...except when they crawl back to beg for money.
LOL!
12:40 and former child prodigy here. I rarely speak to my parents and haven't seen them in years. Don't ask for money but do try to avoid them as much as possible: Same for other similarly gifted kids now adults with overbearing parents. Most parents like mine did not achieve what they wanted in their careers so they focused on their kid's talents rather than their own.
Korea--so much for the Asian sterotypes
You illustrate my point beautifully. You see this as a competition. You control your child in certain ways and he or she will perform in certain way. Kind of like a computer. And, again, with the binary view. My happy facebooking child is doing pretty well in terms of placement because she has discovered intellectual passions. This has nothing to do with her parents signing her up for math tutoring and extra language classes. We didn't do any of those things, though we do have a house full of books and we all love to read. Rather, we gave her space to develop, to find her own passions, and she has done so on her own terms. If you want to get competitive about it she is a straight A student at a Big 3 school. Also, she spends time on facebook with her friends. As long as you see the kids who spend time on facebook as "other," as reflections of their parents' (poor) choices, I feel for your kids.
I think prodigy has it right in terms of how kids of such parents relate to their parents as adults.[code]
This is the key word. The family and child viewed their child as a prodigy. The adult child has bought into this by the post. Mistake. Therein lies the problem ... an overinflated view of oneself. What does this have to do with the pursuit of academic excellence. Many children of Tiger moms do not view themselves as prodigies.
Anonymous wrote:See, you just don't get it. The kids who aren't getting off their couches after college are not stuck in that rut because their parents didn't "mentor them" or put them in academic after school programs. This kind of failure to launch is emotional, NOT academic or intellectual. It affects kids who have no inner-directed reason to achieve, or are depressed, or feel like a failure if they can't be the absolute best at every possible thing. And the kinds of parents most likely to produce such an adult are the tiger parents.
Yeah, there are children of tiger moms who achieve everything their parents want them to (notice, their parents want them to. This breed of parenting is a form of narcissism.) and others who, once they can, do everything possible to thumb their noses at their parents Cause ultimately its the kids who are in control and the best way to prove that is to try to exert complete control over your children.
My DC is both a facebooking happy regular kid and a "high academically performing kid." Its only in the simplistic binary world of narcissism are the two mutually exclusive, are parents who aren't as controlling as them deemed destined to be failures.
I get it all right. You want Tiger moms to reel in their happy high academically performing kids in order to free up spaces for your happy facebooking and high academically performing kids in our magnet schools at the elementary, middle school, college, graduate school and professional school levels? If both our kids are happy and high performers why should any of us change? Give me one good reason. My child is not aspiring for your child's lifestyle.
Anonymous wrote:Wow, that's nuts! How would a kid that young possibly get the idea that it was that important? From their parents.
What's nuts about it? Is the psychologic make up of your child different...immunity to parental guidance and mentorship? I doubt it.
Look at any parent and young in the animal kingdom ... same dynamic.
You should recognise that some parents are more interested in soccer and lacrosse for their kids and some math competition. Accept it. Different strokes for different folks. There is nothing perverse about academic and/or athletic pursuits in children. Most of us are shaped by the experiences of our families and these experiences are quite variable as are our children.
Anonymous wrote:...except when they crawl back to beg for money.
Maybe. But they're the ones who rarely see or speak to their parents when they are adults.
Anonymous wrote:See, you just don't get it. The kids who aren't getting off their couches after college are not stuck in that rut because their parents didn't "mentor them" or put them in academic after school programs. This kind of failure to launch is emotional, NOT academic or intellectual. It affects kids who have no inner-directed reason to achieve, or are depressed, or feel like a failure if they can't be the absolute best at every possible thing. And the kinds of parents most likely to produce such an adult are the tiger parents.
Yeah, there are children of tiger moms who achieve everything their parents want them to (notice, their parents want them to. This breed of parenting is a form of narcissism.) and others who, once they can, do everything possible to thumb their noses at their parents Cause ultimately its the kids who are in control and the best way to prove that is to try to exert complete control over your children.
My DC is both a facebooking happy regular kid and a "high academically performing kid." Its only in the simplistic binary world of narcissism are the two mutually exclusive, are parents who aren't as controlling as them deemed destined to be failures.
I have not seen any studies on this score, but I doubt the children of Tiger moms are the ones back at home on the basement couches after university. The anecdotal experience in my small world/neighborhood does not affirm this.
+1
See, you just don't get it. The kids who aren't getting off their couches after college are not stuck in that rut because their parents didn't "mentor them" or put them in academic after school programs. This kind of failure to launch is emotional, NOT academic or intellectual. It affects kids who have no inner-directed reason to achieve, or are depressed, or feel like a failure if they can't be the absolute best at every possible thing. And the kinds of parents most likely to produce such an adult are the tiger parents.
Yeah, there are children of tiger moms who achieve everything their parents want them to (notice, their parents want them to. This breed of parenting is a form of narcissism.) and others who, once they can, do everything possible to thumb their noses at their parents Cause ultimately its the kids who are in control and the best way to prove that is to try to exert complete control over your children.
My DC is both a facebooking happy regular kid and a "high academically performing kid." Its only in the simplistic binary world of narcissism are the two mutually exclusive, are parents who aren't as controlling as them deemed destined to be failures.
See, you just don't get it. The kids who aren't getting off their couches after college are not stuck in that rut because their parents didn't "mentor them" or put them in academic after school programs. This kind of failure to launch is emotional, NOT academic or intellectual. It affects kids who have no inner-directed reason to achieve, or are depressed, or feel like a failure if they can't be the absolute best at every possible thing. And the kinds of parents most likely to produce such an adult are the tiger parents.
Yeah, there are children of tiger moms who achieve everything their parents want them to (notice, their parents want them to. This breed of parenting is a form of narcissism.) and others who, once they can, do everything possible to thumb their noses at their parents Cause ultimately its the kids who are in control and the best way to prove that is to try to exert complete control over your children.
My DC is both a facebooking happy regular kid and a "high academically performing kid." Its only in the simplistic binary world of narcissism are the two mutually exclusive, are parents who aren't as controlling as them deemed destined to be failures.
Anonymous wrote:I lot of schools around the DC area highly encourage, if not require, you to redshirt summer birthday boys - so often it's not the mom's decision or personality, it's the school.
Are these the elite, prestigious or run of the mill private schools?
Anonymous wrote:I was at an open house for a "top 3" private and the AD specifically stated that those born in June, July or August will probably not be accepted into their pre k prgm - thus forcing a red shirt...