"School drift" strictly implements the study plan every day like students at school. There are such a group of people around many colleges and universities. Some of them have failed in the postgraduate entrance examination, some are on-the-job personnel, and some have resigned and come back to take the postgraduate entrance examination. Most of these people rent near the school and appear in the study room and canteen of the school. They call themselves "school drifters".
The life focus of "school drift" lies in the school, making use of school resources to survive and still living the same life as students. This group mainly includes "examination schools" that avoid the peak of employment and increase the weight of employment; The "public examination school" that tries hard to get into the public examination year after year is unwilling to leave the school's "school-loving school"; Unemployed people who are dissatisfied with job hunting or encounter difficulties and go back to school to find a way out, and a small number of "smart people" who eat household wealth.
"School drifters" was a new term before 2004, but now it is well known to the public. After the enrollment expansion of colleges and universities, many social problems caused by the employment dilemma of college students have attracted the attention of sociologists and psychologists. Therefore, there is always a puzzling question behind the "school drifters", that is: Why did this group, either waiting for employment or preparing for postgraduate entrance examination, choose to stay after graduation?
According to a survey conducted by some universities in Shanghai, 54.35% of the students said that they would become "school drifters" before finding suitable jobs.
"School drifters", a fashionable and unique term, refers to college graduates who have graduated but are still "wandering" around the school, and even go to school to attend classes every day. They are all examiners for the postgraduate entrance examination.
"School drifters" also have a name, that is, "marginal people", which means they are neither college students nor people who work in schools. Some experts predict that there are hundreds of thousands of "school drifters" around universities in Beijing, Guangzhou and Zhengzhou. In 2005, the number of college graduates in China will reach 3.38 million, which is the largest year since the implementation of the enrollment expansion policy in colleges and universities from 65438 to 0999.
Up to now, there is no authoritative statistical data on how big the group of "school drifters" is, but its overall flooding trend has aroused widespread concern in society, which has become an accepted fact.
There are still some adults who haven't graduated from college, but a large part of them have become school drifters, or they have become school drifters for college entrance examination, self-taught examination or adult undergraduate research.
According to statistics, in 2009, there were 61100000 college students who graduated to the society. Together with more than 2 million graduates who have not been employed in the past two years, the employment problem of more than 8 million college students needs to be solved this year. In this army, there are such a group of people who have graduated and lost their school status, but they refuse to leave the campus, have no fixed long-term occupation and live a wandering life. The number of 20 10 will be even larger.