In China - as in many
countries - more women than men are entering university. But are there
jobs for the girls out in the real world?
Manicurist or courtroom judge? Cake decorator or radio host?
For the cost of a ticket, children in Beijing can test out dozens of
possible careers at the I Have a Dream theme park.
But even in this imaginary world, these children - and their parents - stick to rigid gender stereotypes.
The most popular attraction for girls is the chance to dress
up as flight attendants. After dragging tiny suitcases onto a fake plane
cabin, they learn to serve meals from a miniature trolley.
"Straighten your uniforms!", the girls are told, as they stand in neat rows, nervously tugging at their sleeves.
Many boys choose to work as customs agents or
security guards - in costumes complete with fake rifles and mini
bullet-proof vests.
In China, the idea that girls can't or shouldn't do the same
jobs as boys is passed on early. It's a lesson that extends into
university and beyond.
Six hundred kilometres south of Beijing, at the China Mining
and Technology University in China's eastern Jiangsu province, a group
of mining engineering students listen intently to their professor.
They're the envy of others at this school, since they belong
to one of China's so-called "green card majors", courses that all but
guarantee employment after graduation.
But this program has one clear entrance requirement: men only.
Girls are encouraged to dress up as air hostesses at the I Have a Dream theme park in Beijing
Meanwhile young boys parade with guns, pretending to be security guards
"China's labour law suggests mining work is unsuitable for
women, so we ask women to refrain from applying to our major," explains
one of the department's senior professors, Shu Jisen.
This university is not alone. Out of respect for women's
safety, it says, China's education ministry bans girls from studying a
variety of subjects across China, from tunnel engineering to navigation.
At one university in Dalian, northern China, females are
barred from studying naval engineering - because months on board a ship
would be tough for women to endure, one admissions officer explained to
the BBC.
Slightly different reasons are given for
severely restricting the number of women who can study at Beijing's
People's Police University, which has a strict quota, limiting girls to
comprise 10-15% of the student body.
An admissions officer refused to be interviewed in person.
But over the phone, he told the BBC that women were not allowed into the
university in large numbers because there were not many jobs open to
them after graduation, since most people in China expected police
officers to be male.
Jiangsu's mining engineering department cites similar
practical considerations. Women would not be able to carry heavy mining
equipment, they explain, and they would not be able to escape the mine
as quickly in an emergency.
"Some jobs are really inappropriate for women," Prof Shu argues.
"If they force their way into these jobs, they will waste energy that can be better used elsewhere."
Should women be allowed to sign up to all university courses? We asked students in Jiangsu province
Some refuse to accept those reasons. A small but feisty network
of students and lawyers is fighting the restrictions. Using electric
razors, they shaved their heads in series of well-publicised protests
across China last year.
"It was blatant gender discrimination," argues one of the student activists, Xiao Meili.
"No-one had stood up to these universities before, and told
them these policies were wrong. Why didn't anyone want to change
anything? It really made me very angry."
But more are starting to question the ban. In the university
lunch canteen in Jiangsu, girls, here to study everything from
management to mathematics, can't stomach the restrictions.
"If someone can endure tough working conditions, that person should be allowed to do it," explains one student.
"Universities should lift the limitations and allow people to make their own choices, instead of just barring them."
The activists' network is also battling gender quotas at many Chinese universities that favour boys.
In recent years, females across the country scored top marks
in China's all-important college entrance exam. But schools want their
courses to achieve a balance between genders, so they regularly lower
the admissions standards for boys, leaving girls with higher marks out
of luck.
China's ministry of education insists that it does not allow
fixed gender ratios when admitting students, "except for military
academies, national defence and public security colleges", according to
China's state news agency, Xinhua.
But unofficially, the quotas are still in place at many schools, according to the activists.
Chinese education officials say there are no fixed gender ratios for student admissions
They hope to eradicate all written policies banning girls from
applying to any majors, a goal activist Xiao Meili feels they can reach
within a year.
And hidden prejudice against women in education? That presents a bigger challenge.
"Sexism is in every corner of life in China, and people get so used to it that it's easy to ignore it," she says.
"People got used to the idea that men did things better than
women. But when women started to excel, people got scared and thought of
that as a problem."