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Original Articles

The Impact of Family Background on College Students’ Chances of Serving as Student Union Cadres

Pages 128-142 | Published online: 24 Jul 2015
 

Abstract

A survey and comparative analysis of the family backgrounds of the entire undergraduate student body of X University and the group of student union cadres shows: the proportion of college students who serve as student union cadres who come from cities and have families with high social status, high family income, and parents with high educational backgrounds is greater than that of college students from the rural areas with families with low social status, low family income, and parents with low educational backgrounds. The reason is: there is uniformity in the cultural habits of college students who come from middle and high strata and the student qualities required by the student union; the self-alienation and rejection from the student union of college students from the low social class aggravates the trend of the low probability that they will become student union cadres.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Zhu Xinzhuo

Zhu Xinzhuo is an associate professor at the School of Education, Huazhong University of Science and Technology.

Shi Junhua

Shi Junhua is a teaching fellow at the College of Electronic Information Engineering, Wuhan Polytechnic University.

Dong Zhihui

Dong Zhihui is a research fellow at the Beijing Offen Future Education Consulting Co., Ltd.

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