It also claims to "enhance" students' commitments and contributions to analyse and judge personal, family, social, national and global issues.
It has been suggested "life event" exemplars being used as learning contexts to enable students to realise positive values.
Its vice president Cheung Man-kwong claims that introduction of MNE is a political action ordered by the central government of the People's Republic of China.
The group issued a petition opposing to MNE, initiated by Cardinal Joseph Zen, Ching Cheong, Allen Lee and 27 other public figures, and co-signed by more than 1000 parents.
Fifty members occupied the public park beneath the government offices, of which three began a hunger strike.
The goal of the protest was, expressly, to compel the government to pull back its plans of Moral and National Education.
[14][15][16] In mid-September 2012, Anonymous hackers threatened the Hong Kong government organisation National Education Services Centre.