The Systematic Generation and Multiple Dilemmas of Educational Involution: An Integrative Analytical Framework
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.61173/8c5r4584Keywords:
educational involution, social structure, cultural psychology, technological anxiety, systemic cycleAbstract
With the continued deepening of globalization, educational competition at all levels of Chinese society is becoming increasingly fierce. “Educational involution,” a social science concept describing systemic over-competition, manifests itself as a social phenomenon in which individuals and families, within the context of limited resources and development opportunities, continuously invest additional time, energy, and capital in their quest for relative advantage, resulting in diminishing returns for individuals and a continuous expansion of collective losses. This article systematically explores the root causes of educational involution in China and its broader social consequences from a multidimensional and integrated perspective. The study finds that educational involution is not driven by a single factor but rather by the combined effects of social structural tensions, intergenerational cultural and psychological inertia, and external anxieties triggered by technological iteration. These intertwined factors not only significantly suppress students’ innovative thinking and compromise their psychological well-being at the micro level, but also, at the macro level, further widen the gap in educational resource distribution and reinforce the entrenched social class structure. Consequently, this article argues that only by deeply understanding the selfperpetuating systemic cycle underlying involution can we lay the necessary theoretical foundation for transcending this predicament and reshaping a healthy educational ecosystem.