There seem to be similarities in behavior to the “Cultural Revolution”, such as rebelling at universities, and requiring teachers and classmates to toe the line or publicly apologize and/or get fired, etc. (I don’t know if the similarities are sufficient, or if this is more or less a standard pattern for every political movement.)
I don’t know about every political movement, but it’s certainly a thing that happens a lot; see e.g. the list at the end of Wikipedia’s article on student protests. You’ll notice that there’s quite a variety of causes there, enough so that from “Maoism and X both had rebellions at universities” I don’t think you can infer any interesting similarities between X and Maoism.
There seem to be similarities in behavior to the “Cultural Revolution”, such as rebelling at universities, and requiring teachers and classmates to toe the line or publicly apologize and/or get fired, etc. (I don’t know if the similarities are sufficient, or if this is more or less a standard pattern for every political movement.)
I don’t know about every political movement, but it’s certainly a thing that happens a lot; see e.g. the list at the end of Wikipedia’s article on student protests. You’ll notice that there’s quite a variety of causes there, enough so that from “Maoism and X both had rebellions at universities” I don’t think you can infer any interesting similarities between X and Maoism.