Page 7 - HKSYU Prospectus 2023-24
P. 7

University History

                            Brief History of the University


              Hong Kong Shue Yan College, the predecessor of Hong Kong Shue Yan University, was
          founded in 1971. The idea of an independent liberal arts college was first conceived by Dr.
          Henry H. L. Hu, then a Legislative Councillor, and the late Dr. Chung Chi Yung, a prominent
          educationist, in response to their concern over the acute shortage of tertiary places for local
          Form VI students aspiring for university education.

              In July 1971, a College Board was formed, a building was acquired on Sing Woo Road,
          Happy  Valley,  and  Shue  Yan  (romanized  from  the  Chinese  characters  樹仁,  meaning  the
          cultivation of virtue) was chosen as its name. At the inauguration of the College on the 20th
          September, 1971, the Hon. Wilfred S. B. Wong expressed the underpinning philosophy of Shue
          Yan:

              “The aim of the establishment of Shue Yan College is not for profit but it is hoped to
          provide the ideal education, i.e. the cultivation of virtue. Virtue applies when the ideal person
          meets other persons. Therefore, to establish virtue one has to start from the person. One wants
          to help every student to build character and develop a harmonious way of living with others. In
          Chinese, the words 'kindness' and 'man' can be co-used. Furthermore, the aim of education is
          not only the moulding of man of healthy mind and body, but also the creation of Confucian
          superior men and philosophers who are needed to lead society in establishing a rational social
          order based on humanism.”

              In  order  to  gain  formal  recognition  in  Hong  Kong  for  the  qualifications  held  by  its
          graduates,  the  College  actively  sought  registration  under  the  Post  Secondary  Colleges
          Ordinance (Cap. 320). Throughout May and June 1975, a series of inspections and evaluations
          were conducted, culminating in a visit by the Hon. Kenneth Topley, C.M.G., J.P., then Director
          of Education, on 16th December 1975. As a result of the successful outcome of this process,
          the College was officially approved to register under the Post Secondary Colleges Ordinance
          on 28th January 1976. From that time on, Shue Yan academic qualifications were recognized
          by the Government as a qualification for appointment to the civil service.

              The College expanded rapidly and soon outgrew its premises on Sing Woo Road.    In
          1977 it acquired a seven-storey building on Monmouth Path in Wanchai to accommodate its
          growing student body and faculty, pending the completion of its permanent premises to be built
          on a site granted by the Government in Braemar Hill, North Point.

              In the  White  Paper on the Development  of  Senior Secondary  and Tertiary  Education
          published  in  October  1978,  the  Government  proposed  granting  financial  assistance  to  the
          three approved post-secondary colleges in Hong Kong, including Shue Yan, on condition that


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