2011
DOI: 10.3167/latiss.2011.040303
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A public secret: 'education for quality' and suicide among Chinese elite university students

Abstract: This article is based on anthropological fieldwork undertaken at two elite universities in Beijing. It addresses the paradoxical situation of the many instances of suicide among Chinese elite university students in Beijing, which constitute a public secret. The pressure of education weighs heavily on the shoulders of China's only child in each family, known as the generation of little emperors and little empresses. Since the 1980s, the suzhi jiaoyu reforms (education for quality) have involved various attempts… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…These socioeconomic transformations were also paralleled by educational reforms, especially the development of “Quality Education” (素质教育, suzhi jiaoyu ), which was presented in a policy document published by the State Council in 1999 (The State Council, 1999). “Quality Education” was a broad initiative that called for changes in pedagogy, curricula, teacher training, and the structure of the education system from kindergarten to university level (Bregnbæk, 2011: 26). Susanne Bregnbæk explains how this educational initiative shifted the focus of education to a form of self-realisation and self-development, as it encouraged students to begin nurturing their individual skills (Bregnbæk, 2016: 12).…”
Section: Fostering Self-reliant and Aspiring Individualsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These socioeconomic transformations were also paralleled by educational reforms, especially the development of “Quality Education” (素质教育, suzhi jiaoyu ), which was presented in a policy document published by the State Council in 1999 (The State Council, 1999). “Quality Education” was a broad initiative that called for changes in pedagogy, curricula, teacher training, and the structure of the education system from kindergarten to university level (Bregnbæk, 2011: 26). Susanne Bregnbæk explains how this educational initiative shifted the focus of education to a form of self-realisation and self-development, as it encouraged students to begin nurturing their individual skills (Bregnbæk, 2016: 12).…”
Section: Fostering Self-reliant and Aspiring Individualsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…PhD students have been active internationally in analysing changes in the practice and context of their work (for example, Nielsen and Thorkelsen 2012;Morrison et al 2011). More recently, there is an increasing interest in learning and teaching in West and East Asia, notably China (Bregnbaek 2011;Hansen and Thørgersen 2015) t / viii and in transnational or 'global' education (Nielsen 2012;Trahar 2015). We started this anniversary year by considering not only how to shape teaching and learning by engaging critically with neo-liberal contexts but how to recreate universities for the public good (Greenwood and Wright 2017).…”
Section: / VImentioning
confidence: 99%
“…3. For some the pressure of obtaining a scholarship to go abroad leads to depression and suicidal thoughts (Bregnbaek, 2011). 4.…”
Section: Fundingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This 'educational desire' (Kipnis, 2011) is tied to both internal and external migration. Whereas young people from rural China (and their parents) struggle to create a future in one of China's major cities, young people from urban China often dream of travelling abroad (Bregnbaek, 2011). 3 In contemporary China even higher education increasingly falls short of living up to its promise of social mobility, as college graduates are outnumbering white collar jobs (Fong, 2004(Fong, , 2011.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%