Anonymous wrote:OP here. Believe me, I know this is my issue and not theirs. I haven’t been pushing them because I don’t want them to be stressed out and neurotic when academics don’t come naturally easily to them. I guess I’m trying to see what others are doing bc it seems like it’s a real problem if a kid is average. Even PPs above are suggesting ADHD. I realize not everyone is going to be a superstar professor or CEO or math genius. Academics came easily to me my whole life. I didn’t need tutors or SAT prep classes etc. I just did well. So it’s admittedly difficult for me to see my kids struggling with what came so easily to me.
And what’s wrong with classifying oneself as Type A? I wish I wasn’t so intense about things, but I am. My kids, and one in particular is definitely Type B. She couldn’t care less about schoolwork or tests or grades. She enjoys art and music and dance. But I am trying to explain to her that she needs a solid education even if she ends up in art school or culinary school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Maybe I don't get it bc I'm Asian, but why can't you push your kids? We were pushed growing up. Not every kid was an academic genius -- most weren't in fact. And yet due to very high parental expectations my Asian friends/siblings/I are ivy grads; med school grads; lawyers (all top 10 schools) etc. Sure some kids got it easily, some kids had SAT tutoring starting in 7th grade to make it to a 1500+ score. There are advantages and doors that open from certain schools and certain professions - as you well know. Why not push the kids? And I don't get why people are bagging on OP. Sorry I had certain expectations for myself educationally/professionally/financially and I expect the same of my kids. I'm not suggesting that it's going to come down to -- I went to MIT so you must go to MIT, but I do expect them to go to comparable schools and sorry to me Va. Tech and UVa and UMD aren't it.
PP, I hope for your children's sake that they live up to your expectations of them.
They will. My expectations are not nearly as onerous as the ones I/my friends grew up with. I am not demanding that they MUST be doctors; I am not demanding that they MUST go to Harvard. Frankly they know even now that they have career choices of – medicine/dental; I banking; or law; and I’d live with engineering. They must choose from those – I am not choosing for them. I am also not requiring any particular school – they know that any ivy; MIT; Chicago; and a handful of others are all perfectly fine so they literally have to just get into 1. None of this is impossible and frankly my friends growing up who HAD to be doctors (even though they wanted a different respectable profession – engineering) had it much worse.
Anonymous wrote:I feel like I’m the only parent in the DC area that doesn’t care if my kids go to top ranked schools. I want them to travel and do interesting things, and define their own standards of success, and go out and get the education they need (whether in state school or elsewhere) in order to live the life they want.
Anonymous wrote:I really hate people who identify as "Type A." I feel no sympathy for you, OP. I do have sympathy for your kids.
(And I went to a top-10 college.)
Anonymous wrote:I really hate people who identify as "Type A." I feel no sympathy for you, OP. I do have sympathy for your kids.
(And I went to a top-10 college.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have plenty of close Asian friends and they are happy today. That does not mean their parents weren't horrible to them. I vividly recall breakdowns in college about the continued pressure. I had a friend commit suicide without even leaving a note. Anyway, I don't for a second think that it's appropriate to raise children that way. My friends wouldn't disagree. So far none have raised their children that way.
Most Asian Americans I know (born and raised here by those kinds of parents) ARE raising their kids that way. It's more subtle. They're a bit more lenient than their parents were. They're not starting SAT pressure in 6th grade. Yet they ARE doing many similar things just watered down . . . .
Watered down is what well educated white people do too. It isn't doing testing drills every night...trust me it's like night and day. At best, I'd describe my.friends parents as manipulative, no-boundaries, no-trust and threatening explosion from.the family for not complying.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have plenty of close Asian friends and they are happy today. That does not mean their parents weren't horrible to them. I vividly recall breakdowns in college about the continued pressure. I had a friend commit suicide without even leaving a note. Anyway, I don't for a second think that it's appropriate to raise children that way. My friends wouldn't disagree. So far none have raised their children that way.
Most Asian Americans I know (born and raised here by those kinds of parents) ARE raising their kids that way. It's more subtle. They're a bit more lenient than their parents were. They're not starting SAT pressure in 6th grade. Yet they ARE doing many similar things just watered down . . . .
Anonymous wrote:I have plenty of close Asian friends and they are happy today. That does not mean their parents weren't horrible to them. I vividly recall breakdowns in college about the continued pressure. I had a friend commit suicide without even leaving a note. Anyway, I don't for a second think that it's appropriate to raise children that way. My friends wouldn't disagree. So far none have raised their children that way.
Anonymous wrote:
Sure -- I'm positive the time is coming in the next 40 yrs where doctors, lawyers and bankers will be pointed and laughed at and teachers and insurance claim payers will be revered. Plus it's about money too. And before people go on about -- well the richest people are creative geniuses like Bezos or whatever -- there's nothing you can do to inherently make anyone into a Bezos or an Elon Musk or whatever. Yet any average person can be made into a dr., lawyer or banker -- it simply isn't THAT hard.