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Being and becoming a university student: Chinese rural students’ identity work in urban universities

Thu, March 14, 9:30 to 11:00am, Hyatt Regency Miami, Floor: Third Level, Pearson 1

Proposal

China’s social, economic and political environment has gone through significant changes. In educational sector, the widening higher education access in China has enabled many rural students to enter urban universities and change their life trajectories through higher education (Lin and Wu, 2010). However, rural students are still underrepresented in the higher education system, especially in the elite universities (Bai, 2006).

This research aims to understand how social changes, urbanisation and broader neoliberal reforms have influenced rural students’ social mobility experiences, to examine how rural students make sense of their encounters with the dominant urban culture. Specifically, the study seeks to elicit rural students’ narratives about their journeys, during and after higher education so as to better understand how the impediments of a disadvantaged family background, the hukou (household registration) system and its related issues (such as the unequal distribution of urban-rural educational resources) affect the potential for social mobility. A life history approach is applied to the qualitative data collection and analysis. Participants of this research is university graduates who have grown up in rural villages of Shandong province in China. A purposive sampling strategy has been followed to recruit participants of four age cohorts groups: university students who graduated in 1980s, 1990s, 2000s and 2010s.
Bourdieu’s toolkits are applied to understand the constraints and disadvantages that rural students experience when compared with their urban peers after entering higher education and then moving into their professional lives. The analyses revealed the development of marketization and meritocratic ideology in the educational sector have reinforced the existing inequality between urban and rural students, and the rural students’ chances for upward social mobility have been increasingly squeezed. Moreover, the division of urban and rural in China is by no means straightforward and the rural educational field is not homogeneous but with contains hierarchies within itself. After entering higher education, urban-rural differences perceived by rural students appeared in various forms with distinctive and historical features. Compared with urban students, rural students are disadvantaged in terms of those cultural capitals which are valued in the fields of schooling, and subsequently, in higher education. In addition, from Bourdieu’s perspective (1990), the process of upward social mobility involves the adjustment of habitus to field. When habitus encounters an unfamiliar field, individuals are supposed to experience ambivalence when having to deal with moments of misalignment and tension, which shares many similarities with rural students’ first encounter in the urban cultural context. For those rural students who are living in the urban context, transformation and alteration co-exist throughout their adaptation to the urban context and efforts have been made by rural students to reshape the urban field with rurality and guanxi. This research aims to explore a more reflexive and critical application of Bourdieu’s theoretical concepts and other social class approaches in Chinese context. Considering the complexity and uniqueness of the Chinese social context, I am carefully localising, recontextualising and hopefully enriching those above mentioned theoretical framework with the reflections obtained from the data analysis.

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