By DSE Strategy Desk
Learning Topic: Technology and Living "Smart home devices are marketed as time-savers. However, many users report feeling 'lazy' and 'disconnected' from their homes. Do convenience and emotional connection have to be enemies?"
When you see "Technology and Living" in the 2025 paper, do not see a circuit board. See a dinner table. See an elderly neighbor. See a sleepless teenager. Write about the human first, the tech second. That is the secret hiding in every past paper answer key. technology and living dse past paper
In the 2022 Paper 2 (Q.7), candidates were asked about the impact of smart home technology on family life. Most students wrote about turning off lights with a voice command (Boring). The top-scorers wrote about the loss of friction —the idea that families no longer need to communicate to complete chores.
"Social media allows teenagers to stay connected with friends. It is very convenient." Level 5 response (based on 2021 trend): "While social media erases the geographical distance between friends, it creates a temporal distance within families. A student texting a friend in Canada feels close, yet sits in silence across the dinner table from a parent in Hong Kong. Technology has not isolated us; it has merely made us choose who to ignore." Notice the difference? The second response uses paradox . Examiners love paradox. Past Paper Goldmine: The 2020 Curveball Let’s review the 2020 Paper 4 (Speaking) Individual Response. The prompt showed a photo of a family in a restaurant—four people, four phones, no eye contact. By DSE Strategy Desk Learning Topic: Technology and
For the average Hong Kong student, the phrase “Technology and Living” used to conjure images of Home Economics—sewing aprons and calculating nutritional charts. But flip open any DSE English past paper from the last five years, and you’ll find a different reality. Technology has crashed the party.
Here is the ultimate breakdown of the hidden patterns in the DSE past papers, and how to write like a top-scorer. Look closely at Paper 2 (Writing) and Paper 4 (Speaking). The examiners are tired of essays about "convenience." They want tension . See a dinner table
From the rise of smart homes to the ethics of AI caregivers, the HKEAA has developed a quiet obsession with asking how our gadgets are changing our humanity. If you want a Level 5 or above, you cannot just list features of an iPhone. You must debate the soul of the machine.
The standard candidate said: "They should put down phones and talk."