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Chimera readability score 72 out of 100, Expert reading level.

Students say summers in Shenzhen, Shanghai and Beijing teach them about cross-border communication and offer chance to build connections
More Hong Kong students are turning to mainland China for summer internships as government and university schemes expand cross-border placements.
Students said they were drawn by greater opportunities in different sectors, hands-on experience in a larger market and lower living costs, with some viewing cross-border exposure as a career asset.
The Home and Youth Affairs Bureau’s corporate summer internship scheme has expanded its number of mainland placements for young Hongkongers, with dedicated slots rising by 71 per cent since 2023.
Launched in 2018, the scheme places students in mainland and overseas locations across sectors ranging from finance and property to biotechnology. Companies cover transport and accommodation, while salary or allowances are determined by individual firms.
Mainland offerings rose from no fewer than 253 of 328 places in 2023 to 433 of 522 this year, lifting their share of the programme from 77 to 83 per cent, according to scheme data.
Application numbers have risen in tandem, more than doubling from about 1,400 in 2023 to over 3,100 last year.

Sentinel — Human

Confidence

The text is highly factual and well-structured, exhibiting characteristics of human reporting based on specific institutional data rather than generic AI synthesis.

Signals Detected
low severity: Slight variance in sentence structure, although generally formal; lack of overly uniform rhythm.
low severity: Coherent presentation of data points with clear topic shifts (motivation to scheme details).
Human Indicators
The specific, non-trivial statistics regarding the expansion of government schemes and application numbers suggest grounded sourcing.
The phrasing connecting student motivation ('cross-border communication,' 'career asset') to institutional data feels naturally journalistic.