Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Because you had one friend like this you know more than those of us who are Indian-Americn who grew up with traditional Indian immigrant parents? Such hubris.
Oh come on. I had an Indian American best friend, and hung out with her and a lot of her Indian American girl friends and they ALL complained-joked about how strict their parents were with them (but not their brothers). Some more than others, but still. They weren't allowed to go to sleepovers (except with other Indian kids), to go out with a bunch of kids, to date, or to go on school ski trips or school overnight trips.
I also knew this friend when we went to college together and saw her and her Indian American friends there (in the Indian American Club) where they talked about getting away from their overly protective parents.
Am I saying they all were not allowed to go to a teens house for an academic club. No that seems extreme. But there was a level of more over protectiveness than was considered usual for the rest of the kids in our town or area. That's for sure.
Anonymous wrote:
Because you had one friend like this you know more than those of us who are Indian-Americn who grew up with traditional Indian immigrant parents? Such hubris.
Anonymous wrote:Riddle me this DCUM. Our family is white. DD, who is now late ES, had a "best friend" (Indian girl) who lived in out neighborhood for several years before she moved. Although she and DD could meet up on the playground, with the friend's mom watching, DF (dear friend) was never allowed to come over to our house-- not even for DD's birthday party. In fact, DD so wanted DF at her birthday party (which was at our house), that I extended the invitation to the DF's mother as well, and told her she was welcome to stay for the whole thing. I always thought the mom was a bit overprotective, because DD had her other neighborhood friends come over to play without a problem, and DF was prohibited from visiting other homes in the neighborhood too.
Fast forward to this year. DS, who is in late MS, is on a very competitive academic team, that practices about 15 hours a week outside of school, often at team members' homes. One of the members of the team is an Indian girl (IG). The entire team managed to coordinate the timing for several practices at the homes of various team members (once at our home, and the home of another team member). I made it clear that I would be home while they practiced, and offered to provide pizza & snacks so they could work through dinner. It seemed like it was settled, when IG's mother stepped in and said that IG could only meet with the team via Skype from her home. For logistical reasons, this doesn't work, and all of the members of the team have to be present for practice. When the head coach said that all team members must be present in person or they would be dropped, the mother agreed-- but only if the team practices are at IG's house. Weirdly, neither the mother nor the father can be present-- just the grandmother, who has minimal English (which makes me a little uncomfortable). Additionally, Also, some of the parents have volunteered and scheduled to act as coaches (DH was supposed to coach one night), but IG's mother has said that parent coaches "aren't necessary" (they are) and should not attend.
This isn't the only time I have run into this. Twice last year, once for Science Olympiad for DD (who was in 5th) and once for a group school project for DS (who was in 7th), parents of Indian Girls refused to allow them to come to our house (Science Olympiad) or the house of a team member (the group project), which caused a lot if inconvenience, and made it hard for the kids to do their projects. For my DD's birthday party last year (a different party) a different IG as not allowed to come (not had a conflict-- not allowed).
My question: what the he** is going on? Since I have an 11 year old DD, I understand the need to exercise caution, and I don't casually let he go to stranger's houses. But we live in a typical, safe upper middle class Fairfax County neighborhood, are involved in our children's schools and never invite other children to come over to our house unless there is a parent home (usually me). As our DC's get older, they hare having more and more group projects or extracurricular activities that require the kids to meet outside of school-- which seems reasonable to me if I verify that a project exists, take the child to the house, meet the parent, leave them with a phone, etc. Other parents with kids in the same age range (11-14) seem to feel the same way. So what's up with the parents of Indian Girls? This keeps happening-- and not just when it's our home. Honestly, I'm getting a little pissed off. So what's the reasonable explanation?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Riddle me this DCUM. Our family is white. DD, who is now late ES, had a "best friend" (Indian girl) who lived in out neighborhood for several years before she moved. Although she and DD could meet up on the playground, with the friend's mom watching, DF (dear friend) was never allowed to come over to our house-- not even for DD's birthday party. In fact, DD so wanted DF at her birthday party (which was at our house), that I extended the invitation to the DF's mother as well, and told her she was welcome to stay for the whole thing. I always thought the mom was a bit overprotective, because DD had her other neighborhood friends come over to play without a problem, and DF was prohibited from visiting other homes in the neighborhood too.
Fast forward to this year. DS, who is in late MS, is on a very competitive academic team, that practices about 15 hours a week outside of school, often at team members' homes. One of the members of the team is an Indian girl (IG). The entire team managed to coordinate the timing for several practices at the homes of various team members (once at our home, and the home of another team member). I made it clear that I would be home while they practiced, and offered to provide pizza & snacks so they could work through dinner. It seemed like it was settled, when IG's mother stepped in and said that IG could only meet with the team via Skype from her home. For logistical reasons, this doesn't work, and all of the members of the team have to be present for practice. When the head coach said that all team members must be present in person or they would be dropped, the mother agreed-- but only if the team practices are at IG's house. Weirdly, neither the mother nor the father can be present-- just the grandmother, who has minimal English (which makes me a little uncomfortable). Additionally, Also, some of the parents have volunteered and scheduled to act as coaches (DH was supposed to coach one night), but IG's mother has said that parent coaches "aren't necessary" (they are) and should not attend.
This isn't the only time I have run into this. Twice last year, once for Science Olympiad for DD (who was in 5th) and once for a group school project for DS (who was in 7th), parents of Indian Girls refused to allow them to come to our house (Science Olympiad) or the house of a team member (the group project), which caused a lot if inconvenience, and made it hard for the kids to do their projects. For my DD's birthday party last year (a different party) a different IG as not allowed to come (not had a conflict-- not allowed).
My question: what the he** is going on? Since I have an 11 year old DD, I understand the need to exercise caution, [u]and I don't casually let he go to stranger's houses. But we live in a typical, safe upper middle class Fairfax County neighborhood, are involved in our children's schools and never invite other children to come over to our house unless there is a parent home (usually me). As our DC's get older, they hare having more and more group projects or extracurricular activities that require the kids to meet outside of school-- which seems reasonable to me if I verify that a project exists, take the child to the house, meet the parent, leave them with a phone, etc. Other parents with kids in the same age range (11-14) seem to feel the same way. So what's up with the parents of Indian Girls? This keeps happening-- and not just when it's our home. Honestly, I'm getting a little pissed off. So what's the reasonable explanation?
Sounds like you already know the answer to your question. These families exercise caution differently from you. Assume they have a valid reason and go with a good heart and mind onward. Would you feel differently knowing the mother, of whatever nationality, felt this way because she was gang raped during a "study session" when she was 12? They offered their home and presumably your child will be fine even if the grandma doesn't speak much English, no?
I'm actually a little concerned about someone chaperoning a group of American teenagers if they don't speak English. But more concerning, the designated Coach is not welcome in the home and no, grandma cannot be a team coach and help the team on the substantive issues this competition, which is of the speech & debate variety, unless she speaks English.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Riddle me this DCUM. Our family is white. DD, who is now late ES, had a "best friend" (Indian girl) who lived in out neighborhood for several years before she moved. Although she and DD could meet up on the playground, with the friend's mom watching, DF (dear friend) was never allowed to come over to our house-- not even for DD's birthday party. In fact, DD so wanted DF at her birthday party (which was at our house), that I extended the invitation to the DF's mother as well, and told her she was welcome to stay for the whole thing. I always thought the mom was a bit overprotective, because DD had her other neighborhood friends come over to play without a problem, and DF was prohibited from visiting other homes in the neighborhood too.
Fast forward to this year. DS, who is in late MS, is on a very competitive academic team, that practices about 15 hours a week outside of school, often at team members' homes. One of the members of the team is an Indian girl (IG). The entire team managed to coordinate the timing for several practices at the homes of various team members (once at our home, and the home of another team member). I made it clear that I would be home while they practiced, and offered to provide pizza & snacks so they could work through dinner. It seemed like it was settled, when IG's mother stepped in and said that IG could only meet with the team via Skype from her home. For logistical reasons, this doesn't work, and all of the members of the team have to be present for practice. When the head coach said that all team members must be present in person or they would be dropped, the mother agreed-- but only if the team practices are at IG's house. Weirdly, neither the mother nor the father can be present-- just the grandmother, who has minimal English (which makes me a little uncomfortable). Additionally, Also, some of the parents have volunteered and scheduled to act as coaches (DH was supposed to coach one night), but IG's mother has said that parent coaches "aren't necessary" (they are) and should not attend.
This isn't the only time I have run into this. Twice last year, once for Science Olympiad for DD (who was in 5th) and once for a group school project for DS (who was in 7th), parents of Indian Girls refused to allow them to come to our house (Science Olympiad) or the house of a team member (the group project), which caused a lot if inconvenience, and made it hard for the kids to do their projects. For my DD's birthday party last year (a different party) a different IG as not allowed to come (not had a conflict-- not allowed).
My question: what the he** is going on? Since I have an 11 year old DD, I understand the need to exercise caution, [u]and I don't casually let he go to stranger's houses. But we live in a typical, safe upper middle class Fairfax County neighborhood, are involved in our children's schools and never invite other children to come over to our house unless there is a parent home (usually me). As our DC's get older, they hare having more and more group projects or extracurricular activities that require the kids to meet outside of school-- which seems reasonable to me if I verify that a project exists, take the child to the house, meet the parent, leave them with a phone, etc. Other parents with kids in the same age range (11-14) seem to feel the same way. So what's up with the parents of Indian Girls? This keeps happening-- and not just when it's our home. Honestly, I'm getting a little pissed off. So what's the reasonable explanation?
Sounds like you already know the answer to your question. These families exercise caution differently from you. Assume they have a valid reason and go with a good heart and mind onward. Would you feel differently knowing the mother, of whatever nationality, felt this way because she was gang raped during a "study session" when she was 12? They offered their home and presumably your child will be fine even if the grandma doesn't speak much English, no?
Anonymous wrote:This is not what parents of "IGs"do. This is what a few parents you have run into did with respect to the dealings you had with them.
I am Indian-American and was allowed to go to the houses of all my female friends, including tons of sleepovers. I was allowed to go to any school or extracurricular meetings at any person's house.
I have coached Science Olympiad teams at the elementary level and had many Indian kids on the team. I have never run into this problem with their assigned meetings or mentors.
Back away from the generalizations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is not what parents of "IGs"do. This is what a few parents you have run into did with respect to the dealings you had with them.
I am Indian-American and was allowed to go to the houses of all my female friends, including tons of sleepovers. I was allowed to go to any school or extracurricular meetings at any person's house.
I have coached Science Olympiad teams at the elementary level and had many Indian kids on the team. I have never run into this problem with their assigned meetings or mentors.
Back away from the generalizations.
+100.
Hang on a sec. I am not generalizing or trying to criticize, or whatever. And I am trying to shorten words to type faster, not be snarky. But all told, I have run into 5 situations , all involving different girls, in the last couple of years. The one involving DS's academic team will probably continue this entire year. Since we need to make this work for all team members, I am genuinely trying to understand what is going on; and what I can do about it. Also, I'm a little uncomfortable dropping DS off twice a week at a home where I cannot communicate with the responsible adult(s). And having the coaches blocked from attending is a problem. We are going to have a much easier year if the team can meet at different homes, the coaches have access to coach, etc. In the current situation, we have one set of parents making things difficult for an entire group of kids. I'm sure there are thousands of Indian Girls in FCPS who do not have overprotective parents. This isn't about them. This is me trying to understand the cultural issues at play. And implying I'm racist because I'm running into these issues doesn't help. (If anything, the parents who won't let a child study at my house, with me home to chaperone teenage children are the racist ones). Seriously DCUM: why is this happening, and what can I do to make things easier?
Ask the parents! Pretty simple. And sorry, you may not be a racist but you are rude. I guess all black kids steal too, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree, the nationality of the child does not matter. Is there any way for this one girl to be on a different team? It seems that the constraints the parents would like to place on the rest of the team members will make it difficult for the team to work in the way it is meant to. Or, in the alternative, is there another team for your son?
If this is a team effort, it doesn't seem appropriate for one set of parents to set out different rules than the Olympiad rules.
I agree with this poster. This family's rules, regardless of their ethnicity, seem like an undue imposition on the rest of the team.
+2. This family's rules are not amenable to their DD participating. It's on them. BTW, I'm Indian-American growing up in the 1970s-80s, and I've never heard of anyone among our ethnic cohort with similar rules. I did see something similar but not so extreme with some very religious families of various religions, and sadly, families with domineering fathers.
+3 Not amenable.
Anonymous wrote:OP, my best friend growing up (admittedly years ago) in middle and high school was Indian, and she had the stereotypical overprotective recent immigrant Indian parents who were exactly as you are describing. She joked about it, all her Indian girl friends lamented it. They did not let their girls do ANYTHING without a parent or grandparent or older family member along to chaperone. They did let up slightly in high school and become more assimilated when it was time to send her away to college which they relented and allowed her to live 2 hours away from home (but visited often!)
Yes, this is a cultural thing, despite so many posters telling you it's just your own personal experience with 5 Indian families and how they treat their daughters.
As for how to handle this particular girl, as you say, don't focus on her being Indian, focus on how this is unacceptable that she can't meet anywhere but home, that at her home there isn't a parent or someone who is fluent in English supervising the children and they won't let coaches attend there. Sorry. They state their preferences, you state yours. This girl should not be on your team. She can't meet and she can't host. Too bad for her but there is no reason to make allowances for what may or may not be bias against non-family members. What on earth do her parents think would happen is all 20 kids refused to meet anywhere but their own homes for Pete's sake?