‘No men allowed on our campus’


IT is just two weeks before the final exams. But things have come to a standstill at Seoul’s Dongduk Women’s University, where students have stopped attending classes since Nov 11.

At the school’s annexe outside the main gate, a row of funeral wreaths has been placed in a symbolic gesture. There are protest slogans spray-painted on the ground and protest notes pasted on the building’s facade, calling for the university to exercise more democracy and revoke the plans for co-education.

The school gate – pasted with handwritten protest letters and notes – remains tightly shut, while a security guard checks student cards before allowing the women entry into the campus.

News broke on Nov 7 that the school was mulling a transition to co-education. On Nov 11, Dongduk students started occupying the school’s buildings in protest. They argue that such a move would go against the school’s founding principles, which is to ensure women’s equal rights to education.The protest has since spread to other women’s universities like Sungshin Women’s University, also in Seoul, and Gwangju Women’s University in the southwestern part of the country.

South Korea’s birth rate woes have led to its school-age population dipping to 7.14 million in 2024 from 9.18 million 10 years ago. The falling enrolment rates have prompted many private universities to come up with ways to increase student intake to stay financially viable.

But resistance has been strong. In 2015 and 2018, two women’s universities were forced to withdraw their co-educational plans after fierce student opposition.

South Korea has a history of gender-separated education institutions. Women-specific colleges were established mostly from the late Joseon dynasty (late 1800s to early 1900s), by either Christian missionaries or women’s activists.Today, South Korea has 14 women-only colleges – all privately run – with most located in Seoul. There are about 200 universities across the country.

Many other women-only universities’ student councils have since issued statements of solidarity supporting Dongduk, Sungshin and Gwangju universities.

When The Straits Times visited the Dongduk university campus on Nov 22, student council president Choi Hyun-ah and other council members were clearing some of the protest debris from outside the university’s annexe.

“Our university was founded in 1950 as a women’s university, but now the school has announced its intention to transition into a co-educational institution.

“It did not inform the students in advance about the plans, despite it being such a major decision. This has caused significant anger among the students,” said the 22-year-old chemistry major.

At a general assembly of students held on Nov 20, 2,000 students turned up and voted unanimously against the transition to co-education. The school has an enrolment of 6,500 students.

The school’s president has since issued a statement to explain that the co-education transition issue was under discussion and not cast in stone, but the students do not buy into the argument.

Another council member Song Min-ju, 21, said she had always aspired to attend a women’s college, after hearing about sex crimes in other co-ed universities, such as hidden cameras in the women’s bathrooms.

Yet, the journalism major insists the protest is not a feminist movement, but more an expression of their disappointment in the lack of respect from the school authorities over such a major decision.

She said: “It is true that the student population has been declining, so going co-ed could be an eventuality. But shouldn’t the school think this through with inputs from the students instead of pushing forward unilaterally?”

Over at Sungshin Women’s University, the university’s administration building was similarly defaced with graffiti and posters and strewn with debris. A bright yellow poster read “No Entry” along with “#NoManZone”.

While some have suggested that the protests are a manifestation of South Korea’s chronic gender inequality struggle – a World Economic Forum’s gender gap ranking report released in June placed South Korea 94 out of 146 countries – sociology professor Shin Kwang-yeong does not see it that way.

Prof Shin said: “Students see themselves as a key stakeholder in the university. So the school’s top-down decision-making is what is provoking the students’ anger and discontent, since such a decision would completely change the identity of the university.” — The Straits Times/ANN

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