Read More
Indonesia trims meals programme: what next?
10 hours ago
2 dead after bus rear-ends broken-down taxi on Tsing Ma Bridge
31-03-2026 00:49 HKT
MTR launches first Q-train with new signaling system on Tsuen Wan Line
29-03-2026 17:41 HKT




As Hong Kong students continue their studies abroad, they are reminded that international education is learning from one another, which is more than taking what others can offer, says Ian Crichton, CEO of Study Group, a global education provider which operates international colleges with leading universities around the world.
To Crichton, old photographs of the ‘floating village’ in Aberdeen Harbour are among the most iconic and enduring images of old Hong Kong. Located between Hong Kong Island’s southern coast and the outlying islet of Ap Lei Chau, Aberdeen is known for its famous floating restaurants, and houseboats in the typhoon shelter where some fishing families still live.
Aberdeen Harbour has become synonymous with images of Hong Kong. Bruce Lee used Aberdeen Harbour as a location in his famous film, ‘Enter the Dragon’. And from Xbox games to Lara Croft, a new generation of gamers and movie goers is familiar with its waterfront. But this place also has a personal connection to Crichton and his own home, because Aberdeen Harbour was named in memory of George Hamilton Gordon, Earl of Aberdeen, and a former British Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs and then Prime Minister.
British rule is over. But living connections between these two cities remain. Aberdeen in Scotland is where Crichton studied History in the 1980s. And it is where this year his own daughter and many modern Hong Kong students will attend its great university. Founded in the 1400s to train teachers, doctors and lawyers, Aberdeen University is now also a kind of academic harbour - home to a community of international students and scholars, one of the best universities of its type in the UK.
According to Crichton, the first Chinese student to formally graduate in Britain was Dr. Wong Fun (Huang Kuan) who attended Edinburgh University Medical School from 1850 to 1855. He later returned to China where he practised as a surgeon. Today there are 17,630 students enrolled in UK universities from Hong Kong alone.
Crichton points out that Hong Kong also has its own great universities and attracts students from around the world to study law and medicine, business, science, technology and commerce. His own company works closely with the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology. “As I visit the city to talk to international education partners and those who support students to travel overseas to pursue their studies, I will be as keen to learn as I am to share opportunities for students in the U.K,” he notes.
“Hong Kong is famously a city of ports and harbours, a gateway city for the world. As you approach the airport, the clouds part to reveal the inlets and natural harbours which have shaped its identity as a place of connection and trade,” he observes. “But perhaps the most important global goods are not carried on container shops but the exchange of information and ideas. These are the precious cargo of our universities, shared by our students and universities. And that is a history and a connection truly worth celebrating.”
-----------
Address: 713, 7/F, Lippo Sun Plaza, 28 Canton Road, Tsim Sha Tsui, Kowloon, Hong Kong
Website: www.studygroup.com

