惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

V
Visual Studio Blog
爱范儿
爱范儿
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
雷峰网
雷峰网
V
V2EX
博客园_首页
Engineering at Meta
Engineering at Meta
博客园 - 聂微东
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
Apple Machine Learning Research
Apple Machine Learning Research
GbyAI
GbyAI
H
Help Net Security
A
About on SuperTechFans
freeCodeCamp Programming Tutorials: Python, JavaScript, Git & More
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
Blog — PlanetScale
Blog — PlanetScale
W
WeLiveSecurity
云风的 BLOG
云风的 BLOG
D
Docker
Security Archives - TechRepublic
Security Archives - TechRepublic
Help Net Security
Help Net Security
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
Simon Willison's Weblog
Simon Willison's Weblog
G
Google Developers Blog
A
Arctic Wolf
T
The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss
博客园 - 叶小钗
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
博客园 - 三生石上(FineUI控件)
aimingoo的专栏
aimingoo的专栏
Hacker News: Ask HN
Hacker News: Ask HN
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
博客园 - 司徒正美
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
P
Privacy International News Feed
T
Troy Hunt's Blog
T
Tenable Blog
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
Recent Commits to openclaw:main
Recent Commits to openclaw:main
Recorded Future
Recorded Future
F
Fortinet All Blogs
D
DataBreaches.Net
B
Blog
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
MyScale Blog
MyScale Blog
Hacker News - Newest:
Hacker News - Newest: "LLM"
The GitHub Blog
The GitHub Blog
Security Latest
Security Latest
M
MIT News - Artificial intelligence

South China Morning Post

Singapore drama sparks Malaysian ire over scam hub depiction Time to act on stalled proposal toughening child abuse penalties, lawmakers say ‘Eager to explore’: Chinese migrants return to Venezuela after Maduro’s capture ‘We have no trust in the other side’: Iran blames US as talks end with no deal Opinion | Why securing Hong Kong’s economic future is a cultural question Hong Kong’s ministerial team spent HK$46.6 million on visits in past 3 years China family creates AI clone to comfort elderly mum after only son dies in crash Canada Olympic star Williams plans on ‘having a ‘blast’ at Hong Kong Sevens Singapore’s robotaxi drive revs up with help from Chinese AV leaders Editorial | Making Hong Kong desirable to overseas students must be a priority All 7 are dentists and hot. The Asian-American family blowing up social media Editorial | Ageing Hong Kong should welcome more open conversations around death My Take | Discovery Bay will never be the same if the restriction on taxi access is lifted Medical intern suspended after complaint over patient data in social media post Fish and vegetarianism major flashpoints in India’s West Bengal election Chinese crystal ‘paves way’ for GPS-free thorium clock navigation SCMP Best Bets: Endued can show his quality at Sha Tin Russia and Ukraine begin 32-hour ceasefire for Orthodox Easter Israeli spy firm Black Cube involved in Cyprus corruption probe ‘A big deal’: military drills show Tokyo’s growing focus on deterring China China targets middlemen in renewed crackdown on ‘hidden’ corruption Hong Kong-born gymnast leading quest to turn Singapore into elite hub Thais celebrate new year despite fuel price shocks delaying travel Harry Bentley tees up two good chances in Smart Golf and Elite Golf at Sha Tin Is this Kenyan rail project a model for Chinese and Western firms in Africa? Unearthing peace: ancient China gravesite reveals significance of broken weapons Meet Queen Elizabeth’s youngest grandchild, James, who was at Easter service Turtle found dead after apparent fall in Hong Kong’s Wong Tai Sin Landlords of 5,557 subdivided homes seek 3-year grace period to fix flats Trump critique pauses UK handover of Chagos Islands to Mauritius Hong Kong’s Cathay Pacific and HK Express cut some flights as jet fuel prices rise Calls grow for HKMA to go further on stablecoins after conservative first batch Nepal’s school fee crackdown upends South Asian private education norms DeepSeek ramps up hiring ahead of V4 launch as chip strategy questions swirl Hins Cheung to lead arrested 2019 Hong Kong protesters on mainland exchange trips Macroscope | Can World Bank and IMF leaders rescue a global economy on the brink? Hong Kong proposes mandatory renovation briefings to combat bid-rigging The winners from China’s growing intercity football rivalries may surprise you China warns university students about lucrative job offers from foreign spies Profile | Who is Byeon Woo-seok, IU’s co-star in romance K-drama Perfect Crown? Richard Kingscote hopes lightweight ride will be a Force again: ‘I’m happy to squeeze the lemon a bit for a horse like him’ Tighter civil service disciplinary rules risk becoming excessive: union head How the Gulf conflict recast risks for Asian investors in Dubai What does China’s tightening grip on red-chip structures mean for IPOs? South Korea’s president hits back at Israel in row over ‘disturbing’ video China café sets ‘entry rules’, ban littering, discarding black stockings, turtle theft Samsung weighs China overhaul as local rivals pile on the pressure Beijing’s point man on Hong Kong affairs wraps up second bay area visit in 3 weeks Gucci shoes worth HK$11,000 stolen from shopping centre restroom in Hong Kong Vaccine coverage gaps spur Bangladesh’s deadly measles outbreak How to get an iPod and set it up as Apple’s music device makes a comeback Global wealth gap widens as aid to world’s poorest sees record drop Malaysia detains masseuses from China offering ‘extra services’ Asian Angle | Who is Vietnam’s new Prime Minister Le Minh Hung? ‘Cancelling orders’ in China: Hormuz oil crisis hits transport and manufacturing Discovery Bay developer submits proposal for full taxi access despite backlash Hong Kong hairstylist’s cancer battle takes him on a crowdfunding campaign UAE pulls US$3.5 billion from Pakistan after Iran war mediation Champions-elect Kitchee out to prove they are city’s best despite cup final flop US-Iran talks in Islamabad stretch on as Hormuz stand-off fuels duelling claims Letters | Policy outcomes of Hong Kong’s mega-events can be improved Asia’s ‘panicked farmers’ brace for a looming rice crisis post-Iran war Can Hong Kong’s listing reform 2.0 win over innovative firms? Was Penang ‘robbed’ from Kedah? Malaysian states face off in sovereignty row Why has China mapped out a third new county in Xinjiang on its western frontier? Rory McIlroy in total command at the Masters, takes 6-shot lead into the weekend As I see it | Helpful analysts predict China property recovery now, soon and much later 73 public schools join new scheme to hire native English-speaking teachers How gossip spread in ancient China before newspapers reported on scandals Molotov attack on OpenAI CEO Sam Altman’s home leads to arrest Reflections | Cremation was frowned upon in ancient China, so why was it so widespread? Japan’s Middle East oil habit gets an Iran war reality check Ex-Wales flanker Parks on ‘dark thoughts’ and going Pole to Pole with Will Smith In pictures: 50 years of mud, sweat and beers at the Hong Kong Rugby Sevens China’s Li Qiang hosts Moonshot AI chief, urges faster industrial AI roll-out Editorial | Cheng’s Beijing visit underscores hope for cross-strait engagement Hypertension’s link to dementia calls for stronger blood pressure control Artemis II astronauts return home from record-breaking moon mission Editorial | Hong Kong’s rare, speedy response to fuel price surge shows preparedness This new exhibition pays tribute to Queen Elizabeth’s style legacy Vocational schools a new front as China backs businesses’ global expansion Meet Gerran Howell, who plays Dr Whitaker in HBO Max’s The Pitt Trump’s tariff powers tested again as court questions ‘deficit’ justification Opinion | China’s next growth engine? An AI-powered intelligence dividend Trump tariff refund tool will go live on April 20, US Customs says China, Russia rally behind Cuba as US squeezes Havana in deepening crisis US presses Iran as talks gear up in Pakistan under fragile ceasefire Trump unveils plan for his giant triumphal arch: eagles, lions, lots of gold High fertiliser prices mean more soybeans for farmers – and greater reliance on China Prince Harry sued by African charity he set up to honour Princess Diana Ukrainians sceptical as Russia’s Putin orders Easter truce Girl, 9, in a critical condition with meningococcal infection after holiday in Japan China banks buffer against AI contagions as US sweats over Anthropic’s Mythos China telecoms face US exit risk as FCC deepens crackdown on data centres China police detain and fine man behind cyberbullying of Olympian Quan Hongchan Man jailed for killing ‘ruthlessly’ abused wife who jumped from Scottish bridge Tai Po blaze: no fire risk checks done for HK$336 million estate renovation Taxi passengers won’t benefit from Hong Kong’s 50% reduction in tunnel tolls Tencent moves to rein in AI content flood on WeChat with stricter rules China-North Korea thaw gathers pace as Kim says ties have reached a new level
Harvard, Stanford, Oxford, Cambridge and more: how YCIS guidance open doors to prestigious universities worldwide
Advertising · 2026-05-26 · via South China Morning Post

[The content of this article has been produced by our advertising partner.]

At Yew Chung International School of Hong Kong (YCIS HK), a university offer is not a finish line but the first step in a life of service. The Class of 2026 demonstrates this belief: as of mid-April, graduates have secured places at Oxford (Law), Cambridge (Geography), Harvard (Environmental Science & Engineering), Stanford (Economics and Environmental Systems Engineering), Peking University (Law), Tsinghua University (Aeronautical and Astronautical) and many other world-class institutions. 

These headline offers are part of a wider achievement (as at 16 April) that includes 124 acceptances from Hong Kong’s three flagship universities — the University of Hong Kong, The Chinese University of Hong Kong and The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology — along with 23 places in Medicine and Biomedical Sciences and 129 offers from research intensive Russell Group universities in the United Kingdom.

As the 2026 global university admission season continues, students across the wider Yew Chung Yew Wah Education Network (YCYW), of which YCIS HK is a part, have already received more than 900 offers from leading universities such as Harvard University, Stanford University, the University of Oxford, the University of Cambridge, Imperial College London, Tsinghua University, Peking University, the University of Hong Kong, KAIST and Parsons School of Design.

Behind each offer is a journey shaped by rigorous academics, global awareness and compassionate action. Three YCIS Hong Kong graduates — Fiona Fan, Amos Cheng and Hilary Leung — show how these elements combine to create lives of purpose.

Fiona Fan’s dual passion for sustainability and data science earned her places at Cambridge for Geography, Stanford for Economics and UC Berkeley for Environmental Sciences. She began at YCIS Beijing in primary school before moving to Hong Kong and credits “meaningful extracurricular engagement” for sharpening her thinking. Years driving the campus greening project and leading climate initiatives turned classroom theories into real-world solutions and cultivated a systems-thinking mindset. 

“My teachers constantly asked us to link theory to current issues,” Fiona explains. “Learning became critical, not performative.” Active recall, synthesis and continual feedback anchored her study routine, while an environment of curiosity made every lesson purposeful.

Fiona founded the Green Collective Club at school, dedicated to sustainable greening solutions for the rooftop garden.

Fiona founded the Green Collective Club at school, dedicated to sustainable greening solutions for the rooftop garden.

Amos Cheng, who enrolled in YCIS’s Infant & Toddler Learning Programme at six months old, embodies the through-train pathway that carries learners to Year 13. With offers from Harvard, Stanford, UCLA and Imperial, he stands at the intersection of science and service. Amos founded Eco Humanitarian Advocates and organised trips to rural Yunnan and Nepal to install solar-powered lighting systems. 

“Seeing the children’s joy when the lights came on was unforgettable,” he recalls. The project earned him a keynote invitation at the ESG Xchange 2025 Summit and set his course toward sustainable engineering. School musicals, meanwhile, taught him public speaking and servant leadership—skills he will take to Stanford, where his sister, another YCIS alumna, is already studying.

Amos spent his holidays in rural Yunnan and Nepal, collaborating with local communities to install solar lighting systems.

Amos spent his holidays in rural Yunnan and Nepal, collaborating with local communities to install solar lighting systems.

Hilary Leung’s story highlights YCIS support for highly specialised fields. After transferring from a local curriculum to YCIS, she secured a coveted place at the Royal Veterinary College (RVC), one of the world’s top veterinary schools. Her passion for animal welfare began with volunteering at a dog shelter and Kadoorie Farm, where she saw urgent unmet needs. “I can’t imagine being anything other than a veterinarian,” she says. Hilary plans to specialise in emergency and critical care and praises her teachers for creating “an encouraging, open environment that helped me reach the grades such a demanding field requires.”

Hilary, who transitioned from a local high school to Yew Chung International School, received an offer from the Royal Veterinary College.

Hilary, who transitioned from a local high school to Yew Chung International School, received an offer from the Royal Veterinary College.

YCIS bridges classroom learning with authentic application through “Seeds for Tomorrow”, an initiative that partners with leading universities and Fortune 500 companies to give students a researcher’s-eye view of professional life. Participants rotate through a medical immersion programme at Raffles Hospital, collaborative engineering projects with CERN and a residential research stint at the Oxford Suzhou Centre for Advanced Research (OSCAR), Oxford University’s first engineering and physical sciences institute outside the United Kingdom. At OSCAR, students join Oxford scientists in state-of-the-art labs to explore optoelectronics, machine learning and regenerative medicine — opportunities normally reserved for postgraduates. “These programmes open a window into the life of a researcher,” explains initiative lead Dr Christopher Hurley. “Students learn to network with experts and draft publishable papers, igniting a passion for learning that crosses disciplines.”

Guidance for life after graduation begins early. The Careers and University Guidance Office (CUGO) works with students from Year 7 onward, helping them align subject choices with emerging interests. By Year 12 the focus shifts to one-to-one counselling on course selection, essay strategy and interview preparation. “We observe students in lessons and activities so our recommendations are truly personal,” notes counsellor Grace Poling. “Authentic insight makes applications stronger.” For Hilary, that insight proved decisive. “Ms Poling’s feedback transformed my personal statements and helped me gain places at RVC summer school and other competitive programmes,” she says. The same tailored approach guides musicians heading to conservatoires, coders targeting MIT or designers applying to RISD and Parsons. In the face of the increasingly complex global admissions landscape, the YCYW CUGO has become a vital bridge helping students reach their dream universities. With 32 university counsellors across the network and a counsellor-to-student ratio of 1:12, CUGO is able to offer highly personalised and targeted guidance, ensuring that all students receive advice tailored to their strengths, aspirations, and individual pathways.

YCIS HK Careers and University Guidance Office (CUGO)Team

YCIS HK Careers and University Guidance Office (CUGO)Team

Whether they started as infants like Amos, transferred within YCIS like Fiona, or joined later like Hilary, YCIS students benefit from a coherent, values-driven pathway that prizes academic rigour, global citizenship, and compassionate action in equal measure. Fiona and Amos will soon join the Stanford community, while Hilary prepares to serve animals in need at RVC. Their stories affirm the YCIS conviction that education’s highest purpose is not merely to open doors to prestigious universities, but to equip young people to shape a better future — with knowledge in their minds and compassion in their hearts.