrival students (for instance Wai and Ban in the “marginality” category) nevertheless
retain their “homeland accent” and therefore can accommodate to but not assimilate
into the “Cantonese chauvinist” Hong Kong. They have language accommodation yet
not language assimilation as they could only master the use of Cantonese but could not
acquire the Cantonese accent. We will discuss the issue “command of Cantonese as a
form of cultural capital” in chapter seven when we talk about “marginality”. For the
“transitional” case of Man and Shing, by the way, they can still speak their mother
tongue in daily lives in Hong Kong and hence they are in a way “automatically”
assimilated into the Hong Kong Cantonese speaking society. Whilst some other new
arrival students with the “homeland accent” encounter discrimination such as being
called “mainland guy” (大陸仔 ) when they communicate with the local born
counterparts in Cantonese, language assimilation, as cultural capital, permits Man and
Shing to form supportive networks with peers including local born peers.
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Transitional adaptation is characterized by its temporal nature. After a certain period of
adaptation time, students undergoing transitional adaptation will find themselves well
adapted to Hong Kong culture and society. The duration of this period is by and large
determined by how long it takes the new arrival students to form the social networks
with peers. The case of Man can illustrate this point.
HT: Did you find it hard to adapt to the life in Hong Kong?
Man: Well, only in the first several months. After that, I got to know some friends in
primary school and I found my life okay.
Man indeed has several very good friends in his class. They play ball games together
and live in the same district. Some of his good friends are local born students, some are
new arrivals. He finds his Hong Kong friends as good as his old friends in the Mainland.
He also has good acquaintances with whom he can talk deeply, for example about goals
and visions in life. Having fully assimilated into mainstream peer group, which is
conforming and well-behaved, Man is enjoying recognition and social support from his
friends and classmates.
When they were asked to comment on school policies’ on new arrival students, both
Man and Shing provided similar answers, pinpointing what was conducive to their
smooth adaptation.
HT: If you were a school principal, what would you do to help new arrivals’
adaptation?
Man: I would organize more activities for new arrivals to have more contacts with
Hong Kong students. Once the new arrival students have made more friends in class,
they can adapt easily.
Shing: If I were the school principal, I’ll provide more extra-curricular activities to
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students. I spent 2 hours to choose my activities. There are too few choices.
Shing has joined scout and drawing courses this year. It seems that he wants to involve
himself more in school life. Every day after school he plays basketball with
schoolmates for an hour.
Leung argues that new arrival students adopt a dual frame of reference but not in the
same way as suggested by Ogbu. The article says,
“the students in my study did have a dual frame of reference, but what appears to
have the most bearing on their current school performance was the dual reference
they made to their experiences and opportunities as students, rather than the dual
reference to opportunities for success in the larger society.”
The new arrival students adapt to Hong Kong with reference to their homeland in
regard to their everyday lives in school instead of the opportunity structure of the larger
society. Shing does not think that Hong Kong will offer more and better occupational
opportunities than Mainland does, however he likes Hong Kong because he is able to
know more friends here. “I feel Hong Kong friends are better than the Mainland’s. I
can get to know more fr iends in Hong Kong than in the Mainland as there were not so
many activities for making friends in homeland,” he remarked. The many
extracurricular activities provided by Hong Kong schools work as an agency to
empower new arrival students with social capital. Shing in actuality made his very best
friends in Hong Kong school.
One context in which the social capital of peer network can be activated is through the
formation of study groups. Man remarked that peer group had positive influence on his
academic results because good peers could study together and encourage one another.
Shing furthermore admitted, “I find it really hard to study without friends around.”
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Apart from institutional resources and emotional support given by peers in a study
group, a culture of learning can also be cultivated among the students, who are
therefore empowered with more cultural capital.
Schools and Local Community as Agencies of Social Capital
From the track record of Man’s school performance, we can see that although he was a
high achiever in his homeland school, he experienced a sudden drop in academic results
upon his arrival in Hong Kong. After one year of adaptation, however, he could
manage to come first among the students in all form one classes. His case offe rs
interesting insights into our understanding in immigration and school performance. In
the interview I raised the following issues.
HT: Why was there a change in academic results?
Man: It is because my English had improved a lot. I was especially hardworking in
primary six in learning English. Afterwards, I kept reading English books and learning
vocabulary.
HT: Does teachers’ help matter regarding your improvement in English?
Man: It mattered when I was in primary school. My primary school teachers were very
helpful and supportive. I think being hardworking is more essential now.
He mentions that when his primary school teachers knew that he was a new arrival, they
gave him free tuition on English. “Indeed at that time, I paid full attention to learning
English so I didn’t have time for (worrying about) other matters,” he told me frankly.
Their help was really very crucial for his further adaptation, including studying in an
English-as-Medium-of-Instruction school. Through this good learning experience he
got used to English gradually and therefore kept his positive student identity. He admits
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that his English result is quite good now. He also claims that he had already adapted to
life in Hong Kong when he was in primary school.
In his study of school success and failure of new immigrant students from Mainland
China, Leung (2001) concludes that student’s school performance is very much “the
product of the complex interaction between their present school experiences and their
past student histories and identities”. This study attempts to supplement this argument
by considering this “complex interaction” as the acquisition, possession and activation
of social capital and cultural capital in the students’ school experiences in Hong Kong.
In this connection, the students’ past schooling histories, student identities and school
performance are treated as cultural capital; whereas the present school experiences are
regarded as the field where their cultural capital can be activated, and where new social
capital and cultural capital can be acquired. Being agencies of social capital, the school
and the local community convert the students’ cultural capital into instrumental
relations with institutional agents and hence activate and materialize the capital.
Stanton-Salazar and Dornbusch (1995) maintain:
“The process of inclusion in mainstream institutions is aided when cultural and
linguistic capital are converted into instrumental relations with institutional agents
who actively transmit valued resources, special privileges, and personal
assurances of future institutional sponsorship.” (Stanton-Salazar and Dornbusch,
1995:120)
Man’s cultural capital in the form of positive student identity and past academic success
was activated when his primary school teachers gave extra support for his studies. He
could therefore keep his high learning motivation in the free English tuition class. His
acquired proficiency in English in turn became his cultural capital of great value for
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further studies. On top of that, his high achiever identity helps him win recognition
from teachers and peers. This positive identity facilitates the formation of closer ties
with the institutional agents. Stanton-Salazar and Dornbusch (1995) find out that
Mexican high school students with higher grades and higher status expectations will
generally have greater social capital than their counterparts with lower grades and
expectations. Positive student identity creates opportunities for establishing
relationships with nonfamilial institutional agents.
Similar findings can also be observed in Shing’s case. He commented that Hong Kong
teachers were sincere and taught with patience, while he thought that Mainland teachers
only worked for money. With sufficient social support provided by school and his
church, he did not encounter any serious adaptation problem. He just felt he had
adapted to Hong Kong gradually within half a year. Now he has a very strong sense of
belonging to his present school. Sense of belonging to the school contributes positively
to his school performance.
HT: How do you think about your school?
Shing: I like my school very much. The only disadvantage of my school is that we need
to walk through a sloping road in order to get there. It’s really wonderful to have trees
on a city school campus.
Man also has a strong sense of belonging to his present school and finds it a nice school
that can help him attain future academic success.
HT: With your excellent school performance, you can change to another more
prestigious school. Have you ever thought of changing to another school?
Man: No, I find this school quite good. Whether I can go to university in the future
depends much on my own effort.
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HT: You find this school a famous school, don’t you?
Man: It’s quite good.
Besides making school success, social capital and cultural capital empower students
with the capacity to transcend the differences they come across during adaptation. Man
criticizes the Hong Kong examination system for its examination- led orientation,
encouraging students to learn only for tackling examinations. Taking the example of
Chinese language, he remarked that students were simply assessed by how well they
memorized texts but not the real Chinese standard that they had. However interestingly,
he could still handle it and manage to get a prize in Chinese. He believed that he could
get even better results if the examination format could be changed. On the other hand,
Man prefers the Mainland educational system for its higher level of curriculum. Yet he
adds that the greater educational opportunities in Hong Kong can compensate for the
lower level of the Hong Kong curriculum.
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Concluding Remarks
This chapter attempts to understand “transitional adaptation” in terms of the new arrival
students’ acquisition, possession and activation of social capital and cultural capital in
the their adaptation experiences in Hong Kong. Capitals here refer to “accumulated
capital” bearing the potential capacity to produce profits and to empower individuals,
including immigrant minorities, to be active social agents. Three “fields” of capital
acquisition and activation namely the family, the school and local community, and
peers have been examined to illustrate how the students undergoing transitional
adaptation experienced and adapted to social life and school life in Hong Kong. The
positive relationship between transitional adaptation and good school performance has
also been studied. It is found that the students’ good command of Cantonese (serving as
a proxy for the accumulation of cultural capital (Stanton-Salazar and Dornbusch,
1995) ), close ties with parents, and sufficient support from school and local community
enable them to transcend environmental differences, form supportive relations with
institutional agents and subsequently assimilate into Hong Kong culture and society.
Interviewing Man and Shing is just like a causal conversation with an ordinary Hong
Kong secondary school student. They neither have special feelings about immigration,
nor struggles in adapting to life in Hong Kong. During the interviews, I found that the
both the students’ outlook and well-being are a far cry from the image of “new
immigrant children” that Hong Kong people commonly have. They are also very
different from the ‘marginality’ type of new arrival students whom I will examine in a
later chapter. To Man and Shing, immigration means a “hopeful” change and it has a
positive effect on the students’ learning motivation and the motivation to achieve.
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However not all new arrival students experience transitional adaptation. In the next
chapter, we are going to look at another mode of adaptation – “instrumental adaptation”
-which involves more challenges and obstacles than transitional adaptation.
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CHAPTER 4
Overcoming Social Barriers through Achievement -
Instrumental Adaptation
In the previous chapter, we have examined the transitional type of adaptation. Students
who experience transitional adaptation possess significant cultural capital i.e. having
proficiency in Cantonese and having a cultural background very similar to Hong
Kong’s. Having arrived in Hong Kong, such students are also fortunate enough to have
received social support from their family and other institutional agents such as the
school, peers and the local community. Because of this, their cultural capital can be
activated. They are therefore able to adapt to school smoothly, and also to perform well
at school.
Now we are going to examine another type of adaptation – instrumental adaptation – in
which the new arrival student possesses adequate cultural capital but lacks social
capital. The case of Wing, which I will look at below, can inform us of how new
arrivals with cultural capital but deficient in social capital (in the sense of having no
effective connections with the institutional agents) will adapt instrumentally. The
cultural capital possessed by him is not complemented by social capital embodied in the
relations between himself and the social institutions outside the family. Because of this,
his adaptation is obstructed. However it is expected that the possession of cultural
capital can enable him to fare as an active agent acquiring social capital, and
subsequently to have his cultural capital activated. The school is the site where he can
build supportive networks with the institutional agents.
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Wing’s father sneaked across the border between Shenzhen and Hong Kong in the
1970s, and has been living and working in Hong Kong for more than twenty years.
Wing’s mother and elder brother joined the father by migrating from Shenzhen to Hong
Kong in 1997. Four years later, Wing came to Hong Kong voluntarily for family
reunion. Now his father is a supervisor in a construction site whereas his mother is a
housewife. His elder brother has returned back to Shenzhen to run his own “cyber pub”
business there.
Wing’s father in fact told him to immigrate to Hong Kong when he was ten years old
but he did not follow suit as he had many good friends in the homeland. However after
his first visit to Hong Kong in 1999, he has discovered the positive side of Hong Kong:
cleaner environment, more prosperous society, and more educated citizens than
Shenzhen. Hence he came here in 2001, not solely for family reunion but with positive
expectations. At the time of the interview, he has come here for three months.
What he never thought of, unfortunately though, is the discrimination he faced
immediately after his arrival in Hong Kong. Having finished Form Three in Shenzhen,
he hoped that he could enter Form Four in one of the Hong Kong schools. In the two
months following his arrival, he searched for a place from a total of eleven schools but
his effort was in vain. He encountered many obstacles in his attempt to get a school
place. One time he was told by a school to sit for a written test within two weeks. He
was waiting with hope yet he did not receive a response two weeks later. So he went to
the school again and consulted the school staff about the date for the written test. But
they replied that he should wait fir another two weeks. So he patiently waited for a total
of four weeks but his hope finally turned to despair. The staff of the school later simply
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informed him that he failed in that application without further explanation. Another
time he received a letter from the HKSAR Education Department and was informed of
a temporary offer but it also turned out to be futile. Later he tried studying Form Four
in a night school whilst waiting for a place in a day school. To Wing, Hong Kong
society does not provide special social support to him as a new arrival; it rather treats
him indifferently and coldly.
Wing: I thought I was qualified to study Form Four, but I was repeatedly told that I
wasn’t so. I thought it might be due to my “new immigrant” status… During that time, I
was really confused and anxious. How could they treat a student like that? It was too
unfair… I think the “new immigrant” label will make people lose self-esteem. When I
thought I was a new immigrant at the time I first arrived, I couldn’t lift my head and
look at peers of my age.
Finally he could not choose but was allocated to Fukien Secondary School (a school for
new arrivals) in Kwun Tong, Kowloon and started his study on April 4, 2001. He
explained his success by saying, “my result of that application test was quite good since
I was assessed on the basis of what I had learnt in Shenzhen.” It seems that his cultural
capital of past academic achievement has finally been activated.
In spite of this discriminatory and unpleasant experience, Wing did not lose his hope
and confidence in faring better in Hong Kong. Instead due to the discrimination, he is
motivated to equip himself with better educational qualifications which guarantee more
job opportunities and other better life chances in the future. Wing can be classified as
“voluntary minorities” with reference to the Ogbu’s framework. He voluntarily chooses
to “make the deal” of immigration so he is willing to pay its price which includes
discrimination. In looking back at the worse off opportunity structure of the Mainland,
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he finds discrimination a necessary cost for greater gains. This positive dual frame of
reference can explain Wing’s higher learning motivation in Hong Kong.
It is obvious that as compared with the students undergoing transitional adaptation,
Wing has not received sufficient social support from institutional agents. To him, the
Education Department and the principals of many schools did not offer him support in
his school searching exercise. Now living in a rental flat in Tai Po with his family,
Wing needs to take a one-hour bus ride to school and back home every day. But when
he lived in the dormitory in a Shenzhen school, he could commit himself fully to school
life as it just took a few minutes to walk from the dormitory to classrooms. Wing
considered this change to be a hindrance to his adaptation to school life, making it
difficult for him to form a supportive network with the institutional agents of peers and
teachers. Thus his source of support is from his family and not other institutional
agents.
Wing’s lack of social support is also evident during the interview. Wing was very
expressive and at the end of the interview, I asked if he might have anything to tell me.
Then he actively sought help from me for information about schools in Tai Po. It is
apparent that he could not receive help from teachers, community or peers regarding his
school transfer. So he needed to ask somone whom he met just for the first time. The
lack of social support differentiates Wing’s adaptation pathway from the other cases of
transitional adaptation like Man’s and Shing’s. All the same, Wing grasped every
opportunity to establish supportive networks with institutional agents.
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Positive Dual Frame of Reference
Immigration brings many challenges including discrimination to new immigrant
students. But for the students adapting with a positive dual frame of reference,
immigration can act as a source of motivation for schoolwork. The experience of
immigration helps Wing to see clearly that what he wants is educational credential. So
he decided to study harder after his arrival. He regards having a good educational
qualification an instrument for him to get ahead in the mainstream society. It can also
help him to overcome discriminations and to get respect and status in Hong Kong.
Although Wing was ranked average in his class in the last examination, he admits that
he needs will spend all his efforts in studying in the coming semester, and he wishes to
get full marks in Mathematics.
HT: Why do you study harder in Hong Kong?
Wing: I think I was too lazy in Shenzhen in the last two years and I didn’t have any
motivation for studying hard. At that time I didn’t know why I should study hard. But
now the environment has changed, I know if I don’t study hard, it will be very difficult
for me to find a good job. Whether I work on construction sites as a worker or in law
firms as a lawyer all depends on whether I study hard or not. I know what I want and
have a clearer picture in my mind now. I need a good credential; people will respect me
when they see my credential.
Wing’s theory of success is education plus hard work, is identical to those of the
“voluntary minorities” in the cultural ecological theory. He treats education highly not
solely because better educational qualifications (as cultural capital) lead to better job
opportunities. Like the majority of new arrival students who view the school as the
most common channel for making new friends (Commission on Youth Hong Kong,
1999), Wing also sees school life as a social agent through which he can establish close
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networks with local born peers, teachers and welfare workers. For this reason he wants
to change to a school near his home so that he can stay behind on campus for greater
involvement in school activities.
Wing adopts a dual frame of reference with regard to the opportunity structure of Hong
Kong and Mainland China. He considers Hong Kong that has a much fairer
opportunity structure. Wing points out that he needs to have the right kind of
relationships (or guanxi) if he wants to attain success in the Mainland, whereas in Hong
Kong a certain level of educational qualification is in correspondence with jobs of a
certain level. On top of that, Wing’s dual frame of reference is also about the “quality”
of educational qualifications. He believes that Hong Kong’s educational qualification is
a kind of cultural capital which is of higher value than that of the Mainland because
Hong Kong’s educational qualification is recognized in many places.
Wing: If I stayed in Shenzhen, I could only find a job there. But when I study in Hong
Kong, I can have an alternative choice; I can either develop my career in Hong Kong or
in Shenzhen. It depends on the economic condition of the two cities in the future.
HT: Your elder brother is running a “cyber pub” in Shenzhen. Do you think you are
suitable for doing business?
Wing: Not really. I think at my age I need to concentrate on studies in the present but
not future business. You need to have qualifications say educational qualifications if
you want to choose your career. If you don’t have good qualifications, it’s pointless for
you to talk about choices. So I think doing well in education is very important.
All in all Wing adapts a positive dual frame of reference with regard to Hong Kong’s
opportunity structures. In his mind, Hong Kong society can better provide him with
cultural capital (mainly educational qualification), social capital and later economic
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capital for the socio-economic advancement of his own self and his family in the future.
Wing is therefore highly motivated in schoolwork and expects to excel in education.
In the following we will investigate how within-family social capital reinforces his
positive dual frame of reference and we will explain why within-family social capital is
not a sufficient factor for smooth adaptation.
Within-family social capital and non-familial support
Similar to the cases of Man and Shing, family reunion brought by immigration gives
Wing within-family social capital. He finds his family role changed due to immigration.
When he compares his independent and sometimes- lonely life in dormitory in
Shenzhen with the present family life, he loves his family very much for his parents’
support and warmth. He admits that warmer family life has positive effect on his
academic results as well.
HT: Did your role in the family change after you came to Hong Kong?
Wing: I don’t need to take care of myself much in Hong Kong, so I am a bit lazier in the
family. Yet I do like to be a bit lazier! Haha.. In fact, one time when I was sick at the
school hostel in Shenzhen, I was in great pain and I cried. But now in Hong Kong my
mother does take good care of me when I am sick and she also gives me support in my
studies.
HT: Does this warmer family life affect your academic results?
Wing: A little bit. I do want to study well to get a good job so I can take better care of
my parents in the future.
Family reunion facilitates the development of trust among his family members. Wing’s
parents care about Wing and trust him to reciprocate in the future; this establishes an
expectation of his parents and an obligation on him. Wing told me in the interview that
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his father did have great expectation on him. In return, he felt obliged to study hard for
the socio-economic betterment of his family, as a way to pay back his parents’ love and
care.
Nevertheless within-family social capital is not a sufficient factor that ensures smooth
adaptation. As we consider the cases of Man, Shing and Wing together, we see that all
of them have decent possession of within-family social capital but Wing adapts not as
desirably as Man and Shing does. What delineates the difference between transitional
adaptation and instrumental adaptation is the availability of non-familial social support
from institutional agents. Having a network of support from the institutional agents is
vital for smooth adaptation in the host society.
Because Wing was not offered social support from institutional agents upon his arrival,
he spent a total of four months just to get a school place. As mentioned previously, this
school is far away from his home so it is not easy for him to establish a supportive
network with the institutional agents through involvement in school life. Yet like many
new arrival students, Wing treats the school as an instrument for him to acquire the
social capital from institutional agents. One point worth noting is that Wing has only
arrived in Hong Kong for three months at the time of the interview. It is expected that
with the effect of the within-family social capital and the cultural capital that he
possessed, he can build supportive network with institutional agents over time. In other
words, I expect that his instrumental adaptation will one day transform into transitional
adaptation and then he will assimilate into the host society.
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Cultural Capital, Social Capital and their Activation
Despite the fact that local institutional agents do not actively support Wing’s adaptation,
his cultural capital supports him to fare as an active agent to acquire social capital, and
subsequently to have his cultural capital activated. The significant cultural capital that
Wing possesses is his proficiency in spoken Cantonese and his socio-cultural
background proximal to that of Hong Kong. In Shenzhen, Wing used Mandarin at
school while he spoke Cantonese at home. All the people in his homeland in fact speak
Cantonese. Talking about lifestyle, he said he was gaining confidence in
accommodating himself to the new socio-cultural environment when he realized the
similarity between Hong Kong culture and Shenzhen’s.
HT: What do you think about the lifestyle of Hong Kong?
Wing: Before I came to Hong Kong, I wondered if I could get along with Hong Kong
people. But since I arrived here, I could accommodate to the lifestyle of Hong Kong
without any great difficulties.
But without institutional support, Wing’s cultural capital cannot be fully utilized. His
past academic results were not recognized in his school place searching process so he
was not in any advantageous position but was required to repeat Form Three. He
explained, “The principal of one school turned down my application and explained to
me that he could not recognize my past academic results. He might think that academic
qualifications acquired in Hong Kong were more ‘reliable’ than those acquired in
Shenzhen.” Even when he is now studying at his present school, he does not receive
sufficient social support from teachers. His teachers do not provide him with special
help though he is a new arrival. Therefore when he encounters problems in his studies,
Wing usually tries to solve them by himself. Take the example of English learning, he
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overcame the problem by reading more English and watching English television
programmes more. “In fact, you can learn a lot English vocabularies in the MTR and
the train,” he said.
In different situations or fields of interaction, the “new arrival student” identity bears
different meanings and values. One of our respondents Man, who had transitional
adaptation, was offered special tuition on English when his teachers know that he is a
new arrival. For Wing, however, the “new arrival student” identity seems to have been
a “liability” in his school hunting experience. He said, “I think the ‘new immigrant’
label will make people lose self-esteem. Once I thought I was a new immigrant at the
time I first arrived, I couldn’t lift my head and look at peers of my age. ” He also
claimed he got no special support from his school though it is a school for new arrivals.
Wing knows well that if he is to get ahead in the mainstream society, he needs to
integrate himself into the mainstream peer groups in school. In the interview he
emphasized that the main concern of his student career is to change to a “better” school
so that he can adapt better to life at school and in Hong Kong. A better school to him
means a school near his home in Tai Po. He is also confident that he can adapt well in a
non-new arrival school. His past experience of active school life provides him with
cultural capital to get along with the mainstream peers.
HT: The greatest adaptation problem of yours is finding a school place, isn’t it?
Wing: Yes. You know, this school is too far away. To me, I want to get better results in
Form three and change to a school near my home in Tai Po. At present, it’s impossible
for me to stay behind at school to play ball games and take part in other school
activities.
HT: What type of school do you prefer? Do you want to study in a school with more
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new arrival students?
Wing: Well, I don’t have this preference. But I want to study at a good school. You
know there are band one schools and band five schools. I may like a band two or three
school.
HT: What do you expect if you have changed to a school where the majority of students
are local born?
Wing: It should be very different. I think students there will use a language mixed with
more English and they will follow new trends and fashions more closely, like talking
about trendy fashions. Mainland students are not like that.
HT: Do you expect you will become like such local born students when you are in that
kind of school?
Wing: Yes, I think so. You need to adapt to the env ironment. For instance, my
classmates in Hong Kong are more active and talkative. So, I adjust myself according
to their minds and behaviors and talk more with them. I think I can cope with them.
HT: Have you thought about how you will prepare for the HKCEE?
Wing: I will prepare for it step by step. But the first thing is to change to a better school.
Wing is in fact very interested in sports. He received basketball training in Shenzhen
for many years. When he lived on campus in Shenzhen, he played basketball every day.
However he claims that since his arrival in Hong Kong he does not have much leisure
time because he has to spend most of his time on travelling and doing homework. “I
can’t retain this habit (playing basketball) now as I have no one to play with near my
home. I am not sure if people will play with me and I don’t know what sort of people
are playing on basketball courts near my home. So I swim in the swimming pool
nearby. Sometimes I visit my friend in Mongkok and play there,” he told me. This
friend is a classmate from his Shenzhen school and his only companion in Hong Kong.
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He completed a course in a technical vocational school and he is now working as a
technician intern. From Wing’s account, we can conclude that Wing’s lack of active
support from local supporting groups results in his isolation in social life. His cultural
capital as a result remains only largely as a potential asset. He needs the support of
social capital in the form of a network of social relationships in order to get the cultural
capital activated.
Concluding Remarks
The school provides a site where new arrival students can establish supportive
networks with the mainstream social groups and institutions. It also empowers students
with educational qualifications making them more competitive in the opportunity
structure of the host society. Students undergoing instrumental adaptation view
education and school performance as an instrument or capital for them to advance in the
host society. Having discovered the instrumental value of schooling, Wing studies
harder now in Hong Kong. In order to sum up the instrumental adaptation of Wing, I
quote one of his statements: “If you don’t have good educational qualifications, it’s
pointless for you to talk about choices. So I think doing well in education is very
important.” Success is indeed determined by how substantial the capital you possess,
and how well you can activate the capital.
However instrumental adaptation could be just a temporary phase in the process of
adaptation. Soon after the students (of instrumental adaptation) have acquired their
social capital, very likely they will experience transitional adaptation. Yet, if the new
arrival students’ failure to establish a supportive network of social relations continues,
they will probably feel that they are not ‘full’ members of the host society; they will
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may also continue to view the host society as one just offering them the instrumental
opportunity to make a better living. To become ‘full’ members of the society, it is not
sufficient that they feel culturally at home; they must also feel socially accepted and
supported. The case of instrumental adaptation is a testimony to the importance of
supportive social relationships at school and in the wider community – social
relationships which constitute social capital – for the adaptation of new arrival students
to social life in Hong Kong.
In the course of his adaptation to life in Hong Kong, Wing has not received adequate
support either from peer groups with his “ethnic” Shenzhen background or from the
Hong Kong community. As a result, searching for his new social identity becomes a
challenge for Wing in his adaptation.
HT: Do you think you are a Hong Kong person or a Shenzhen person?
Wing: I have asked myself this question many times. I really can’t answer this question
as I don’t know these two identities well enough.
HT: Do the people back in your homeland think you are a Hong Kong person or a
Shenzhen person?
Wing: They make me feel that my status has been upgraded. I don’t know why. I don’t
want them to see me like that as this would make me a “rebel” against my homeland.
Now I don’t know how to communicate with them and they say that I have changed to be
an arrogant person. However I feel inferior in Hong Kong especially when I recall the
time when I was searching for a school place. But anyway, these views may change
over time as I have been here for only one year. Maybe after several years, I will be
able to feel myself as a Hong Kong person.
HT: Does the identity issue matter much regarding your studies?
Wing: It doesn’t matter much in my present school (which is a school for new arrivals).
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Maybe I need to find out my real identities if I am in a school where the majority of
students are local born students.
It seems that Wing’s ambiguous identity does not pose too serious a problem for him.
Given the close ties between Hong Kong and his homeland and other major cities in
China, Wing tries not to see post-colonial Hong Kong and other places in China as too
culturally and socially different. Discussing about the linkage with his homeland, Wing
points out that the traveling time for going back to his homeland is comparable to that
for going to his school in Kwun Tong. Now he goes back to Shenzhen about once a
month. He perceives that a desirable lifestyle in the future should be the one like
working hard for a challenging job in Hong Kong during weekdays and returning back
to his homeland for leisure during weekends.
HT: What do you see to be the difference between Hong Kong’s lifestyle and
Shenzhen’s?
Wing: Hong Kong’s lifestyle is tense with fierce competitions. Shenzhen’s lifestyle is
good for having a holiday and “recharging energy”.
HT: What kind of lifestyle do you plan to lead in the future then?
Wing: For developing my future career, I prefer Hong Kong to Shenzhen, because the
salary and medical benefits provided by the companies in Hong Kong are more
attractive than those in Shenzhen. But for vacation, I enjoy staying in Shenzhen as I
grew up there and therefore I have a sense of belonging to that place; Shenzhen is my
home. I feel much more comfortable when I live there. For instance, if you were born in
Hong Kong, and later you migrate to Canada as a new immigrant, no matter how good
your living environment in Canada is, you still think that Hong Kong is your home and
you have a sense of belonging to Hong Kong.
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These words of Wing suggest that instrumental adaptation may well turn out to be a
lasting pattern of adaptation for many immigrants from Mainland China. It would be
instrumental in that such immigrants would be looking for what they view to be the best
of both worlds. They look for a better material life in Hong Kong, but return to the
Mainland for leisure and recuperation, and to renew their roots there.
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CHAPTER 5
From Assimilation to Multiculturalism - Accommodative Adaptation and
Bicultural Adaptation
Introduction
I have investigated how the availability of social support differentiates “Transitional
Adaptation” from “Instrumental Adaptation” for new arrival students coming from
cultural and linguistic background proximal to that of Hong Kong. We now come to
examine those new arrival students who do not share similar culture, value, lifestyle
and identity as those of the mainstream Hong Kong people; and whose mother tongue is
not Cantonese. Putting cultural difference and availability of social support together in
analysis, we can identify three more types of adaptation, namely “Accommodative
Adaptation”, “Bicultural Adaptation” and “Marginality”.
Many people think, and hope that, immigration is a “linear” process and that over time
immigrants can naturally get assimilated and acculturated into their host society after
they have adapted. But it is not always the case. The culture embedded in people’s
selfhood makes adaptation not always “linear”. Here culture means value, lifestyle and
identity which are acquired through socialization in the family, peer group and
community life. Despite the fact that new arrival students from Mainland belong to the
same Chinese race as the other local born students do, due to the different socialization
processes that many of the new arrival students have undergone there are cultural
differences between them and the mainstream local students. Culture is the key
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analytic theme of this and the next chapter.
One task of these two chapters is to view (and review) the cultural ecological theory
from a cultural perspective. According to the cultural ecological theory, education is
seen by “voluntary minorities” as an institutional instrument for climbing up the social
ladder, also for positively tackling discrimination in adaptation. This is the
instrumental value of education; and indeed many local Hong Kong students also hold
this value in the examination-oriented and bookish education system of Hong Kong.
However some new arrival students do not treat education in every respect as an
instrument for achieving high status life and making money but view education itself as
having its intrinsic value. In a number of cases in my study, this is the orientation the
new arrival students have brought with them from the Mainland. Valuing this Mainland
students’ culture, they cannot easily accept and get assimilated into the mainstream
Hong Kong student culture which they are inclined to see as a kind of “lower” student
and school culture. Given sufficient social support from school and other institutional
agents, they can conform to the school’s official culture and excel in education but they
can simply be said to be accommodating to the Hong Kong school life as a whole.
These students still lack some socio-cultural agencies such as ethnic communities or
ethnic peer groups that value their cultural orientation to education, sustain their social
identity, and facilitate the activation of their cultural capital. At the end of this chapter I
will suggest that multiculturalism is what Hong Kong schools should pursue for
providing to the new arrival students the kind of education that will help to develop
their full potential. I will now look at the case of Kin who falls into the category of
accommodative adaptation.
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Accommodative Adaptation: The Case of Kin
Again like many other new arrival students, Kin came to Hong Kong for the sake of
family union. There are three sons in his family. According to laws they could not
come together in one time so they immigrated to Hong Kong by steps. After Kin’s
mother, who got married and gave birth to the three sons in Mainland, immigrated to
Hong Kong, Kin stayed behind in the homeland with his elder brother and grandmother
for about three years. During those three years, Kin visited his uncle in Guongzhou and
did not study for one year or so. He learned his Cantonese in that year.
Immigrating from a village in Chiu Chow to “world city” Hong Kong, he said that
immigration was once joyful news to him. Arriving in December 1995, Kin did not
study for the first half year but just joined a free-of-charge tuition class in a community
centre. He then entered a primary school in Kowloon City in September 1996 and after
graduation he entered a Catholic boys’ school in the same district.
Different from the students as discussed in the previous two chapters, students adopting
“accommodative adaptation” are those coming from places which are rather different
from Hong Kong in language and ways of living. Some new arrival students speak
some Cantonese in their homeland; some may have learnt a little Cantonese from Hong
Kong television programmes. However Kin used Chiu Chow dialect solely in the
homeland, where people did not have access to Hong Kong television. Even in his
family now in Hong Kong, he speaks mainly Chiu Chow dialect. He told me, “I know
Cantonese but in origin we are Chiu Chow people, and my mother’s Cantonese is not
good so we use Chiu Chow dialect. I talk with my father sometimes in Cantonese.”
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Kin faced some difficulties in adapting to life in Hong Kong (including alienation from
the local born peers in school) yet fortunately he has been receiving social support from
a local church and its members (they are called “brothers and sisters”). About five
years ago, a few female social workers visited his home and invited him to join an
English tuition class in the church. From that time onwards, he has joined the Chiu
Chow language fellowship of his present church in Kowloon City. The supports that he
received are various, including social, academic, financial and emotional support. The
church has compensated for the deficiency of his family, which as we will see later,
lacks within-family social capital, in supporting him for coming to grips with life in the
new society.
When he was in homeland, Kin studied hard for the intrinsic value of education. He got
satisfaction from studying so he was a motivated learner. He ranked in the top ten in
class in his countryside school and he came first for several times. After he immigrated
to Hong Kong, he has incorporated the instrumental view of education into his
perception of schooling. Owing to his poor English, he once lost the satisfaction from
learning and now feels the pressure in his school life. All the same he pushes himself to
be more hardworking so as to attain better education qualifications. Currently he is
around average in school performance.
Accommodative Adaptation: Ping and Cheong
Two other students who have the accommodative type of adaptation, Ping and Cheong,
came to Hong Kong involuntarily. At the time of interview, they were both studying in
the same governmental school in Tai Po. They are both high-achievers in school, but
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they do not seem to identify with the mainstream culture of Hong Kong youths and the
Hong Kong popular culture as a whole. We will consider first the case of Ping. Ping’s
ethnic origin is Shan Mei, a Chiu Chow speaking county. He has a strong sentiment
toward the Chinese nation that he wants to contribute to his motherland and to “do
something great” with his Mainland friends. His heart being in homeland, he loves the
universities in China and he hopes that he can study at Tsing Hwa University. Overall
speaking, he thinks that Mainland students are of better quality and he finds it hard to
understand the undisciplined and unruly characteristics of some local born students. He
thinks that owing to the materialism of Hong Kong popular culture, Hong Kong people
pursue university education just for making money in the future. He is well aware of
the value difference between Mainlanders and Hong Kong people. Regarding lifestyle,
he comments that Hong Kong has a fast pace of life and that its people do not treasure
neighbourhood.
Before Ping came to Hong Kong he had experience in living in Shanghai and
Guongzhou. He said that those experiences helped him to adapt to life in Hong Kong
much. His high adaptation competence and past good school performance turned out to
be valuable assets which were “activated” through the supportive network of teachers
in his Hong Kong school. He was invited by his teachers to join various kinds of
extra-curricular activities like Mandarin Ambassador and athletics team, while the
school principal also allocated him to the “elite class”. He therefore can accommodate
to the school life easily. He ranked about 20th out of 200 in his form and he came first in
Mathematics in Form two. Moreover he won prizes in the Hong Kong Inter-school
Speech Contest; he came fourth in the Chinese section in 2000, second in the English
section in 2001. He urges himself to perform well (better than Hong Kong students) so
as to give his local counterparts a better impression of himself as a high achiever.
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The other student, Cheong (who is a friend of Ping) is also motivated in getting ahead in
Hong Kong. His parents want their son to make big money in the future. His mother is
a free-time factory worker but she loves money much. She wants to make money by
speculating in the stock market. To Cheong, however, success does not mean making a
lot of money but being knowledgeable. He therefore discourages his mother from
indulging in speculations.
Cheong does not go along with the popular mentality of Hong Kong students. He does
not agree with the local born male students who think it is cool to smoke and to go
around with a girlfriend. He also comments that Hong Kong students mostly study
without direction. His goal in education is to at least earn a bachelor degree, as there
are too many university graduates in Hong Kong. He sets the new arrival student who
acquired 10As in HKCEE several years ago as his role model and he aims at getting
2As for himself. He considers hard work and good peer influence to be the factors for
getting academic success. His present school performance is good; he ranked seventh
out of 200 in Form three.
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Two Dual Frames of Reference: Structural and Cultural
Bankston and Zhou (1997) in their study of the social adjustment of Vietnamese
American adolescents have found out that assimilation may occur in two distinct yet
related forms: structural assimilation and cultural assimilation. In chapter 3 we have
gone through the scenario of Transitional Adaptation which comprises both structural
assimilation and cultural assimilation. Now we are going to discuss Accommodative
Adaptation -- which means structural assimilation without cultural assimilation. I will
borrow the notion “dual frame of reference” from cultural ecological theory to analyze
how new arrival students adapt by comparing Hong Kong and their homeland in terms
of social structures and cultures.
The Positive Frame: Hong Kong is better in terms of opportunities
The cases of Kin, Ping and Cheong show that the positive dual frame of reference is
held not only by students who immigrate voluntarily (Kin), but also those who
immigrate involuntarily (Ping and Cheong). They all perceive that the opportunity
structure of Hong Kong is better than that of Mainland: more educational opportunities,
fairer opportunity structure (in the sense of the conversion of educational credentials
(as cultural capital) to occupational opportunities and hence actual economic reward
(salary) as well as social status). Students who were required to move to Hong Kong
involuntarily for family reunion try not to view immigration in a negative sense. Given
the social support provided by family and institutional agents, they attempt to justify
the changes and losses incurred by immigration through developing a positive dual
frame of reference to the opportunity structures. Indeed, immigration has a positive
impact on the learning motivation of these new arrival students.
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Take the case of Kin for instance. Having stayed in his homeland in a village in Chiu
Chow since childhood, Kin was eager to find out how Hong Kong as a “world city”
looks like. He mentioned few people from the countryside could come to Hong Kong.
He wanted to test himself out in Hong Kong, instead of staying in a country for life
long.
Kin: When I first arrived and was on the way to my home in Hong Kong, I was quite
happy. I seldom saw buildings as tall. Indeed, for my whole life I hadn’t taken a taxi
before that time. Hahaha…
Kin also believes that if he works hard enough, he can be guaranteed of higher
educational opportunities in Hong Kong. When he was asked whether he would come
to Hong Kong if he could choose again, he said, “I do not know what I would be doing
if I were still in Mainland. Perhaps I am studying. My life would be totally different if
I haven’t immigrated to Hong Kong.” Indeed the living condition of Kin’s family has
improved gradually since they were in Hong Kong. He is confident that Hong Kong’s
opportunity structure can better his and his family’s welfare. He did not view education
as an instrument for getting ahead when he was in the Mainland. But being
hardworking in fact enabled him to adapt well to Hong Kong society when he first
arrived.
HT: How do you feel about Hong Kong?
Kin: Thus far, I feel so so. Yet to think long-term, Hong Kong is better. Indeed you don’t
have many developments (opportunities) on the Mainland. I do know some people who
have studied a lot but are paid not more than $3000 to $4000 per month. They need to
work for employers. On the other hand, some are only primary school graduates but
they are successful in doing business and travelling to coastal cities.
HT: So you mean you like the system of Hong Kong?
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Kin: Yes. If you can acquire a decent education in Hong Kong, you need not worry
after you have grown up. At least you can find jobs more easily.
HT: Do you think new arrivals are treated equally as local borns?
Kin: Well, there is fair treatment. Whoever has ability can get ahead.
Although immigration gives Kin’s family hope, in reality the family members still need
to struggle for making a living. Actually his parents are both unemployed; his mother
has been unemployed for several years. His father was once a construction worker, but
currently has been doing some temporary jobs, and sometimes unemployed. In this
5-member family, only his twenty-one year old brother is working. However the
economic hardship of the family furthermore reinforces the positive dual frame of
reference that Kin holds.
HT: Did your brother stop studying once he came here?
Kin: He did try studying in night school but perhaps he didn’t have the motivation so he
stopped. Or perhaps he needed to take care of our family. He is the breadwinner.
HT: I see. Does your brother’s experience have any influence on you?
Kin: (He thinks for a while) Indeed, my brother is unhappy with his failure in studying.
Yes, he is unhappy. He has the ability to do well in education. He has that ability. But
no one can help. I see that his life is hard. Yes, hard. He wants himself to study better
and then get a better job, or have the chance to do other things.
HT: I see. Because of the family situation, he didn’t study in night school right?
Kin: At that time, my father was suspected of having cancer. Actually my brother was
back in the mainland at that time but because of that news, he needed to stop studying
and stay in Hong Kong. Then he kept working here until now.
HT: What is your elder brother working for?
Kin: He is working for a publishing company. He once worked for Wellcome
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Supermarket but he thought that he wasn’t paid well so he changed his job.
Kin believes that education plus hard work is a solution to his family’s economic
problem. He has a clear career aspiration. “I don’t want to work for employers. I may
start with working for employers for several years and save money. I may then start
doing business once I have saved enough money. I will do what is popular at the time
when I do my business,” he states.
Ping and Cheong came involuntarily to Hong Kong because they were not willing to
leave their peers and the desirable lifestyle of their homeland. However once they were
in Hong Kong, they find that studying in Hong Kong is a good way to realize their plan
in the future. Ping wants to “do something great” and contribute to the Chinese nation,
while Cheong hopes to change the educational system of his homeland to be more
accountable to the people. Good academic achievement provides them with more
opportunities. Cheong also stated, “Success to me means attaining more educational
qualification.” In comparison with Mainland education, both Ping and Cheong
perceive that the educational credentials conferred by Hong Kong institutions can
empower them with cultural capital for future development of any kind. The positive
dual frame of reference to the opportunity structure can explain Ping and Cheong’s high
learning motivation and good school performance.
The Negative Frame: the cultural Hong Kong is less desirable
The notion of “dual of frame of reference” is in actuality more complex than Ogbu
suggests. Apart from comparing the opportunity structures between the host society
and the homeland, immigrants make dual reference also in terms of culture, value and
lifestyle. As such immigration does not simply provide opportunities for
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socio-economic advancement, it itself is a process which induces lots of ambivalent
feelings. It is especially the case when structural assimilation is not followed by
cultural assimilation.
In May, 1998 Ping received a phone call from his mother to order him to go to Hong
Kong after two days. He was extremely surprised and packed up things immediately.
Immigration to Ping means leaving his good friends, homeland and Mainland school
life within two days. In the interview he said, “I had too many things to think about
when I was on the way to Hong Kong. All things are about lives in homeland. Even
after I had arrived in Hong Kong, I sometimes cried at night.” As mentioned previously,
his sentiment to the Chinese nation seems to be alien to the culture of mainstream Hong
Kong students. His goal is to study at a prominent Chinese university like Tsing Hwa
University and to live a more meaningful life in Mainland Chinese major cities. As for
Cheong who is Ping’s schoolmate, he is not used to the popular mentality of Hong
Kong students and the materialism of Hong Kong people. He also comments that Hong
Kong students mostly study without a clear goal. Ping and Cheong do not choose to
assimilate into the Hong Kong mainstream culture as they seem to believe that the
homeland culture they have acquired is of higher value.
I had a more in-depth discussion with Kin about the impact of immigration on his value,
lifestyle and identity. Because of the linguistic and cultural difference between local
born peers and himself, he as a minority was not well accepted by his peers and was
even coldly treated. Lacking a close companion, Kin is rather isolated from school life.
He joins extra-curricular activities simply out of student responsibility.
HT: Did your classmates treat you differently because you were a new arrival?
Kin: Well, some classmates did call me “tai luk chai” as I was a minority in class. I got
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hurt that time but I have learnt to take the label and those experiences easy. It all
depends on how you treat the label. I think I’m alright with those experiences now.
HT: Who are your best classmates?
Kin: They are the friends in my class. But I don’t have good buddies who know my
heart. I do have many good friends here, ordinary friends also.
HT: Do you join any interest clubs?
Kin: I am just a member of several clubs. I’m not so interested in them. I join just
because I don’t want to be assessed badly in terms of my extra-curricular activities at
school.
He does not perceive Hong Kong as his new home accommodating his own values. He
knows that without cultural assimilation, he cannot become a “full” member of the
Hong Kong society; he accommodates only to its social structures. In the interview we
also talked about the issues of culture and lifestyle. Kin talked about his
“away-from-home” feelings and also the way he dealt with the feelings.
HT: You said that “Hong Kong is so so”, what does it mean? Did Hong Kong
disappoint you? What does Hong Kong lack?
Kin: Countryside style. (鄉村風味) It’s a lot more relaxing and more comfortable to
live in homeland. I feel so maybe simply because I didn’t have worries in childhood
times. Having grown up, I may have worries even if I were in the mainland now.
HT: Do you like countryside lifestyle?
Kin: It’s hard to say whether I like it or not. If I live there, I can’t choose but live that
lifestyle. You need to follow what other people do.
HT: How was the life at your homeland primary school like?
Kin: My Hong Kong primary school is much smaller than my homeland school. We had
a garden in school, so we planted flowers in Labour Day and in “exercise lesson”(勞
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動課). Studying in Hong Kong is more comfortable but the school life in mainland is
more solid and has more practical training. We needed to wash toilets. You know, the
toilet was very smelly and we didn’t have tape water. We needed to take water from
places far away. We were to clean droppings too. Yet we were accustomed to it hence
didn’t find it a problem. If I need to do the task again, I may find it unbearable.
HT: Does it mean that you like the solid life in homeland?
Kin: I may say I miss the life there. I like to keep it as a memory but I don’t like to lead
that sort of lifestyle now as it’s too harsh. Maybe I’m enjoying comfortable life now.
The ambivalent feelings shown by Kin indicate that cultural difference does not impact
much on his educational strategies. Although he misses the life of homeland, he just
keeps it as a good memory and will endeavour to accommodate himself to Hong
Kong’s life style for future socio-economic advancement. Actually even though the
cultural values which Kin, Ping and Cheong hold are not close to the Hong Kong
popular culture and the mentality of mainstream local born students, their values are
highly esteemed in the school official culture. Their high learning motivation,
conformity orientation, patriotism, and strong sense of social responsibility are all
championed by the school official culture. Once the supportive networks are
established between the students and teachers, the students’ human capital and cultural
capital can be activated in the school context, and these activated capitals are conducive
to their academic success. Take the example of Ping, his sportsmanship and leadership,
and his proficiency in Mandarin as well as positive student identity all contribute
positively to his present school performance once his teachers recognize his strengths.
Therefore at the end of the research interview when I asked if he had anything special to
say, he held the tape recorder and said, “I encourage all new arrival students to face
their adaptation positively”, as if he was making an announcement to all new arrival
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students in Hong Kong. His case suggests that even holding values and beliefs different
from the majority of the Hong Kong mainstream students, a new arrival student with
support and recognition from teachers can accommodate successfully to life at school
and in the large society.
As we have discussed thus far, Kin seemed not to be well received by his school and
peers. Fortunately however, his church provides him with social support. Supportive
network with institutional agents, being one key analytic variable of this thesis, was
discussed extensively in the last two chapters. In those cases, we saw that the school
was the institution offering social support. I turn now to examine the role of the church
in offering Kin social support and facilitating his adaptation to Hong Kong society.
The Church as an Institutional Agent Providing Social Support
Unlike Ping and Cheong, the economic and socio-cultural background of Kin does not
offer him abundant social and cultural resources. I have briefly mentioned the
hardships he faced during his adaptation process such as the unemployment of his
parents, his father’s illness, and the discrimination he experienced in secondary school.
Kin is studying in a band-one boys’ school in which the student culture is dominated by
elitism, mainstream youth culture and masculinity. He therefore finds it hard to involve
himself in the student culture, and he receives little social support from this kind of
school context. He is disappointed that he cannot keep his strong sense of belonging to
his school as he could in his homeland school. On the other hand Kin also told me that
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he was not looking forward to the family life in Hong Kong before he immigrated, and
that he missed his homeland life with his grandmother. He does not have close relations
with his parents. Lacking within-family social capital, his family is what Coleman and
Hoffer would consider to be functionally deficient (Coleman and Hoffer, 1998). It does
not provide him with adequate social support for meeting the challenge in the new
society.
But Kin’s church plays a significant and unique role in his adaptation. In the interview
he talked in length and with gratitude about how his church sheltered him from those
hardships during his adaptation process and helped him accommodate to the
mainstream society. After a visit from a few social workers five years ago, he started
his church life with an English tuition class in the church. Up to now he has been
regularly attending gatherings of its Chiu Chow language fellowship.
Through the English tuition class, he began to establish a solid relationship with his
church as well as the church’s brothers and sisters. He recalled that he had lost his
motivation to learn when he faced the obstacle of the “English” problem. But gradually
with the help of his brothers and sisters in church he could overcome the problem and
hence regain his interest in learning and studying. He now believes that proficiency in
English is a valuable asset for occupational success in the future.
HT: You said that one of your greatest adaptation problems was English. How did you
overcome it?
Kin: Thanks to the help of my church. The workers and the “elder brothers” were all
nice and helpful.
HT: Do you feel interested in English?
Kin: Mmm… I may say I have interest gradually. It may be because I have gained a
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little sense of success from learning English. And I know I need to advance in English
from now on, as every job requires you to have English ability.
HT: I see. That is your church’s “elder brothers and sisters” who help you a lot in
adaptation.
Kin: Certainly. It’s really joyful. You know, the life in church is very different from the
life outside. You can see that every church member treats you well.
One reason why he said the life in church was distinct from the life “outside” is that he
can enjoy friendship and love from his “brothers and sisters”. In the “outside” world,
he experienced discrimination and alienation and felt rejected by his peers; however he
had peer support inside the church. One of his church friends is a new arrival high
achiever and he is also studying in a band-one boys’ school. They are good companions
who encourage each other to study hard. Indeed Kin has adapted well to Hong Kong
after he has known his new group of friends, who are mainly church friends. He has
even more friends now than in Mainland.
HT: Do you think believing in God helps you?
Kin: Yes, yes, more or less. My character has changed. In the church, friends from
different schools and different forms play together.
Having known the economic difficulties which Kin’s family is facing, his church also
gives a helping hand in this regard. His church offers him a part-time job of teaching
children in tutorial class. He can earn about HK$1,000 monthly by teaching twice a
week and use the money for his daily expenditure, like transportation and meals.
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Bicultural Adaptation: Introduction
We will next look at another category of adaptation, that is, bicultural adaptation. In this
regard, it is pertinent to note that Alejandro Portes (Portes and Zhou, 1993; Portes 1994;
Portes and Rumbaut, 1996; quoted by Gibson, 2001) has used the notion “segmented
assimilation” to refer to three distinct acculturation processes, which are “linear
acculturation and assimilation” (which corresponds to “transitional adaptation” in our
discussion); “accommodation and acculturation without assimilation” (which
corresponds to bicultural adaptation in our discussion); and “downward assimilation”
(that is, “marginality” which we will examine later).
“Accommodation and acculturation without assimilation” is a conceptual term
constructed by Margaret Gibson from her study of Punjabi Sikhs in Britain and the
United States (Gibson, 1988; Gibson and Bhachu, 1991). In her thesis she discusses the
protection function of the “ethnic enclave” which serves to preserve the homeland
culture of immigrants. With the support of a strong ethnic enclave, Gibson argues,
immigrant children are often protected from the adverse impact of racial discrimination
and from pressures to reject the homeland culture.
Gibson also points out that receiving “ethnic support”, immigrant children have greater
motivation in acquiring the language of the host society and accommodating to the new
culture. She states:
The acquisition of knowledge and skills in the new culture and language are
viewed as an additional set of tools to be incorporated into the child's cultural
repertoire rather than as a rejection or replacement of old traits. (Gibson,
2001:21)
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Immigrant students as a result follow a path of adaptation which Gibson terms additive
acculturation (Gibson, 1988, 1998). The strength of additive acculturation lies in its
power to help immigrant students transcend the difference between their home culture
and the culture of the host society (Gibson, 1997). On top of that, the ethnic
community helps sustain the students’ social identity and self- identity by functioning as
a source of social capital (Bankston III, Caldas and Zhou, 1997). In these ways, additive
acculturation has beneficial side-effects on the immigrant students’ school
performance.
Additive acculturation is what I call “bicultural adaptation” in this thesis. Here
bicultural adaptation refers to the adaptation process in which the new arrival students
sustain their ethnic identity and culture while they are adapting to the host society. As
stated previously, accommodative adaptation is understood as structural assimilation
without cultural assimilation. Bicultural adaptation is a solution to the deficiency of
accommodative adaptation in that the students’ ethnic culture and identity as a form of
cultural capital can be activated in a bicultural or multicultural environment. Instead of
attempting assimilation into the culture of the host society, students undergoing
bicultural adaptation sustain their ethnic culture and enjoy social support from ethnic
peer group. Ethnic support groups act as “cultural intermediates” and they enable the
students to accommodate to the mainstream culture.
Bicultural Adaptation: The Importance of Ethnic Support
Chiu is the respondent who undergoes bicultural adaptation. Chiu’s family is a typical
immigrant family. Twenty years ago his father came to Hong Kong from a village near
Tsuen Chow in Fukien, then his mother and elder brother followed in the 1970s and
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Chiu immigrated to Hong Kong in late June of 1998. When his elder brother came here,
he entered Form 1 in a school run by Fukien tongxiang hu (dialect association), which
is also the present school of Chiu. Having adapted smoothly and achieved decent
success in school, his brother has been working as a clerk at China Bank since his
graduation in Form six. Chiu is enjoying a good relationship with his brother who gives
him support in his schoolwork and adaptation. His family is in good economic
situation and they are living in a self-owned flat in North Point.
Coming from a village in Fukien, Chiu did not possess much cultural capital for
adaptation. Prior to immigration he did not know Cantonese nor did he have any
experience in living in places other than his homeland. He did not have a style of life
and values similar to those of the mainstream Hong Kong people. His advantage is his
above average academic results, especially in Mathematics, in his homeland school. In
the research interview Chiu did not talk much about conflicts with the mainstream
Hong Kong culture as the students of “accommodative adaptation” did. Yet Chiu does
not seem to have assimilated into the mainstream culture. One interesting point Chiu
raised is the ethnic peer group. As Chiu’s school is a special school for new arrival
students, he can make new arrival friends easily. Now he with the other five to six
students has formed a peer group, which provides support to one another. They are all
from Fukien and they came to Hong Kong in the same year. They talk to one another in
Fukien language. They are living very nearby in North Point so they always play
together and mostly in North Point (instead of other places). Their unique learning and
playing experience helps them develop a particular habitus. This habitus has become
the supportive socio-cultural context for Chiu.
Chiu finds it comfortable to seek achievement in the mainstream society on one hand
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while keeping his ethnic identity and culture on the other. He is a cheerful boy who is
actively involved in school life. Upon arrival in Hong Kong, he entered Form one
again in order to catch up with the English standard of Hong Kong schools. Despite
this, he has been doing well in school. He ranks the 7th in his class. His favourite and
strongest subject is Mathematics and he plans to do Mathematics in university.
Sometimes he scores the best in Mathematics among his classmates and he plans to get
an “A” in Mathematics in the HKCEE. He has joined a Mathematics interest group
which is for students who excel in Mathematics and which trains them for inter-school
Mathematics contest called “Mathematics Olympics”. With clear plan and hope, he
will stay in Hong Kong and study university here. He wants to honour Fukien by
attaining high achievements in Hong Kong. Compared with his school performance in
homeland, his performance in Hong Kong has improved.
Like the cases of accommodative adaptation, Chiu receives sufficient support from his
school. He thinks his teachers are helpful in his adaptation; the teachers also recognize
his talent in Mathematics and train him for inter-school Mathematics contest. Holding
a positive dual frame of reference regarding the opportunity structure, Chiu perceives
that there are many educational opportunities in Hong Kong and that educational
qualification is necessary for future career. He also compares Fukien with Hong Kong
and thinks that it is easier to be successful in Hong Kong.
Overcoming the “Cultural Difference” Problem
The rationale of assimilative policy rests on the assumption that by means of a “big
melting pot”, culture differences will melt and merge, especially with the mainstream
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culture, hence cultural assimilation and unity will be the result. Yet in actuality this
assumption often does not hold true, as shown from our cases of accommodative
adaptation. Therefore dealing with the issue of cultural difference becomes the
imperative task of immigration policies, especially in the post- industrial era where
immigration is a global phenomenon.
Cultural difference makes adapting to a new socio-cultural environment difficult. But
biculturalism is a way to overcome the cultural difference problem. By sustaining,
instead of abandoning, one’s ethnic culture and language, immigrants in fact become
more ready and efficient in their acquisition of a new language and culture. In this way,
immigrants can be spared the trauma of having to give up their ethnic culture and
language and instead can retain them as cultural capital. Thus, adapting in a bicultural
environment, Chiu continues to speak Fukien language in his family; as well as with his
friends and relatives. Keeping his ethnic identity by speaking Fukien language, he did
not have any sense of inferiority (to the mainstream culture) and because of this
actually find Cantonese easy to learn. His confidence in adaptation is shown in the
following conversation.
HT: What is the most difficult for you to face in the adaptation process?
Chiu: I didn’t find anything difficult in adapting to Hong Kong life.
HT: How about learning Cantonese?
Chiu: I knew only very little bit at the start yet I found it easy to learn.
HT: And English?
Chiu: A little bit difficult. I found I have adapted to it since Form 2 second semester. I
started being able to adapt to teachers’ teaching styles.
Ethnic peer support constitutes a significant part of Chiu’s bicultural adaptation. As
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mentioned previously, he has close supportive relationships with six other schoolmates
of similar socio-cultural background. They are living very nearby in North Point where
many Fukien people settle. They communicate in Fukien language and they like
playing basketball together. They like playing in North Point as they find North Point
more familiar and friendly. Because he can meet his friends at school, Chiu likes going
to school. He finds no great difference between the good friends of his Hong Kong
school and his homeland friends. Also he did not feel his schoolmates treated him
differently when he first arrived Hong Kong. Nor did he experience any discrimination.
HT: Do you and your friends go back together to North Point after school?
Chiu: Sometimes.
HT: Oh, I understand. So you guys feel North Point more familiar and “friendly”?
Chiu: Yes (He smiles).
HT: Where do you like to go for playing?
Chiu: North Point. We seldom go to other places.
HT: Do you meet many people from your homeland in North Point?
Chiu: Yes.
The Family as a “Cultural Broker”
Chiu’s family is a typical immigrant family. His father, mother and brother immigrated
to Hong Kong before Chiu did. They have adapted well to Hong Kong and have now
established some networks with various social groups and institutions. His family
therefore functions as a “cultural broker” linking the mainstream culture in the larger
society to the Fukien culture at home. As such, it enables Chiu to keep his own ethnic
culture and at the same time become familiar with the mainstream culture.
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In addition, Chiu’s parents are serious about his school performance. They give him
more pocket money for good academic results and expect him to go to university. The
role played by his brother who is currently working at China Bank is even more
influential. Chiu consults him every time he encounters any studying problems, and he
also supports Chiu by giving him pocket money. He is indeed a role model for Chiu to
build his confidence in working hard at school and making his living in Hong Kong in
the future.
Though Chiu is still quite new to Hong Kong, he does not miss his homeland or his
“native” lifestyle much. But he does miss his grandmother. When his other family
members immigrated to Hong Kong one by one, his grandmother took care of him in
homeland. Even now he phones his grandmother two or three times a week. All the
same, he considers Hong Kong to be his new home and has not thought of going back to
Fukien to work and live. Instead of thinking about migrating back to homeland, he
wants to convince his grandmother to come to Hong Kong and live together.
HT: Do you miss your grandmother and cousins now?
Chiu: Yes, I do.
HT: Do they think of coming to Hong Kong?
Chiu: They visit Hong Kong sometimes. But they won’t immigrate to Hong Kong.
HT: Did you try to convince your grandmother and cousins to come to Hong Kong?
Chiu: Yes.
It seems that whether the new arrival students are surrounded by co-ethnics or are more
isolated from their ethnic culture has an important impact on their acculturation process
(Gibson, 2001). I have tried to argue that biculturalism which permits immigrant
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minorities to retain their own way of life and their own language is what policy makers
should pursue if they are to help the new arrival students adapt and achieve in Hong
Kong. The cases we have examined so far, be it transitional adaptation,
accommodative adaptation, or bicultural adaptation, are on the whole successful cases
of adaptation. In the next chapter, we will look at what I have called “marginality” cases.
These are new arrival students who lack social support in the host society and who feel
culturally alienated from the new social environment. Their experiences as immigrant
minorities in Hong Kong are unfortunate and unhappy experiences.
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CHAPTER 6
Cultural Difference and Social Isolation - Marginality
In this thesis the voluntary/involuntary immigrants typology serves as one starting
point for analyzing the differential school performance of new arrival students. The
typology assumes that the statuses of “voluntary immigrant” and “involuntary
minority” can be clearly defined and can remain stable over time. Voluntary
immigrants are also assumed to have a positive dual frame of reference through which
they view and make use of schooling in the host society positively for socio-economic
advancement. For a similar reason, voluntary immigrants are believed to have a high
learning motivation which in general leads to their good performance at school. I will
demonstrate in this chapter that some voluntary immigrants who before arrival had a
high motivation to do well at school and who had positive views of Hong Kong’s
opportunity structure lost their incentive to perform well and indeed became alienated
from the society soon after their arrival. These students fall into our ‘marginality’
category. These cases suggest that the immigrants’ initial views of the host society
cannot be assumed to be static or to remain constant overtime, as the cultural ecological
theory has assumed. They also point to the importance of examining the immigration
experience as a process. One main objective of this chapter is to explore those factors
and circumstances, and the processes, which have contributed to the alienation and
marginality of new arrival students.
In examining such processes, we will again refer to the concepts of social capital and
cultural capital. Our contention is that these two forms of capital play an important role
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in shaping the new arrival students’ process of adaptation. Whether the students became
marginalized or not depends to a significant extent on the amount of social and cultural
capital they possess, as well as on their ability to accumulate further capital and to
activate the capital during their adaptation in the host society. In other words, their
initial views of Hong Kong society, their motivation to achieve, and their feelings of
attachment to or alienation from the society change as their fortunes (in terms of
accumulation and activation of cultural capital) in the host society change.
In what follows, we will examine the last type of adaptation – Marginality. The
situation of marginality, which refers to structural and cultural alienation, is attributable
to the limited capital which the new arrival students possess and to their failure in
activating such capital in the new socio-cultural environment of the host society. As
will be shown below, students experiencing significant linguistic and cultural
differences, and yet not receiving sufficient social support from peers, school and
family by and large fail to adapt positively to the host society and find themselves in the
situation of anomie. Such “marginalized” students often suffer from low self-esteem
and this has a negative impact on their student identity. The consequences are usually
poor performance in school, depression, deviant behaviour and some kind of
psychological disturbance.
Some Cases of Marginality - The Case of Wai
Since his arrival in 1992, Wai has been discovering many conflicts between the
socio-cultural environment of Hong Kong and his own perceptions, values and lifestyle
which he has carried with him from the Mainland. He also lacks social support in the
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host society. Over time he perceives that he is alienated from the new society and
believes that he is destined to stay in a marginal position in the society.
Having lived with his grandmother for three years in his homeland Chiu Chow, Wai
arrived at Hong Kong in May 1992. Before that his mother and elder brother
immigrated in 1989. Wai came from a reasonably good family background. His
parents both work in a china and grocery store and they are paid decently with a joint
monthly income of about HK$30,000 to 40,000. His elder brother finished Form 5 in
Hong Kong and he is now working in the publishing department of a newspaper
company. This four-member family lives in a self-owned flat in Hung Hom.
In one sense Wai came to Hong Kong for family union, but his father applied for the
immigration of Wai and his elder brother also for another reason -- better education.
His father cared about their children’s education and he believed that Hong Kong could
provide them with better education. Wai agreed with his father’s belief at the time of
his coming as he said, “Because I was a student at that time, education was important to
me. Better education is a stronger reason than family reunion for me to immigrate to
Hong Kong.”
In spite of this, he cannot now agree with his father any more for he has been facing
many obstacles in his education and discovering various drawbacks of the Hong Kong
education system. When Wai arrived at Hong Kong in May 1995, he had to take the
final examination immediately in June. After the examination, his father told him to
repeat primary four again lest he could not follow the curriculum thereafter. In the
research interview he sighed that he was in fact very reluctant to follow his father’s
advice. Without support from the school and other institutional agents, he could not
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cope with the high level of English in Hong Kong schools; even now he suffers from
many learning difficulties due to his poor English foundation. Wai also dislikes the
Hong Kong education system because of its examination-oriented nature. He
comments that Hong Kong education should be not treated as real education as Hong
Kong students study simply for examinations and not for the pursuit of knowledge.
Despite the fact that he has been here for about six years, he still cannot (and does not
choose to) accommodate himself to the culture of education in Hong Kong.
He used to come first or second in primary school but having joined a band-one
English-as-medium-of- instruction boys’ school (the same school of Man and Kin), his
academic performance has been declining from Form one onwards. It is because there
were a lot subjects taught in English. He failed two times in examination in Form six.
His parents are very concerned about his difficulties in studying, so is he. He told me,
“They think that if I can’t deal with my studies, then I should leave school for jobs.
They won’t allow me to repeat. Indeed, I don’t want to repeat myself.” He in fact
wants to work as an editor in a publishing company or a researcher of Chinese History
in Hong Kong in the future. He therefore wants to get good results in “A” Level
examination then he can study Chinese or Chinese History at the Chinese University of
Hong Kong or the Baptist University. He chooses his career simply out of his own
interest, without any idea of getting ahead in the host society or climbing up the social
ladder. He does not take into account job opportunities available in this career field. He
simply justifies his career plan by saying that Hong Kong provides a more liberal
environment for writing or research.
In his adaptation Wai receives minimal social support from institutional agents. Since
primary four when he arrived at Hong Kong, he has only two to three schoolmates with
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whom he still keeps in touch. He leads a lifestyle which is very different from that of
the Hong Kong mainstream youth. In leisure time he likes reading books and articles.
He does not like activities other than reading. During recess at school, he likes to
discuss Chinese History but only very few students are interested in it. Unlike Wing,
whom we considered earlier in our discussion of “Instrumental Adaptation”, and who
shares similar culture and value as Hong Kong local born peers, Wai finds it hard to
establish a supportive social network with his mainstream counterparts. He also thinks
that his teachers, especially those in his secondary school (where elitism is valued), are
not helpful at all. He maintains that the most important thing is to depend on one’s own
effort. But by himself alone, he cannot handle all the problems he has been facing as a
new arrival, and he told me, “I have lost the motivation to learn and I feel powerless all
the time. I just let things go on naturally.”
Some Cases of Marginality – the Brothers Kim and Yung
Another two cases of marginality are two brothers – Kim and Yung from Hoi Fung of
Guongdong. They have been in Hong Kong for about a year and they are now in
Primary five. They are from a lower class family background, and they have little
social and cultural capitals. They live in a public estate in Ap Kei Chau of Hong Kong
Island.
The brothers are voluntary immigrants and they both have a positive dual frame of
reference through which they view Hong Kong as much better than their homeland.
Their parents tell them that they cannot have a bright future in Hong Kong without
good educational qualifications. They also learn from their parents that Hong Kong
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offers them better education and that it is easier to be successful in Hong Kong than in
the Mainland. Nevertheless, Yung still holds the view that “one needs to be a Hong
Kong person and to know the system well if one wants to benefit from Hong Kong’s
plentiful opportunities. He is not confident about becoming a “Hong Kong person”.
HT: Do you want to be a Hong Kong person?
Yung: I am not so familiar with Cantonese.
HT: If you can handle Cantonese well, do you want to be a Hong Kong person?
(He thinks for a while and nods)
HT: Why?
Yung: Mainland people are called “Tai Luk Chai 大陸仔” by others.
The greatest adaptation problem which they face is in studying. Yung says that the
happiest thing in his adaptation process is his improvement in English whereas both
brothers find that bad academic result is the unhappiest thing. Owing to the lack of
social support and with little cultural capital, Kim and Yung are low achievers at school
though they have high learning motivation. Yung ranked 28th out of 33 in class and
failed in English within the first year of arrival. Kim is around average in school
performance. They are more hardworking than they were in the Mainland because they
find studying in Hong Kong very challenging.
The only special social support which they received from school is the special course
for new arrival students organized by Caritas, a Catholic non-governmental
organization. Teachers of this course can teach in more details in Chinese hence Kim
and Yung find the course very helpful. They also find the classmates of this course
better than those in the day school. However only new arrival students who have
arrived within one year are eligible for the course. If such course was offered one more
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time, both brothers would like to join again.
Being over-aged in class (older than their peers for three to four years), they feel
pressured to get acquainted with their peers. They do not like joining the
extra-curricular activities at school. But they join the tutorial class offered by the
Aberdeen Kai Fong Welfare Association and they play table tennis with the new arrival
students there. They prefer playing with new arrival children because they feel more at
ease with new arrival students. Obviously they are looking for social support and an
environment where they can feel at home.
HT: If you were the school principal, what would you do in order to help new arrival
students adapt?
Yung: I would design a class that is specially for new arrival students.
Kim: I will give them more tutorial class and more activities.
Cultural Difference, Lack of Social Support and Marginality
The cases of marginality show that new arrival students from a background which is
linguistically and culturally different from Hong Kong would very likely find
themselves alienated from the society if they do not have adequate social support from
the community. Cultural and value difference is one of the greatest adaptation
problems for the new arrival students of “marginality”. We may now return to the case
of Wai for illustration. The case of Wai shows that his value and lifestyle is very
different from those of the local born youth.
HT: What was your greatest adaptation problem?
Wai: (He thinks for a while seriously) I think it should be the way we think. Hong Kong
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people and I think differently.
HT: Was it not English language the greatest problem? You really believe “thinking”
was the greatest problem?
Wai: Yes, “thinking” was the greatest problem, though English was still a great
problem. As I came from a farming village, I led a simple life. Generally, Hong Kong
students like to play causally (玩玩下), and dress according to fashion. Hong Kong is
more urbanized too.
HT: How are the lifestyles different?
Wai: As I said earlier, our interests differ. There is almost no student interested in
Chinese culture and language in Hong Kong. There are far more students who have
interest in Chinese culture and language in the Mainland.
HT: What do you consider to be the important indicators of success in Hong Kong?
Wai: People in general think having money, a flat and a car means success. But to me,
being responsible to oneself means success. I don’t agree with the value people
generally hold here and I don’t follow that trend.
Wai comes from a family which values education and he himself did have high learning
motivation while in the Mainland. Upon his arrival in Hong Kong, he originally had
high hopes on Hong Kong education and believed he would have better educational and
occupational opportunities in Hong Kong than in the Mainland. His devotion to the
pursuit of knowledge (especially Chinese Literature and History) should be a valuable
cultural capital for academic success. However the cultural capital that Wai possesses
cannot be turned into an advantage in Hong Kong’s education system where success in
education requires more than just an interest in the pursuit of knowledge. The
examination-oriented education system of Hong Kong requires another kind of interest
and ability to achieve academic success. It requires the ability and willingness to
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memorize and reproduce texts, and it requires examination tactics. Such ability and
orientation are the important cultural capital for academic success in the Hong Kong
context. And the local born students embody this kind of cultural capital. But Wai did
not acquire this cultural capital in his Mainland school and family nor could he acquire
it within a short time by simply learning from the local born students. Indeed because
of the difference in the culture of learning, he is alienated from the mainstream peers.
HT: As you are interested in Chinese, do you excel in Chinese?
Wai: Not exactly. I can only do well in composition but not in the “textbook part”
which requires me to memorize a lot. Indeed I got third prize in Chinese essay
composition last year and I am the champion this year. I don’t accept this curriculum
that simply demands students to memorize lots of stuff. I don’t think my ability in
Chinese can be reflected even if I get an “A” in HKCEE Chinese. Examinations mean
little to me so I lack the motivation to excel in examinations here..
Wai does not have friends to share the problems he faces in Hong Kong and support
each other in studying. His alienation from mainstream peers is the result of cultural,
linguistic and value differences. He cannot gain support from them and he finds
himself in a state of alienation. In other words his lack of cultural capital handicaps him
in the attainment of social capital, which in turn aggravates his marginality and leads to
his poor school performance.
Wai also lacks another kind of cultural capital for establishing supportive network with
institutional agents; he cannot speak Cantonese with the Hong Kong accent. Because
of the accent issue, he experienced discrimination by local born peers in his secondary
school and he has lost confidence in getting along with them now.
HT: Did you find discrimination towards new arrivals in your experience?
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Wai: I think not but maybe the local students of my present school are so full of
nonsense that they make fun of my “homeland accent”. I don’t mind much about this.
They don’t have bad intention but they do it simply for entertainment.
HT: Do you like being made fun like this?
Wai: I don’t like this, of course. But I shouldn’t mind too much.
Wai understood well that his homeland culture is deeply embedded in him and that the
new cultural capital for attaining academic success in Hong Kong cannot be acquired in
a short time. He is pessimistic about his future and thinks that his problem cannot be
solved easily. He attributes his adaptation failure to the lack of social support from the
very beginning of his adaptation process. He thinks that he is no more than just a new
arrival student.
HT: If you were the school principal, how would you change the existing school or
educational system?
Wai: It’s very difficult to say. A single school can’t do too much. The trend is like that.
If it is to change, I suggest starting the change from kindergarten. I believe that any
change in secondary school would be in vain if no change happens in kindergarten.
Like the case of my poor English, the problem is my poor foundation since primary
school.
HT: And how can you as the principal help the new arrival students?
Wai: Mmm… . Do what my school is doing now that is arranging some remedial classes,
especially for those who have just arrived in Hong Kong. It is believed that the NEW
arrivals have great motivation to learn. So if you launch this remedial service upon
students’ arrival, they should benefit and the service should be effective.
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Accumulation of Capital and School Performance: The Cultural Capital of
English
Wai wants to excel in education but due to the lack of social support and the cultural
capital for making success in Hong Kong’s education system, he fails to do so. In the
interview he showed his regret many times that he could not do better academically
when he first arrived in Hong Kong. He thinks that if he could do well in English from
the very beginning, he can have the capital for further academic success and he can
keep his positive student identity and his good academic results.
Wai: I got academic prizes, say coming first, second or third in class, in mainland
school for years but not here. I may lose my motivation to excel in Hong Kong schools.
I may get better results now if I could do better when I first came here.
HT: What academic performance did you have on average in primary school?
Wai: On average, I may say I came second in class. When I was in Form 1, I ranked
about 50 in our form because lots of subjects were taught in English. My results got
worse from Form 1 onwards. I now manage to rank among the better 80 of my form.
HT: Did you work harder when studying had become more difficult?
Wai: Mmm… Because of English, I don’t pay much attention to any subject involving
English. I did regret that I didn’t work hard enough in learning English. I do have hard
times in dealing with English now.
Another student in our study, Man (of Transitional Adaptation), and Wai are studying in
the same school, but their adaptation pathways and academic outcomes are different.
With the free English tuition lessons from his primary school teachers, Man has solved
his English problem and started accumulating the cultural capital of English upon his
arrival, and hence underwent smooth adaptation in secondary school. In comparison,
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with no support for English learning, Wai could not accumulate the cultural capital of
English in primary school. After he discovered the English problem in Form one, he
did try hard to solve the problem by himself but he failed. His attitude towards learning
changed thereafter.
HT: Do you know why you are doing worse in school?
Wai: It should be lack of motivation. After several failures in form 1, I just aim at
getting a pass in exams. I just take exams causally now.
HT: How do you treat your English problem now?
Wai: O... my solution is to postpone the problem. (得過且過) I postpone the problem
as long as I could meet the minimum requirement every time. So my English is very bad
even at this moment.
HT: But you could manage to pass every time.
Wai: However I don’t think it’s the case now as Form six English is a lot more difficult
than that in Form five. My personal problems in English are listening and oral. For
listening, I always have problems in knowing what is said and I can’t follow. So I’m in
a poor position.
Class, Family and the Transmission of Capital
Wai fails to sustain his learning motivation as the cultural capital acquired through
socialization in family and Mainland school cannot be activated in Hong Kong’s
education system. This is one scenario of marginality. Now we are going to examine
another scenario where the social and cultural capitals possessed by the family are
limited. These families are of lower-class background. For this purpose, we return to
the cases of the two brothers Kim and Yung.
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Kim and Yung came from an underprivileged family which lacks social, cultural and
economic capitals. Their father has immigrated to Hong Kong for five years. With his
primary two educational qualification attained in Mainland, he can only have a
lower-class job. Being illiterate, their mother works as a dish-washing worker in a
restaurant. She has arrived in Hong Kong for about two years and she still does not
know Cantonese. She can simply speak Hoi Fung dialect at work and in the family.
The eldest brother of the family has finished Form one in the Mainland and came to
Hong Kong in 1998. Aged 17, the brother wants to work but he cannot get a job. So he
remains unemployed and does housework at home. All five members of this family
depend on a monthly income of HK$16,000. Both Kim and Yung think that it is not
enough.
Kim and Yung believe that “class does not matter for a student’s performance in
school”. They have a high motivation to do well at school but this does not bring
academic success immediately. Yung kept failing in English within the first year of
arrival and ranked 28th out of 33 in class; whereas Kim can keep his average results but
he finds English very difficult. Even though their parents are very serious about their
studies, they parents have little cultural capital in terms of knowledge to transmit to
their children (through within-family social capital). The children therefore need to
depend on other institutional agents, say community centre, for adaptation and
advancement. It is very likely that if Kim and Yung cannot accumulate necessary and
sufficient capital like English in the initial stage of their adaptation, they will lose the
learning motivation gradually and remain in the condition of marginality like Wai.
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Conclusion: Process of Adaptation and the Change in the Dual Frame of
Reference
This chapter has been an attempt to examine the process of adaptation in terms of the
possession of cultural and social capital, the activation and accumulation of cultural
capital in the process of adaptation, as well as how the dual frame of reference held by
new arrival students changes in the course of adaptation. I will use the case of Wai to
illustrate the change in his dual frame of reference in the following section.
Wai came to Hong Kong on his own will. Yet six years after his arrival he commented
that he came owing to a “wrong concept”. The “wrong concept” here refers to the
wrong perception that Hong Kong education is better than the Mainland’s. When he
found that his cultural capital could not be activated in the Hong Kong school context,
and when he failed to accommodate himself to the culture of education in Hong Kong,
he realized he had been wrong about the Hong Kong education system. What was
positive in his initial dual frame of reference now turns to be negative.
HT: Why did you come to Hong Kong?
Wai: My grandfather was in Hong Kong first and then he called my father to come.
Why we came was all due to a wrong concept. We thought that Hong Kong education
was better than Mainland China’s.
HT: But you don’t think so now, right?
Wai: I really regret having come when I think of this. Indeed, Hong Kong education is
worse than the mainland’s.
HT: So you came to Hong Kong voluntarily and with hopes.
Wai: Yes really! I did have hopes that time.
HT: When did you find you regret coming to Hong Kong?
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Wai: Mmm… when I was in about Form three and Form four as at that time I had been
more mature and understood the situation. (He utters for quite a while) I came to Hong
Kong for two reasons; one is education quality, another is family union.
HT: Have you ever thought of returning to homeland?
Wai: Well… (He thinks for a little while) I don’t think so. Though there is something
bad in Hong Kong, there is also something good. Hong Kong is more liberal.
HT: You do you mean by “liberal”?
Wai: There are lots of limitations and information barriers in Mainland China. But in
Hong Kong (he thinks for a little while), there is no great consequence if you have done
something say protest, though I don’t protest. Also if I go back, I will be alone and I
don’t like to be alone.
HT: You don’t suggest the whole family moving back to homeland
Wai: I don’t.
HT: Does your father agree with the viewpoint you now have that people have wrong
conceptions about immigration to Hong Kong?
Wai: I don’t discuss this issue with him. But I think that is the wrong conception of
mainlanders in the past, and also mainlanders of today.
From Wai’s case, we can see that the positive dual frame of reference, which Ogbu and
the cultural ecological theorists assume to be characteristic of voluntary immigrants, is
by no means an unchanging frame. It evolves over time in accordance with the
immigrants’ experiences and encounters in the host society. Because of this, we have to
question the ‘static’ assumption in the cultural ecological theory in this regard. Apart
from this, we need also to take note of another assumption in the cultural ecological
theory – the assumption that the belief in better opportunities will lead the voluntary
immigrants to work hard for a better future in the host society. This assumption does not
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apply in Wai’s case. Wai is not concerned about the instrumental value of education,
that is, he does not believe that he should work hard at school for better jobs. He is
rather concerned about the intrinsic value of education. He is simply not concerned
with the view that better educational qualifications will lead to better occupational
opportunities. (Indeed Wai does not care about occupational opportunities; he wants
just a career matching his interest). Wai’s case demonstrates the complexity of the
immigrant experience. In short we cannot assume, as the cultural ecological theorists
have assumed, that voluntary immigrants, because of the positive dual frame of
reference they hold at the time of their immigration, will remain motivated
instrumentally to attain success and a better future in the host society. The immigrants
have other concerns and values than instrumental ones.
HT: Do you think there are lots of educational opportunities in Hong Kong?
Wai: I don’t think so. The “‘education” now we are having should not be termed
education. HKCEE and A-Level should not be called education. Hong Kong education
just teaches you how to do well in exams. Students know only very little. I have great
interest in Chinese literature and language. Yet one discouraging fact is that the
teachers here tend to cater to the Chinese standard of local students and hence make
the subject very exam-oriented. Because of this, the subject has become meaningless.
The average standard of Chinese of our schoolmates is not good. What is taught tends
to be easy. It is very difficult for our teachers to teach something academic.
HT: Is it only the case for Chinese?
Wai: The same applies to other subjects as well.
HT: Is it quite obvious that in Hong Kong better educational qualification can bring
better occupational opportunities.
Wai: Well, I don’t think so. I think it’s not the trend now that educational qualification
matters much; working experience matters more. Yet of course, if you want to get
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promoted to a high position in the government, you need a piece of diploma. For
general positions, people don’t consider your diploma much.
HT: What do you think the factors for academic success in Hong Kong are?
Wai: Hard work and willingness to memorize texts.
HT: How about students who are rich?
Wai: Of course, they can employ private tutors. Many exam tactics are taught in
private tutorial class.
HT: Do you look for those tactics?
Wai: No, I don’t. They are not for the pursuit of knowledge.
HT: Did you hold this belief when you were in homeland?
Wai: Yes, perhaps it’s because of the kind of education we had there.
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CHAPTER 7
Conclusion
A Brief Review
The studies on new arrivals from Mainland China were triggered by the concern that
immigrants from the Mainland face many problems in adapting to life in Hong Kong.
Many non-governmental organizations and government departments have tried to find
out the needs of the new arrivals by general surveys with a view to providing them with
better services. It is assumed that assimilation is what the new arrivals look for, and that
assimilation can benefit the society and economy of Hong Kong. The academic studies
on new arrival students are dominated by social surveys as well. All these studies are
helpful in providing the basic information about new arrivals, and giving us a general
profile of new arrival students. What is lacking is in-depth research which aims at
providing us with descriptive details of the problems and hardships which new arrival
students encounter in adapting to life in Hong Kong. This present study is an attempt to
fill this gap in research on new arrival students.
Having reviewed the local studies on new arrival students, I went to the field (by
in-depth interviews and some observations) to explore the key adaptation concerns or
problems of the students. The most striking discovery is that the new arrival students
(whom I interviewed) are in many ways different from one another. Some students
found their adaptation process smooth and easy; whereas others experienced
discriminations and cultural alienation. The findings from my study suggest that one
cannot treat new arrival student as one homogeneous group who seek better services for
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faster assimilation into the mainstream Hong Kong society. In fact findings from our
14 respondents show that the new arrival students often do not network with one
another or form their own social group. My study points to the importance of
understanding the new arrival students as individuals each having his or her unique
backgrounds, history, and experiences of adaptation to the host society.
By probing the new arrival students’ adaptation experiences, perceptions and
subjectivities, this study therefore sets out to delineate the different adaptation
pathways that the new arrival students have gone through, and to explain their
differential school performance. A typology of adaptations, which I developed through
considering my research data together with some existing concepts, is used to
conceptualize the adaptation of new arrival students in Hong Kong. The five modes of
adaptation are namely “Transitional Adaptation”, “Instrumental Adaptation”,
“Accommodative Adaptation”, “Bicultural Adaptation” and “Marginality”. They
indicate different scenarios of assimilation, accommodation or alienation with regard to
the social structure and culture of Hong Kong.
In this thesis, the above modes of adaptation are not meant to be static but are conceived
as dynamic ongoing adaptation processes. As such we analyze adaptation as a process
and it is the process of activation and accumulation of (cultural and social) capitals.
Using social capital and cultural capital as the key analytic concepts, the research
findings show that supportive networks is the key determinant differentiating the
divergent adaptation pathways. Supportive networks, as a form of social capital, is
necessary for activating the cultural capital the new arrival students possessed. The
amount of accumulated capital is also relevant to further advancement in the ongoing
adaptation process.
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At the same time, in the light of the cultural ecological theory, the differential school
performance of the 14 respondents is also explained by the notion dual frame of
reference. The cultural ecological theory has been widely and effectively used in
explaining the inter-group differences in academic achievement in multiethnic
countries such as the United States. Nevertheless, by examining the process of
adaptation in terms of activation and accumulation of capitals, this study attempts to
shed light on the explanatory power of cultural ecological theory in the context of
Hong Kong. When individual cases are examined comparatively, it is found that
students who possess sufficient social and cultural capital for academic success
generally hold a positive dual frame of reference in the sense that they view their
opportunities in Hong Kong to be better than those in the Mainland. In other words, it is
not the positive dual frame of reference alone, but this frame reinforced by the
availability of social and cultural capital, that contributes positively to the new arrival
students adaptation to Hong Kong society. In this sense, social and cultural capital are
indeed valuable for smooth adaptation and good performance at school. And it is in
terms of these variables that I have examined the cases of Transitional Adaptation,
Instrumental Adaptation, Accommodative Adaptation, Bicultural Adaptation, and
lastly Marginality. In the case of Marginality, what was originally a positive dual frame
of reference turns out to be negative. It is because even though the students have tried
to do well in education with their anticipation o f a ‘better tomorrow’ in Hong Kong, due
to the lack of cultural capital and social capital, their effort is in vain. They then begin
to think that Hong Kong does not really provide them with such a good future and good
life as the Mainland does. They feel themselves socially isolated and alienated from the
mainstream society. They even regret having come to Hong Kong.
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In the following, we will round up the key points of the thesis by reviewing firstly the
notion activation and accumulation of capitals; secondly the typology of adaptation
and lastly implications of the present study.
Activation and Accumulation of Capital
In their article entitled “Moments of social inclusion and exclusion: race, class, and
cultural capital in the family-school relationships” which was published in the
international journal Sociology of Education, Lareau and Horvat (1999) make use of
Bourdieu’s concepts of capital i.e. social capital and cultural capital to examine the
process of social reproduction in education. Pinpointing the distinction between the
possession and activation of capital, Lareau and Horvat highlight the need to “look at
the context in which the capital is situated, the efforts by individuals to activate their
capital, the skill with which individuals activate their capital, and the institutional
response to the activation” (Lareau and Horvat, 1999). They argue that the value of
capital is not fixed but depends on the social settings or fields. Lastly, the authors quote
the analogy of a card game (Bourdieu, 1976; quoted by Lareau and Horvat, 1999) to
illustrate the process of possession and activation of capital.
In a card game (the field of interaction), the players (individuals) are all dealt
cards (capital). Yet each card and each hand have different values. Moreover,
the value of each hand shifts according to the explicit rules of the game (the
field of interaction) that is being played. Apart from having a different set of
cards (capital), each player relies on a different set of skills (habitus) to play the
cards (activate the capital) (Lareau and Horvat, 1999:53)
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Capital, as the term itself indicates, refers to a value which can be accumulated. Hence
in this thesis, I add the notion accumulation to the above conceptual framework so as to
explain the process in which individuals acquire culture, education and educational
qualifications for equipping themselves with the skills to “play the card” and hence to
attain further socio-economic advancement. This set of conceptual tools can
supplement the explanatory power of the positive dual frame of reference, as I have also
pointed out above.
Put simply, the process of adaptation involves firstly the possession of capital prior to
immigration; secondly the activation of such capital in the new socio-cultural context;
and finally the accumulation of capital for further activation along the student career. I
will present below the capital involved in these three stages.
Possession
In terms of cultural capital there are
1. proficiency of languages i.e. Cantonese (with Hong Kong accent) and English;
2. cultural proximity i.e. proximity between Hong Kong mainstream student/peer
culture and home culture; and
3. culture of learning in the family and the school
Whereas for human capital there are
1. academic competence;
2. educational level of parents; and
3. adaptation competence.
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Activation
The above-mentioned capital requires social capital for activation. There are two kinds
of social capital:
1. supportive networks with the institutional agents of school, teachers,
mainstream peers/high achievers, ethnic support group, church or community
centre; and
2. within-family social capital (i.e. relationship between the student and her/his
parents, siblings and other members) for the transmission of parents’ human
capital to children and for acquiring the family’s culture of learning.
Accumulation
Once activated, the original capital facilitates the accumulation of further cultural
capital. This accumulation can take the forms of
1. outstanding school performance i.e. good academic results, positive student
identity, and high learning motivation;
2. proficiency of English language; and
3. coping strategies for Hong Kong (examination-oriented) educational system
The Typology of Adaptation
Making use of the set of conceptual tools ment ioned above, I would now like to go
through the typology of adaptations in this study. This typology aims at delineating the
different scenarios of assimilation, accommodation or alienation with regard to both the
social structure and culture of the host society.
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Transitional Adaptation
Transitional Adaptation is a relative easy and straightforward passage to a new home.
Students who undergo “transitional adaptation” are those coming from a homeland
with insignificant cultural differences from Hong Kong, and who receive sufficient
social support from institutional agents in the host society. Examples are those who
come from Cantonese-speaking origins having a culture similar to that of Hong Kong
and who have established supportive networks with their peers or school. Linguistic
and cultural proximity (to the mainstream Hong Kong culture) endows the students
with cultural capital to build supportive networks with the institutional agents. These
supportive networks, as social capital, in turn enable the activation of cultural capital
which the students possess and facilitate the accumulation of further cultural capital.
The accumulation of further cultural capital, for instance English, is conducive to
academic advancement.
Given the smooth adaptation to school life, the students hold a positive dual frame of
reference. They generally view Hong Kong society, especially its opportunity structure,
in a positive light. They perceive that Hong Kong provides more educational
opportunities and occupational opportunities than their homeland does. Hence
immigration means a “hopeful” change to them and it has a positive effect on the
students’ motivation to do well at school. Students undergoing Transitional Adaptation
are generally high achievers with a strong student identity. Having adapted i.e.
assimilated to Hong Kong, they are just like the locally-borns both in their own eyes
and from the views of their teachers and peers.
Instrumental Adaptation
Students going through Instrumental Adaptation are those from linguistic and cultural
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backgrounds similar to those of Hong Kong but they do not receive, or have not yet
received, sufficient social support from the host society. The “cold” experiences,
sometimes even discriminative ones, after their arrival in Hong Kong make them feel
alienated from the society. They are skeptical about taking root in Hong Kong
whole-heartedly.
All the same, such structural alienation is simply transitional. It is because the students’
linguistic and cultural proximity (to the mainstream culture) provides them with
cultural capital to become active social agents in search of social support from
institutional agents. Once supportive networks with the institutional agents are
established, they will follow the pathway of “Transitional Adaptation” and have their
cultural capital and human capital activated.
Their perception of immigration is instrumental because their concern is about how
they can utilize the opportunities available during their stay in Hong Kong. Staying in
Hong Kong, they hope for attaining better educational qualifications and thereafter
getting a decent salary from a Hong Kong job for the sake of their future
socio-economic advancement. They view the greater educational opportunities
afforded by Hong Kong and the high transferability of Hong Kong educational
credentials to other places (cultural capital of higher value) as justification for the
hardships along their adaptation process. They adopt a positive dual frame of reference
as “voluntary minorities” do. They generally have good school performance.
Instrumental Adaptation means also a flexible adaptation strategy and the students
attempt to make the best use of what they find attractive in both Hong Kong and their
homeland. Given the closer ties between post-colonial Hong Kong and Mainland
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China economically and socially, they anticipate having a lifestyle such as working
hard for a job in Hong Kong during weekdays and enjoying life during week-ends back
in their homeland or other places in the Mainland. They can be said to adopt a
trans-territorial identity.
In comparison with the other four modes of adaptation, Instrumental Adaptation is a
more temporary type of adaptation. As students undergoing Instrumental Adaptation
can act as a active social agent, adaptation means time for acquiring social support from
the social institutions, and therefore activating and accumulating their capitals.
Accommodative Adaptation
Accommodative Adaptation refers to accommodation to the social groups and
relationships but not to the mainstream culture. It can also be termed as “structural
accommodation with cultural alienation”.
Upon their arrival, students undergoing Accommodative Adaptation experience warm
reception from the institutional agents like teachers, locally-born students or church
which try to establish supportive networks with them. Although they receive social
support and “acceptance” from the mainstream society, their culture (i.e. values,
lifestyles, ethnic identity, and their ambivalent feelings about immigration) is seldom
taken care of. Their culture is not fully compatible with that of their Hong Kong peers.
Without ethnic social support, they feel that they are culturally marginalized as
compared with the mainstream students, and they tend to develop a mono-ethnic
perception of Hong Kong culture and society. Also, they view that the Hong Kong
lifestyle is less desirable than their lifestyle in homeland. Hence they do not perceive
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Hong Kong as a new home that accommodates their own cultures and values, nor do
they feel they can become “full members” of the society.
The dual frame of reference – that comparison between “home” and the host society
-adopted by new arrival students coming from a different cultural background is indeed
more complex than the cultural ecological theory suggests. The cultural ecological
theory argues that voluntary immigrants on the whole look forward to a “better
tomorrow” in the host society. That “better tomorrow” is the positive element in that
dual frame of reference. I find that the students (with cultural difference) have in fact
“two dual frames of reference”: one makes reference to the host society’s opportunity
structures in comparison with those back home; the other makes reference to the
cultures of the two places. In the case of Accommodative Adaptation, we have seen
that although the students think positively Hong Kong’s opportunity structure, they
hold rather negative views about Hong Kong’s values and lifestyles or in short Hong
Kong culture. For them it is not a simple “better tomorrow” in Hong Kong. They are
ambivalent about Hong Kong society.
Bicultural Adaptation
Bicultural Adaptation refers to accommodation both to the social structures and the
culture of the mainstream society. Borrowing the term of Margaret Gibson, I would
also describe Bicultural Adaptation as “accommodation without assimilation”.
Students going through Bicultural Adaptation are those who experience significant
linguistic and cultural differences in Hong Kong, but who receive sufficient social
support from institutional agents and the family. The support embraces support which
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is ethnic in nature.
Adapting in a supportive socio-cultural context, such students despite linguistic and
cultural differences adapt to Hong Kong biculturally. Supportive socio-cultural
contexts include school culture which accommodates various ethnic languages, values
and cultures, and social life in ethnic peer groups or dialect associations, and a family
which retains an ethnic lifestyle. These contexts act as “cultural brokers” which
connect the students with social institutions on one hand; and protect the students from
adaptation hardships or discriminations on the other. Agencies of ethnic support
function as a source of social capital; they help to sustain the students’ ethnic culture
and identity.
Bicultural Adaptation is a kind of “additive acculturation” (Gibson, 1991). Instead of
abandoning their ethnic culture and then assimilating into the Hong Kong society,
students adopting Bicultural Adaptation find it comfortable to keep their ethnic identity
and way of life on one hand; while achieving academic success in the mainstream
society on the other. Sustaining their ethnic identity, they want to honour their
homeland by doing well in education in Hong Kong.
Marginality
Marginality is the scenario of both structural and cultural alienation. Students
experiencing significant linguistic and cultural differences in Hong Kong, and yet
receiving insufficient social support and recognition from peers, school and family by
and large fail to adapt to the new environment and find themselves alienated. Students
of Marginality are on the whole low achievers and have lost the learning motivation due
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to repeated failures in schoolwork.
Unlike the cases of Accommodative Adaptation or Bicultural Adaptation, the students
of Marginality do not experience warm reception from the host society’s institutional
agents and hence these students lack supportive social networks. Lacking social capital,
they find it hard to activate whatever cultural capital they possess. In addition, these
students are also deficient in cultural capital in that they come from backgrounds
culturally quite different from Hong Kong and they come from deprived families which
have little cultural capital to pass onto their children. Thus for instance they lack
competence in Cantonese which increases the difficulty they face in building social
relationships with local peers. Whilst other new arrival students start adapting and
accumulating their capitals, students of Marginality cannot help but remain
marginalized and alienated from the host society.
Students who are marginalized in their adaptation experiences usually lose their
motivation to learn and to achieve; hence they are indifferent about the opportunity
structure of the host society. Owing to structural and cultural alienation, they miss their
life in homeland and consider it superior to the life in Hong Kong. Such “marginalized”
students often suffer from low self-esteem which negatively impact on their student
identity. Apart from poor school performance, the consequences of Marginality are
usually deviant behaviour, depression and other kinds of psychological disturbance.
Implications
This study examines the interplay between structure (the culture, opportunity structure,
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and social networks of the host society) and agency (the new arrival students) in the
context of immigration adaptation. In the light of cultural ecological theory, it also
attempts to provide a preliminary framework to look at the adaptation experiences and
school performance of new arrival students in Hong Kong.
My findings suggest that the cultural background (values, lifestyles, and language) of
the new arrival students has a significant impact on their ability to adapt to the host
society. But also important is the kind and extent of social support the new arrival
students have in their new socio-cultural environment. It is such differences in
background and availability of social support which account to a large extent for the
new arrival students’ success or failure in adapting to life in Hong Kong as well as in
school performance. I have borrowed a central theme from the cultural ecological
theory in an attempt to make sense of the new arrival students’ adaptation and school
experiences in Hong Kong. That theme – the so-called positive dual frame of
reference – provides a basis for our analysis. The basic issue in this regard is: under
what circumstances would the new arrival students perceive Hong Kong society
positively, and under what conditions would they view it negatively? Or putting it more
directly in the perspective of the positive dual frame of reference, why do some new
arrival students hold positive and optimistic views of Hong Kong and consider it better
than their homeland? Why do some others feel disillusioned about and alienated from
Hong Kong society and regret having come to this place reputed to be the land of
abundant opportunities?
In attempting to answer these questions, I have made use of the concept of cultural
capital to refer to the kind of values, lifestyles, and language the new arrival students
possess before arrival. The more these resemble those of the host society, the more
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cultural capital the new arriva l students have for achieving success in the host society.
At the same time I have used the concept of social capital to refer to the social support
and social networks the new arrival students have in the host society. This social capital
is important in that it helps the activation of cultural capital, and facilitates the
accumulation of further capital (both cultural and social) in the new arrival students’
endeavour to adapt and to achieve in the host society. And it is these two forms of
capital which interact with and impact on the dual frame of reference the new arrival
students have. The more they have such capital, the more successful they are likely to
be in their encounters and careers in the host society, and the more positively they are
going to view the host society. And such positive views are an important source of their
motivation to do well at school, and to strive for success in the host society.
The main implications of this study are therefore, firstly, the importance of attending to
the cultural difference which the new arrival students may face, and in this connection,
the importance of enabling them to sustain their ethnic culture so that they feel at
“home” in a new socio-cultural environment. Secondly, the study points to the
importance of providing social support networks, ideally capable of offering ethnic
support, to facilitate the new arrivals’ adaptation to the host society. It is only then that
they will come to see Hong Kong as offering them the opportunities they look for, as
giving them a “better tomorrow”.
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APPENDIX 1
Interview Questions Background 1. Name of the school, Banding of the school, Age, Arrival date 2. Which class are you in now? 3. What subjects are you now studying? 4. Where were you born? Did you come from there to Hong Kong? 5. What language do you use at home? 6. Where do you live? What type of housing is it? Who are you living with now? 7. Where do your parents work? 8. For how long have your parents and siblings been in HK? 9. Are there any family members still in Mainland China? 10. Why did you come to Hong Kong? 11. Did you choose to come to Hong Kong? If you can choose, do you want to come? (Would you come if you can choose again?) School Basic Questions 1. Are there any differences between your old school and the present school? (students, teachers, amount of schoolwork, curriculum content, school rules, extra-curricular activities) 2. Which grade were you in when you first were admitted to school? 3. What grade were you in when you were in homeland? Perception of Schooling 1. Do you like going to school? 2. Is school learning important to you? How important is it? What do you go to school primarily for? 3. Do you want to do well in school? Why? 4. Do you think you are serious toward learning? Are you now more or less hardworking than you were in Mainland? 5. Are there any changes in academic performance for any subjects in your adaptation process? Why are there such changes?
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Teachers 1. Are the teachers in your school similar to those in your old school in Mainland
China? 2. How are the Hong Kong teachers different from the Mainland’s? 3. Do you like the teachers in your present school? 4. Either in the present school or in your old school, can you give one example of a teacher you like and one example of a teacher you dislike? How is s/he? 5. Do teachers treat you differently from other local born students? If so, can you give me some examples? 6. Do your teachers help or hinder your adaptation to school life in Hong Kong? Or do you ignore the role of your teachers in your adaptation? Schoolwork 1. Which subject (s) do you like and dislike most? Why? Do you attain good results for that subject? 2. Do you feel your schoolwork heavy? Do you think the competition fierce in Hong Kong school? 3. As compared with the Mainland’s curriculum, which subject(s) is/are of higher standard, which lower? 4. Whom do you ask for help when you encounter studies problems? 5. Do you take tutorial class? Extracurricular activities 1. What is a typical day like for you? 2. What extracurricular activities do you join? Do you play any leadership role in the class or clubs? Why? Summing Up 1. What are the things you like and dislike about your school/Hong Kong education? 2. If you could change anything at your school, what would you change? 3. Please talk about one event happened in school that poses impact to your adaptation. 4. If you were the principal, what would you do to help new arrivals? Peers 1. Who are your best classmates now? How are Hong Kong classmates different from those in Mainland? 2. Do classmates treat you differently because you are a new arrival? 1. What do you do in recess and lunch time? With whom?
156
3. What do you do in leisure times, say last weekend? How are those activities different from what you played in Mainland? Is Hong Kong a more interesting place for entertainment (‘play’)? 4. Compared with your life in Mainland, do you play more or less in Hong Kong? 5. In what ways do leisure activities affect your school performance? 6. Who are your friends in Hong Kong? Are they alike your old friends in homeland? 7. In what ways does peer group influence your school performance and conduct, both in Mainland and in Hong Kong? Family 1. Do your parents concern your homework and school performance much? What are their expectations on your education and future career? 2. Are your parents strict or permissive? Are they acted so before you came to Hong Kong? 3. Do they reward and punish you for good and bad school performance? 4. Do you think your role in family has been changed due to your move to Hong Kong? How? 5. Do you elder siblings, if any, help your school work? 6. Do you prefer family life in Mainland of in Hong Kong? Why? 7. If any, how often is there quarrels in your family? For what reasons? 8. What is your father’s and mother’s educational level? 9. How much is your household income? Educational Opportunities and Occupational Aspirations 1. How do you plan for your F.3 final exam/ HKCEE/ HKALE? 2. What is your career aspiration? 3. What is the best way to getting ahead in Hong Kong society? 4. Do you think there are more educational opportunities in Hong Kong? 5. Do you think it is easier to attain (occupational) success in Hong Kong? 6. Do you think new arrivals and Hong Kong residents have an equal chance to do well in school? Why and why not? 7. Do you think you are doing well in school? If not, what prevents you from doing so? 8. Are there any people who have an advantage when it comes to doing well in school? If yes, who are they, and why do they have an advantage? 9. Would you say that the amount of money in somebody’s family affects how well they will do in school? Why and why not? 10. Rate the following factors which determine the success of getting ahead. Hard work, intelligence, ethnic origin, education, wealth, gender, personal contacts,
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luck. Dual frame of reference 1. How did you prepare for the move to Hong Kong? 2. What did you find “Hong Kong” before you arrived? 3. What do you think about Hong Kong people? 4. Do you like Hong Kong lifestyle or homeland lifestyle more? (figure out how the student compare life in Hong Kong and in Mainland) 5. Talk about one impressive event you encountered when you are in Hong Kong. 6. Do you think you are a Hong Kong person? If not, who are you? 7. Do you think you are Chinese? Why? 8. How often do you go back to homeland for visits? Who do your relatives think you are when you are back? 9. How does academic achievement mean to your ethnic identity?
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APPENDIX 2
Education Services for Newly Arrived Children
HKSAR Education Department offers four types of adaptation courses with a viewing
to helping new arrivals’ children adapt to Hong Kong schooling. They are as follows:
1. Induction Programme for Newly Arrived Children from Mainland (60-hour
Adaptation Course)
2. Full- time "Setting-off" Programme for Newly Arrived Children
3. School-Based Support Scheme Grant for Schools with Intake of New Arrival
Children from Mainland
4. Placement Assistance to New Arrival Children from Mainland
Induction Programme for Newly Arrived Children from Mainland
Launched since April 1995, this programme aims at helping new arrivals’ children
adapt to the local social environment and education system
The programme is also called 60-hour Adaptation Course as each class of the
programme lasts for sixty hours. Non-profit-making and non-governmental
organizations operate the programme with the subsidy of the Education Department.
The programme’s target group is children aged from 6 to 15 who have arrived at Hong
Kong from the mainland for less than 1 year, and they can join the programme without
any charge.
These programmes are flexible in nature for meeting needs of individual children and
facilitating the routine of social service agencies. Generally, classes are conducted in
small group of 10-15 children, with content embracing social adaptation, personal
development, and basic learning skills. Agencies can allocate the sixty hours to the
components like knowing the local community and the cultural differences, learning
English and complex Chinese characters, enhancing self- image and so forth.
Full- time "Setting-off" Programme for Newly Arrived Children
From March 2000 onwards, new arrivals’ children are offered this full- time programme
159
before they join the formal classes. Commencement time of the programme is every
year’s March and September, and the duration is about 6 months. It is operated in a
school setting, and the size of each class is around 20.
The programme is mainly to enhance the standard in the English language subject. At
the end of the programme, participants are expected to have learning experience
enhanced real classroom situation exposed.
Again, flexibility in operating the programme is given to schools, which will be
provided with a block grant, calculated on the basis of a class of 20 new arrivals’
children. With reference to the children’s needs, the school can flexibly use the block
grant to design the curriculum and support programmes. The content should comprise
both academic and non-academic elements.
School-Based Support Scheme Grant for Schools with Intake of New Arrival Children
from Mainland
With a view to encouraging schools to accept new arrivals’ children and enhancing the
support for schools with an intake of the children, the Education Department has
introduced in September 1997 the scheme named “School-Based Support Scheme
Grant for schools with intake of newly arrived children from Mainland”.
The scheme is in general a financial support scheme. To enable schools to provide
timely support for new arrivals’ children when school term starts, Education
Department will give advance payment to schools upon application. With effect from
April 2000, the rate of the grant is revised to HK$2,750 per newly admitted child at
primary level and HK$4,080 at secondary level. It is necessary for the schools
concerned to keep a separate account to reflect all the income and expenditure
chargeable to it.
Schools may flexibly use the grant to provide school-based support services for the
newly admitted children. Such services may include providing supplementary lessons
say English lessons, tailoring curriculum, organizing orientation programmes,
guidance, and purchasing teaching aids and resource materials.
160
Placement Assistance to New Arrival Children from Mainland
The Placement Assistance entails the procedures for admission to Hong Kong schools.
New arrivals may fill in an information leaflet (obtainable at the Lo Wu entry point and
19 District Education Offices) with particulars of their children and return it to the
Education Department.
The Central Placement Unit of the Education Department will then sort the application
with reference to the applicants’ residential address. Applicants’ information will be
sent to respective District Education Offices. District Education Officers is responsible
of contacting parents and offer assistance in finding school places. In case that an
applicant fails to get an offer from the District Education Offices, her/his case will be
referred to the Central Placement Unit for further processing. Children who need
special care will be referred to the Screening, Referral and Placement Unit of the
Service Division of the Education Department for assessment and placement to special
schools.
161
APPENDIX 3
News Articles
Attachment A < 明報 > [港聞] A03 1999-12-18
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
女生跳樓敲響警鐘 新移民學童支援受忽視
日前一名品學兼優的新移民女學童﹐疑因未能適應香港的教育環境﹐最終走
上絕路﹐再次敲響本地教育支援新移民的警號。服務新移民的社工表示﹐女童的
個案正好反映現時的適應課程不夠全面﹐忽略照顧新移民的情緒及社交等適應困
難。
教育署發言人表示﹐新移民學童來港入學後﹐教署便會將其視為普通香港學
童看待﹐若其在情緒或學業上遇有困擾﹐可與本地學童一樣向班主任或輔導教師
求助。發言人強調﹐教署已接近完成新來港學童服務的檢討工作﹐以令服務更為
有效。
降級讀書損自信心
由於兩地文化差異及課程銜接問題﹐一般新移民來港接受教育時都難逃降級
的命運。香港國際社會服務社助理服務主任廖金鳳表示﹐降級讀書不但易令學童
的自尊心及自信心受損﹐亦阻礙他們與同學間的關係發展。
福建中學及漢華中學校長均承認﹐大部分來港的新移民學生也有情緒問題﹐
經常被家庭﹑學業﹑交友及融入社會等問題困擾﹐然而大部分也沒有明顯的自殺
傾向。他們強調﹐學校一直也關注學生的情緒狀況﹐做足支援工作﹐不會等問題
發生才補救。
大多自覺低人一等
福建中學(小西灣)校長黃均瑜坦言﹐大部分新移民學生也有低人一等的感
覺﹐有部分則因廣東話不純正﹑領取綜援而自卑。
漢華中學校長馮敏威表示﹐學校一直關注新移民問題﹐老師除了會為他們額
外補課﹐也特別組成輔助小組﹐專門解決新移民學童的問題﹐幫助他們融入社會﹐
162
安排他們參加如賣旗等社區活動。
163
Attachment B < 明報 > [要聞] A02 頭條2000-06-12
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
九歲新移民為功課跳樓 小小年紀多顧慮輔導人手怨不足
一名生長在單親家庭的九歲新移民男童﹐昨晨致電同窗指功課壓力大及想自
殺後﹐即在黃大仙住所七樓走廊﹐幼妹面前縱身躍下身受重傷﹐送院經搶救後情
況危殆。事發後﹐男童母親因情緒激動﹐幼妹亦因受驚過度同需送院。
妹前跳樓傷頭危殆
有專家表示﹐不少新移民學童年紀小小便已開始為學業﹑住屋及經濟問題而
憂心﹐學校雖會特別關注這類學童﹐但由於學校的輔導教師人手及社工不足﹐往
往難以對新來港學童提供足夠援助(詳見另文)。
墮樓男童‘威仔’﹐頭部重傷。威仔與母親及七歲幼妹﹐同住黃大仙橫頭磡
�宏暉樓。父親多年前在惠州結婚﹐後來誕下威仔﹐幼妹則在港出生﹐妻兒分別
於三年前及兩年前獲批來港﹐一家團聚樂也融融。
一直為家庭經濟支柱的父親﹐曾因心臟積水及癌病致半身不遂﹐年多前病逝﹐
其後全家僅靠六千多元綜援金過活。兩兄妹分別在區內的聖博德小學就讀一年及
二年級﹐兄長今年更當上班長。
其母知悉愛子墮樓後﹐情緒十分激動﹐當愛兒被推往手術室做手術時﹐更哭
得呼天搶地。
致電同窗稱想自殺
昨晨九時﹐威仔起床後與幼妹一起進食早餐﹐其後他在露台畫畫準備今天交
功課﹐幼妹則坐在一旁讀英文。其間﹐他要求母親替他所畫的船隻選取顏色﹐兩
小時後﹐母親上街買菜﹐臨行前叮囑兩兄妹不要胡亂攀爬。
母親離家不久﹐他卻致電一名同學﹐表示感到功課壓力很大﹐很想自殺死去﹐
隨即掛線﹐幼妹見狀也不以為意。未幾﹐他突然手執一張摺椅走出走廊﹐站上摺
椅便縱身躍下﹐直墮一樓平台一鋅鐵搭成的臨時辦公室屋頂。幼妹目睹兄長跳下
後嚇至神情呆滯﹐不知所措。
164
妹受驚母痛心同送院
其母在街市聽聞有小童墮樓﹐有小販更問她會否是其子後﹐大驚下即飛奔回
家。至樓下時赫見救護員將小童救起﹐並證實為其子﹐即時跪地痛哭﹐需由救護
員及警員摻扶﹐後因情緒激動﹐與子送院治理。目擊兄長墮樓的幼妹﹐亦因受驚
過度需送院。
警方經調查後﹐證實案件無可疑﹐但未有檢獲遺書﹐不排除男童因功課壓力
問題企圖自殺。
165
Attachment C < 明報 > [港聞] A04 2000-07-08
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
「最大的敵人是自己」
不懂廣東話﹑英語程度落後於人﹐儘管是上海名牌中學的優等生﹐袁嘉逸四
年前來港時仍遇到不小困難。但他憑著堅毅的精神﹐每天看書啃字典三﹑四小時
將勤補拙﹐他不但成為高考五優狀元﹐更獲百多萬港元獎學金﹐於早前負笈美國
一大學攻讀電腦科。
5A狀元赴美讀電腦
妙法寺劉金龍中學副校長梁惠玲說﹐全校教員都十分欣賞袁嘉逸逆境求學的
精神。當年成績優異的他由於英文程度不足﹐沒有學校肯收他讀中四。但他不想
浪費時間重讀﹐便走到私校「珠海書院」讀中四﹐每天用三﹑四個小時讀英文。
兩年後﹐他在會考英文科取得優﹐更成為八優狀元﹐現在再次奪得五優一良的佳
績。
袁嘉逸剛來港時由於廣東話不靈光﹐經常遭人嘲笑﹐但他每天看電視﹐與同
學溝通練習﹐憑著信心和毅力﹐中六便能以流利的廣東話擔當學校司儀。他在一
篇文章中曾說﹕「最大的敵人﹑最大的障礙其實是自己。」藉此鼓勵其他新移民
遇到困難﹐都要憑著毅力去解決。
3A才女反對死背書
另一名考獲三優佳績的是就讀培正中學的理科生郭津莉﹐她九六年從福建移
居香港﹐原本在內地就讀中五﹐來港後卻要降讀中四﹐但這沒有打擊她學習的信
心。
她坦言﹐來港後沒碰到什麼學習難題﹐她唯一抱怨的是學校的科目全都要死
背﹐還要時常操練模擬試題應考﹐真是吃不消﹗
「課程不鼓勵學生思考﹐而且死背的讀書方法也不好﹐有的學生背了而得到
高分﹐但一些有才華的學生卻因為沒有背誦而得低分﹐太不公平了。」
166
Attachment D < 明報 > [港聞] A04 特稿2001-06-07
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
被標籤「新移民學校」去年刊廣告除偏見 小學仍遭家長歧視註冊冷淡
去年小一派位放榜﹐被家長標籤為「新移民學校」的新會商會學校﹐雖有老
師家長自發刊登廣告﹐希望改變外界對新移民的偏見﹔又有李嘉誠捐助十萬元鼓
勵士氣。但一年後﹐家長抗拒新移民的心態仍未改變。
今年小一放榜﹐被派到該校的學生家長﹐只有半數在最後限期到校註冊﹐情
況較去年還要差。校長更擔心可能因收生不足而被迫縮班。明報記者莊清惠
校長楊佩甜慨嘆﹐全校老師都盡心盡力教導學生﹐但客觀環境不容易改變。
去年率先自掏腰包刊登廣告的副校長梁偉明說﹕「註冊家長少﹐當然感到不
開心。似乎做了很多工作﹐但認同的人不多。不過﹐我有心理準備﹐香港人很現
實﹐家長的心態不是一朝一夕可以改變。最重要是無論學生好壞﹐一樣都教。」
李嘉誠捐10萬獎學金鼓勵
去年六月初﹐小一派位﹐一位家長得悉孩子被派到上環的新會商會學校﹐竟
然情不自禁在傳媒鏡頭前大呼不想孩子入讀這間新移民學校﹐令該校「一夜成
名」。其後梁偉明及家長分別在報章刊登廣告﹐呼籲外界不要戴有色眼鏡看新移
民﹐抹煞學生及老師的努力。
位處上環舊區﹑只有十二班的新會商會學校境況得到外界同情﹐李嘉誠教育
基金更捐出十萬元﹐設立獎學金﹐獎勵學業品行優異的學生。社會人士梁子亨﹑
梁劉柔芬及校友張志剛亦有捐款﹐協助學校推動教學活動。
不過﹐教師﹑家長和社會人士的努力﹐似乎還未扭轉外界對該校的歧見。
過去兩天的小一新生註冊日﹐學校派出八十多個學額﹐只有四十多名家長到
校註冊﹐較去年六十多人註冊的情況差。本報訪問多位來註冊的家長﹐都表示希
望替子女轉校﹐甚至不惜每月交三千元學費入讀私立小學。
老師不放棄不斷革新
167
楊校長說﹕「好無奈﹐很多家長很坦白對我說﹐知道學校老師都是好老師﹐
但不想子女與新來港學童一起生活。」無論學業成績或學生儀表﹐校內老師都會
很關心。
新會商會學校不是中西區家長心目中的名校﹐七成學生為新來港學童﹐這是
不爭的事實。但學校並沒有因此氣餒﹐反而推行很多新的教學措施﹐幫助學生成
長。該校聘請外籍教師提高學生英語水平﹐又將學生按英文程度分組上課。同時
亦加強禮貌及整潔等德育教育。
梁偉明表示﹐學校舉辦不少課外活動﹐但新來港學童在課餘與外界很少接觸﹐
自我形象較低。校方已申請優質教育基金﹐積極推行學生情緒教育﹐鼓勵學生表
達內心感受及加強與他人溝通﹐提升自信心及自尊。該校去年十月更成立家長教
師會﹐加強學校與家長的溝通。
168
Attachment E < 明報 > [要聞] A02 2000-06-12
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
新移民早熟懂事 憂英文成績住屋經濟
新來港的小學生年紀小小﹐問題之多﹐卻不容忽視。為新移民提供電話求助
熱線服務的香港社區組織協會﹐平均每周都會接到近二十個新來港小學生的電話
查詢﹐最困擾他們的問題是英語學習及安排上樓事宜。
‘我接觸過的新移民學童都好早熟﹑很懂事。’香港社區組織協會幹事施麗
珊說﹐但就因為他們太會替家庭設想﹐年紀小小便已開始為居住及經濟問題而憂
心。
施表示﹐該會開辦了三年的新移民諮詢站﹐平均每星期接到近二十個新來港
小學生的電話查詢﹐他們首要問及的是英語學習及上樓事宜﹐其次關心的是經濟﹑
父母管教子女等家庭問題﹐以及在學校被歧視的不愉快經驗。
自我形象低
此外﹐施麗珊還認為﹐他們的自我形象欠佳﹐容易產生自卑感﹐‘曾在新移
民適應班中聽到他們問﹕『老師﹐點解你會肯來教我們這些下等人﹖』’
鑑於一般新移民都較為被動﹑欠缺信心﹐該諮詢站會主動去尋找有需要的服
務對象﹐如在街頭設置攤檔和上門造訪等﹐並會舉辦有關活動和適應課程﹐以及
提供熱線電話(見下表)。