Anonymous wrote:There's really such an element of racism to the idea of a tiger mom. The real tiger parents I met are of all races and the ones that really stick out are actually white. Two kids stick out who literally have been pushed and molded by their white parents so hard that they picked out colleges in kindergarten and said they will get in because of (fill in the blank). Their parents will claim their children are just "driven" and they had nothing to do with their child's activities but it's so false. It was always surprising to me how they dictated their child's lives from age 4 or 5 onwards but the people that other parents label tiger moms are the Asian parents who are actually are super relaxed especially compared to those white parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My SIL's sons, two of them, were best friends with a kid who lived across the street. SIL was absolutely vicious about calling the kid's mother a "tiger mom." (And yes, there was an element of racism, SIL is white and the kid's parents are from China.) The kid's parents pushed him very hard academically.
He is now a doctor, finishing up residency. SIL's sons are living in her house, unemployed, playing online video games all night and stealing from her debit card every chance they get. These kids are all mid-30s now.
Shouldn't a doctor be done with residency before their mid-30s? Even a neurosurgeon should be finished around the age of 33.
Anonymous wrote:There's really such an element of racism to the idea of a tiger mom. The real tiger parents I met are of all races and the ones that really stick out are actually white. Two kids stick out who literally have been pushed and molded by their white parents so hard that they picked out colleges in kindergarten and said they will get in because of (fill in the blank). Their parents will claim their children are just "driven" and they had nothing to do with their child's activities but it's so false. It was always surprising to me how they dictated their child's lives from age 4 or 5 onwards but the people that other parents label tiger moms are the Asian parents who are actually are super relaxed especially compared to those white parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m probably thought of as a tiger mom. Expected my kids to get all As, play an instrument, etc., but that’s because they seemed easily capable of that. They did great in high school. We are also very close. DD is at a T25 getting lots of Bs, and I don’t love it, to be honest, but she’s happy and excelling at her intellectual extracurricular, so it’s fine. Younger kid is brilliant. And happy. We’ll see what happens to him.
To what do you attribute the differences in grades in high school and college? Does your DD go to a grade deflating college or do you think that high school was easier? Would you have preferred that your DD went to a not T25 but got all As or do you not care anymore?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To be fair, kids of my circle's tiger moms seem to be doing well.
I don't doubt it. And when they get married, many of them will choose to spend holidays with their spouse's families who are interested in them as human beings and not just what they can achieve.
Yup! You may think they are happy and don't mind how you raised them. But in reality, many did not enjoy it and appreciate being appreciated for whom they are. There is so much more to a person than their GPA and academic achievements. We care more about what they do with their lives. Are they good, kind, generous people? Do other people want to spend time with them?
Anonymous wrote:My SIL's sons, two of them, were best friends with a kid who lived across the street. SIL was absolutely vicious about calling the kid's mother a "tiger mom." (And yes, there was an element of racism, SIL is white and the kid's parents are from China.) The kid's parents pushed him very hard academically.
He is now a doctor, finishing up residency. SIL's sons are living in her house, unemployed, playing online video games all night and stealing from her debit card every chance they get. These kids are all mid-30s now.
Anonymous wrote:I am not aware of anyone who admits being a true tiger parent, and I am not one , so I would not know. However, I am aware of many many snowplow parents: push teachers to let them into the highest level of something, complain about high school(or middle school) grading, complain about kid not getting first chair(and complain so much the head music teacher asks the actual first chair to give it up), write the essays for them because they say the kid cannot write them correctly, open and manage all the portals for them (after making them apply to 20 million super reaches)……the kids of Every . Single. One. Has floundered in college. Some only temporarily, some more severely and dropped out. Only one of them landed at a Top20, but the rest landed T30-40.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know about the moms' perspective, but I went to school with some Asian and Asian American kids (I am also Asian American) whose parents pushed them into playing an instrument as a hobby, and perhaps after initially hating practice, they ended up loving music so much that they pursued classical music for undergrad and grad school. Some of the parents were supportive of this arts path, but some did not actually want their kids to pursue music as a career because it is impractical.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My SIL's sons, two of them, were best friends with a kid who lived across the street. SIL was absolutely vicious about calling the kid's mother a "tiger mom." (And yes, there was an element of racism, SIL is white and the kid's parents are from China.) The kid's parents pushed him very hard academically.
He is now a doctor, finishing up residency. SIL's sons are living in her house, unemployed, playing online video games all night and stealing from her debit card every chance they get. These kids are all mid-30s now.
Shouldn't a doctor be done with residency before their mid-30s? Even a neurosurgeon should be finished around the age of 33.
You win the prize for the most dumbass poster of the day.
Being done with residency in your mid 30s raises zero red flags.
High school = 18
plus 4 years college = 22
plus 4 years med school = 26
plus 3-7 years residency = 29-33
What is happening during those extra years if someone is mid-30s and still finishing residency? Especially if they're not pursuing neurosurgery or another of the rare specialities that takes 7 years after med school.
The new norm is 1-2 gap years after college to make a competitive application as all of that has gone bananas too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To be fair, kids of my circle's tiger moms seem to be doing well.
I don't doubt it. And when they get married, many of them will choose to spend holidays with their spouse's families who are interested in them as human beings and not just what they can achieve.
What is happening during those extra years if someone is mid-30s and still finishing residency? Especially if they're not pursuing neurosurgery or another of the rare specialities that takes 7 years after med school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My SIL's sons, two of them, were best friends with a kid who lived across the street. SIL was absolutely vicious about calling the kid's mother a "tiger mom." (And yes, there was an element of racism, SIL is white and the kid's parents are from China.) The kid's parents pushed him very hard academically.
He is now a doctor, finishing up residency. SIL's sons are living in her house, unemployed, playing online video games all night and stealing from her debit card every chance they get. These kids are all mid-30s now.
Shouldn't a doctor be done with residency before their mid-30s? Even a neurosurgeon should be finished around the age of 33.
You win the prize for the most dumbass poster of the day.
Being done with residency in your mid 30s raises zero red flags.
High school = 18
plus 4 years college = 22
plus 4 years med school = 26
plus 3-7 years residency = 29-33
What is happening during those extra years if someone is mid-30s and still finishing residency? Especially if they're not pursuing neurosurgery or another of the rare specialities that takes 7 years after med school.
Anonymous wrote:I think I am a tiger mom, but most people would say I am not. I push my kids, but I don't think that Kumon or "prestigious" summer programs (which to be clear, I think have their own benefits but college admission chances are not one of them).
I push them when it comes to what I think matters. Grades, rigor, discipline in their ECs (they cannot quit their core activities and we do the supplemental outside of school stuff only if beneficial to improving). Also being a polite and kinds person is important for life and yes I also think it is helpful professionally and academically.
I'm also extremely loving. So that may not be your definition of a tiger mom. But, I know that if they work hard, they can get near perfect grades in demanding classes, so that's what I expect. Also important to parent the child you have. One of my kids will likely achieve "better" than the other. That's fine. I want that kid to do the best that they can do. Even if that's not a T10, T30 or whatever, that doesn't mean I'm not going to push him. I think it's the journey of pushing yourself in high school that reaps benefits for years to come. Not the college outcome.