Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am Asian. I will make sure that my kids are successful and would have learned time management and work ethics by the time they leave my house.
Some kids will learn these earlier than others, and I will be there each step of the way to help, guide and support them in every way that I can. However, after senior year - regardless of their intrinsic motivation and personality - they will be launched successfully.
OP again. I am not Asian born but do have many Asian friends. I actually am of Western European descent. I thought I would throw that it in since my methods are probably considered Eastern.
LOL. No, I don't consider it Eastern. I consider it very old school type of parenting. You do due diligence as a parent with some tough love thrown in. You try and figure out what each child needs and you give them that support and discipline.
I feel that I have a larger responsibility in raising my kid, than any other entity. I do not feel that that is the role of the school system or the teachers. I see the school as as the workplace and the teacher as the boss. My kids job is to do well at their work. I tell them that if they are successful, I am the one person who gains nothing, but am the happiest and proudest of their achievements. I also tell them that I will not be there for the rest of their lives - so the values I can teach them while they are under my care should be solid enough to last them a lifetime. My job is to watch them carefully, understand the weakness in their personality, work habits etc, and work hard with them to fix it.
If I need to yell - then I will yell. If I need to wake up at 4:00 am to make coffee for them and wake them up to study, I will do that. It is not always easy, but my life for these few years revolves around their needs. Being a parent is not easy.
OP again....I give my kids the same lecture about how their job is to do well in school. My husband and I work full time and I've told both kids that our job to ensure that we are able to pay the mortgage, private school, food, clothing, activities etc so that they may have a much better life than we did growing up. I've never used the teacher is the boss analogy but I do equate the tests to their "performance" reviews. When my DD gets a really bad grade, I tell her that if I continually performed like that at work that I would lose my job. I also tell my kids that I can't support them forever but I will give them the tools so they will be successful. I love your words though very sweet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am Asian. I will make sure that my kids are successful and would have learned time management and work ethics by the time they leave my house.
Some kids will learn these earlier than others, and I will be there each step of the way to help, guide and support them in every way that I can. However, after senior year - regardless of their intrinsic motivation and personality - they will be launched successfully.
OP again. I am not Asian born but do have many Asian friends. I actually am of Western European descent. I thought I would throw that it in since my methods are probably considered Eastern.
LOL. No, I don't consider it Eastern. I consider it very old school type of parenting. You do due diligence as a parent with some tough love thrown in. You try and figure out what each child needs and you give them that support and discipline.
I feel that I have a larger responsibility in raising my kid, than any other entity. I do not feel that that is the role of the school system or the teachers. I see the school as as the workplace and the teacher as the boss. My kids job is to do well at their work. I tell them that if they are successful, I am the one person who gains nothing, but am the happiest and proudest of their achievements. I also tell them that I will not be there for the rest of their lives - so the values I can teach them while they are under my care should be solid enough to last them a lifetime. My job is to watch them carefully, understand the weakness in their personality, work habits etc, and work hard with them to fix it.
If I need to yell - then I will yell. If I need to wake up at 4:00 am to make coffee for them and wake them up to study, I will do that. It is not always easy, but my life for these few years revolves around their needs. Being a parent is not easy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am Asian. I will make sure that my kids are successful and would have learned time management and work ethics by the time they leave my house.
Some kids will learn these earlier than others, and I will be there each step of the way to help, guide and support them in every way that I can. However, after senior year - regardless of their intrinsic motivation and personality - they will be launched successfully.
OP again. I am not Asian born but do have many Asian friends. I actually am of Western European descent. I thought I would throw that it in since my methods are probably considered Eastern.
Anonymous wrote:I'm the OP of this thread and I would like those who are casting stones at me, to please share how your kids performed in school. I am surprised at how many people can't relate. I do appreciate the helpful posters though.
FWIW- I did pose the following question to my kids this weekend without prompting the correct answer," Is it more important to get straight A's or to work hard/do you best?" Both of the kids answered that doing their best was more important.
I just find that my older one in particular at times lacks internal motivation (outside of reading books) which is why I get so frustrated. She has very good standardized test scores also so she is obviously capable. If she didn't have the ability to earn straight A's, I would understand and work with her to ensure she achieved to her highest potential. Taking away her ability to watch TV, electronics,playdates, and lecturing/yelling (I'm not proud of that part) works as motivation now. She is more driven this year than she has been in the past- but she slips back at times. I probably yell/lecture her about once every month or two. It isn't like I am doing this on a daily basis. I would be shocked if the people casting dispersions at me didn't yell at that their children at times too for whatever their hot button is either.
I do and will always hold my kids to high standards and will not make excuses for it. There are always better ways of handling situations and I know I can do better.
I was really hoping to hear from other mom's whose kids earned straight A's whether they felt like they really had to push their children when they were younger or if their young children had an innate drive.
Most of my DD's friends are highly successful in school and I know that their parents are involved and push too. DD and her friends also have very high EQ's too.
Anonymous wrote:I am Asian. I will make sure that my kids are successful and would have learned time management and work ethics by the time they leave my house.
Some kids will learn these earlier than others, and I will be there each step of the way to help, guide and support them in every way that I can. However, after senior year - regardless of their intrinsic motivation and personality - they will be launched successfully.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. She loses all TV, playdates and electronics when she earns disappointing grades. However nothing seems to get through to her like the fact that she disappointed me. Most of the time I'm pretty even keel but this is the one area where I get rattled easily. It is a real sacrifice to send her to her school.
"She disappointed me"-that's a problem. You need to find a way to nurture her joy in learning, or send her to a school where she is engaged and loves to learn-it sounds like you have the resources to choose a school that is a good match for her. I teach college students at a highly selective university (in Baltimore) and I see a good number of students who have no intrinsic motivation to learn, only extrinsic (my parents want me to do this is a big one), they are not happy people, and they are not as successful as the self-motivated students who achieve because they love learning and solving problems. Achievement through threats and punishments is just setting you daughter up for problems in the future.