1st Edition

Higher Education Choice in China Social stratification, gender and educational inequality

By Xiaoming Sheng Copyright 2014
    188 Pages 5 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    186 Pages 5 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Much of the existing research on parental involvement and higher education choice examines the difference between the working class and the middle class, but little literature looks at different factions within the social classes. This book discusses higher education choice in China, particularly through the examination of social issues such as social stratification, parental involvement, and gender and educational inequality.

    Drawing from an empirical study based on Bourdieu’s theory, the book explores both inter-class and intra-class differences in China, providing an insight into how social class differences influence a number of issues, including:

    • educational equality
    • the role parents, especially mothers, play in higher education decision-making
    • the relationship between traditional cultural norms
    • gendered relationships within Chinese families.

    The sociology of higher education choices are derived through feedback from various sources, including both parents and students themselves. The book will be key reading for postgraduates and researchers in the fields of sociology, sociology of education, Chinese studies and Asian studies.

    1. Setting the scene  2. Class and higher education choice  3. Gender and higher education choice  4. Cultural capital and class strategy: How middle-Class mothers make cultural capital work  5. Capital and class strategy: Four social fractions within Chinese middle classes  6. Habitus and the reproduction of cultural capital  7. Contributions and conclusions

    Biography

    Xiaoming Sheng has a PhD in Sociology of Education from the University of Cambridge, UK. Prior to her doctoral studies, she was a Research Fellow in the Department of Sociology at Beijing University, China.