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Education in Hong Kong
Opinion
Editorial
SCMP Editorial

Hong Kong Education Bureau must learn lessons after SMS error over school places

The messaging glitch raises questions about government safeguards and Hong Kong’s push to be a smart city

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A school bus picks up pupils outside the Hennessy Road Government Primary School in Wan Chai on April 9. Photo: Jelly Tse
Editorials represent the views of the South China Morning Post on the issues of the day.
A technical blunder that caused the Education Bureau to send school allocation messages with the wrong details is more than an embarrassing administrative mishap. It is a reminder that in a city that prides itself on efficiency, digital readiness and smart governance, the smallest system failures can carry outsized reputational costs.

Parents were understandably confused when they prematurely received SMS messages with the correct school choices but the wrong calendar year on Tuesday morning. The bureau later clarified that the message was sent due to a system glitch, adding that the results would be released via SMS on Wednesday.

To receive a message with the wrong year and at the wrong time is not a trivial inconvenience. It is troubling because it is not the first time text messages have been used to release allocation results. While the process looks simple and straightforward, it matters deeply to parents and pupils. The allocation result is the culmination of weeks of expectations and shapes a child’s future education and development. The confusion adds to the anxiety, shakes confidence in the bureau’s handling of sensitive information and raises questions over system integrity and safeguards.

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It is regrettable that the bureau is apparently still on a steep learning curve with regard to innovation and technology. Hong Kong has long sought to position itself as a smart city, with many public services available with a few clicks on the internet. But there are also examples of technical blunders and security lapses from time to time, resulting in confusion over the dissemination of public information and personal data leakages.

The latest blunder appears to be an isolated incident. But when a department cannot prevent a simple messaging error, it raises questions over system protocols and safeguards across the government. Officials should therefore go beyond a routine apology and provide a more detailed account of what went wrong, including whether there were any problems with software design and human oversight. The incident serves as a timely reminder that advances in technology such as artificial intelligence cannot be used as an excuse for complacency.

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