Mu Kuang English School

{{short description|Secondary school in Kwun Tong, Hong Kong}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2016}}

{{Use Hong Kong English|date=December 2016}}

{{coord|22.3184|114.2187|region:HK|display=title}}

{{Infobox school

| name = Mu Kuang English School

| image = File:Mu Kuang English School (sky blue version).jpg

| alt = A view of a six-storey concrete school building on a steep hillside road

| caption =

| motto = Pursuit of knowledge, truth, love, and light.

| location = Kung Lok Road, Kwun Tong

| coordinates =

| established =

| opened = 1954

| founder = Elsie Elliott

| closed =

| type = Direct Subsidy Scheme

| district =

| grades = 1 to 6

| grades_label = Forms

| superintendent =

| principal = Mr. Lee Yet Chil

| enrollment =

| faculty = 72

| campus_type =

| campus_size =

| team_name =

| newspaper =

| colors =

| communities =

| feeders =

| website = {{URL|http://www.mukuang.edu.hk}}

| footnotes =

}}

{{Chinese|order=ts

|t=慕光英文書院

|s=慕光英文书院

|j=mou6 gwong1 jing1 man4 syu1 jyun6

|p=Mù Guāng Yīngwén Shūyuàn

}}

The Mu Kuang English School ({{zh|t=慕光英文書院|j=mou6 gwong1 jing1 man4 syu1 jyun6}}) is a secondary school on Kung Lok Road, Kwun Tong, Kowloon, Hong Kong. It is a non-government school funded under the Direct Subsidy Scheme.

History

The school was founded by Elsie Elliott in Kai Tak New Village in 1954 with an enrolment of 30 squatter and refugee children.{{cite news|title=Navy Wives' Gift To Elliott School|work=South China Morning Post|date=28 February 1959|page=9}} Classes were held under makeshift canopies, and Elliott supported the school financially by teaching in other schools. Andrew Tu Hsueh-kwei, whom Elliott married in 1985, became headmaster of the school. The school accommodation was doubled in size in 1958 thanks to a donation from Mr. N.V.A. Croucher.{{cite news|title=Mu Kuang School Christmas Party|work=South China Morning Post|date=23 December 1958|page=9}}

"Mu Kuang" ({{zh|t=慕光|j=mou6 gwong1}}) means "yearning for light" in Chinese. The school was so named in reference to a "thirsting for the light of learning and truth". Elliott later quipped that the name came to refer to a literal thirst for daylight, since it was so dark inside the former British Army tent in which classes were initially held.{{cite web |last1=Elliott |first1=Elsie |title=Defending the underdog, and stay in China |url=http://libproject.hkbu.edu.hk/trsimage/elsie/speech/es0086.pdf |website=Elsie Tu Digitized Speeches |publisher=Hong Kong Baptist University Library |date=26 September 1984}}

Owing to the "extreme poverty and suffering" in the area, the school staff tried to undertake relief work near the school. A simple clinic was set up at the school for emergency treatment. A formal social welfare clinic, offering medical services and distribution of relief food, was set up at the school with the assistance of members of the Guild of Saint Helena in 1959.{{cite news|title=New welfare centre: Clinic Facilities And Relief For Needy In Kowloon City Village|work=South China Morning Post|date=4 September 1959|page=4}}

About five years after its founding, the school moved to occupy two storeys of a building on Nga Tsin Wai Road. It later expanded with two branches, on Lion Rock Road and Prince Edward Road respectively. The school took out an interest-free government loan of $2 million and raised an additional $600,000 to build a permanent school building.{{cite news|title=School's new move|work=South China Morning Post|date=29 November 1972|page=10}}

On 28 November 1972, the new {{convert|60000|sqft|sqm}} school building was opened on Kung Lok Road, Kwun Tong by the Director of Education, J. Canning. It was built to accommodate 1,400 pupils. The building was designed by architect P.K. Chan and built by the Hoover Construction Company.{{cite web |last1=Elliott |first1=Elsie |title=Opening of Mu Kuang New Building |url=http://libproject.hkbu.edu.hk/trsimage/elsie/speech/es0182.pdf |website=Elsie Tu Digitized Speeches |publisher=Hong Kong Baptist University Library |date=28 November 1972}} A new building wing was added in 1986 directly to the north of the older one.

Description

Mu Kuang English School is a co-ed institution with media of instruction of English and Chinese.{{cite web|title=Mu Kuang English School|url=http://applications.chsc.hk/ssp2015/pdf/kt_18_230e.pdf|publisher=Committee on Home-School Co-operation|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180315142345/http://applications.chsc.hk/ssp2015/pdf/kt_18_230e.pdf|access-date=7 May 2016|archive-date=15 March 2018}} As of 2015, the school had a staff of 72 teachers.

Notable alumni

See also

References

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