In 2020, more than a third of the last academic year was mandated to be completed at home, leaving many students, parents and teachers, devastated, disorientated, and dejected, with many describing it as the "worst school year ever.”
Read MoreAs the Education Bureau announces its plans to allow face-to-face classes beginning late September, students have mixed feelings on returning after adapting to the online learning environment.
Read MoreAt the restart of school, students were sent a long email which had a long list of rules and requirements. How did we do?
Read MoreAfter more than three months of online learning, students have finally begun their slow return to ordinary life
Read MoreAs schools gradually return to normal following a decline in COVID-19 cases in Hong Kong, the absence of a year group is subtle but noticeable.
Read MoreRecently, due to the current coronavirus environment, students have been forced to work under very different conditions..
Read MoreHong Kong has responded effectively to the coronavirus, but effectiveness has come at a cost.
Read MoreBy Abbie Wong
Read MoreBy Minhee Ho
A glimpse into Renaissance College’s current plans on reuniting students and teachers
Read MoreWritten By Liam Gordon and Kendo Longid
Many people believe our school toilets have grown worse and worse with every passing year. They have rusty exposed pipes, broken doors, busted flushing systems, old broken hand dryers, and the centrepiece: the rusty, stained, disgusting toilets.
Read MoreWritten by Ariana Jones
Earlier this month, RCHK Year 11 students took part in what many deemed to be an extraordinarily powerful and eye-opening simulation run by Crossroads Foundation Hong Kong.
Read MoreWritten by Jobert Leong
After seven months of demonstrations rocking the streets, many people, especially non-Chinese speakers, may be wondering just what the slogans constantly chanted by protestors mean, and how they came to be.
Read MoreWritten by Jobert Leong and Hubert Leong
Hongkongers march for human rights - six months on
Read MoreWritten by Hubert Leong
On September 23rd, 2019, RCHK hosted its third International Evening in the Performing Arts Center (PAC). Performers had backgrounds from the likes of countries such as Trinidad, India, Hong Kong, and Bangladesh to name a few. The aims of the evening were to celebrate and promote RCHK’s cultural diversity and to raise money for local charity Hong Kong Unison.
Read MoreWritten by Zoe Ying
Visitors to RCHK on the 17th of October may have witnessed an unusual sight: students and teachers racing with decorated book carts on the basketball court. The event was the House Book Cart races, part of the yearly book-themed event, Booktober.
Read MoreWritten by Jobert Leong
On the night of October 18th 2019, the lyrics of the protest anthem ‘Glory to Hong Kong’ resounded along the banks of the Shing Mun River, sung by people from all walks of life joined together hand-in-hand in a human chain.
Read MoreWritten by Ariana Jones
It was announced to the Year 11s at the start of the 2019-20 school year that a new “subject” called Core Time had been implemented into their schedules.
Read MoreWritten by Kristen Wen
With protests in Hong Kong crossing 100 days, “one country, two systems” has undergone a trial by fire. On September 19th at 6pm, the accumulation of anger toward the inaction of the Hong Kong government and police brutality propelled students in and near the Shatin district to congregate around the Shing Mun River.
Read MoreWritten by Eunie Jeong
On the 15th of June at 5 pm, 26 RCHK student volunteers gathered on the Sham Shui Po MTR station. They were assembled together for Hong Kong’s first food bank of Pass It On. It was organised by the Year 12 students, Kristen Wen, Christy Tam, Natazha Lin and Sabrina Wu.
Read MoreWritten by Zoe Ying
RCHK’s Jie Jie Day event is the only one of its kind which celebrates the significant contributions of the domestic helpers in Hong Kong.
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