HKDSE FAQ
How should parents read a learning report?
Understand how parents can read a learning report by focusing on weak areas, mistake patterns, and next-step study priorities instead of score alone.
Direct answer
Parents should not read a learning report as a score sheet only. The most important points are which knowledge areas are weak, what kinds of mistakes appear repeatedly, and what should be prioritised next.
Key takeaways
- Weak areas and mistake patterns matter more than raw score alone
- A report should lead to action, not just describe current performance
- Parents can use it to judge whether tutoring and practice are aligned
Related questions
What is HKDSE knowledge diagnosis?Learn how HKDSE knowledge diagnosis uses structured assessment and learning analysis to identify weak knowledge points and next-step priorities.How can students find weak areas in DSE Maths?Understand how DSE Maths students can identify weak areas using question-type performance, speed, accuracy, and mistake patterns.Who needs HKDSE one-on-one tutoring?Learn which HKDSE students are more likely to benefit from one-on-one tutoring and why diagnosis-based planning matters.What does error-driven practice mean?Learn how error-driven practice starts from a wrong answer, analyses the likely issue, and recommends related questions for follow-up learning.
Suggested next step
If you want a clearer picture of the student’s current level first, start from the platform and use the results to guide the next study decision.
