By now we know better than to accept what is called social
science research. Since most of these studies impact politics and policies
their conclusions must be taken skeptically.
I was skeptical when I first read University of Texas
psychology professor Su Yeong Kim’s study purporting to show that children
brought up by Tiger Moms were not only miserable, but performed poorly in
school.
You remember the now illustrious Tiger Mom. Amy Chua provoked
a major brouhaha when she wrote a book about how she had raised her daughters.
Chua required her girls to work hard at school and at their
music lessons. She did not even allow them to go on sleepovers. She taught her
children the habits of discipline and perseverance, the better to ensure their
future success and achievements.
But, she was willing to modify her approach when she
discovered, in the case of her younger daughter, that it was not working. She
was not mindlessly rigid.
When her book appeared, American mothers got in touch with
their righteous anger and expressed their outrage. To their minds Tiger Moms
were instruments of repression. They were horrified to see children being made
to work so hard that there was no time for real fun.
American childrearing methods want children to be coddled
and nurtured as though they were plants. Children subjected to such a regimen
will grow up to flourish. Apparently, this implied that they would be
well-rounded individuals who thought the world of themselves and fulfilled all
of their human potential.
Besides, all of this Tiger Mom stuff felt strangely alien, even
un-American. Yikes.
Defenders of the American style of parenting have been
heartened to read Su Yeong Kim’s report, because it supposedly proves their
point.
Writing in Slate, Paul Tullis announced the good news:
Children
of parents whom Kim classified as “tiger” had lower academic achievement and
attainment—and greater psychological maladjustment—and family alienation, than
the kids of parents characterized as “supportive” or "easygoing.”
With Kim, Tullis is defending a permissive style of
parenting.
Unfortunately, Kim’s study had a very limited scope. She
only observed uneducated, lower middle class Chinese immigrants in the San
Francisco Bay area:
The
vast majority of parents were foreign-born in Hong Kong or southern China, with
relatively low educational attainment and a median income of between $30,001
and $45,000 in each of the study’s three phases, spaced out equally over eight
years.
Obviously, it matters. A Tiger Mom is actively involved with
all of her child’s schoolwork. Uneducated parents cannot do the same.
Tao Jones has explained in The Wall Street Journal on how
these factors impacted the way his own tiger parents brought him up:
Class and education clearly play a role in the
effectiveness of “Tiger”-style parenting — at least as far as academic
achievement. My parents were strict, and had high expectations for my
achievement, but they also did much more than just encourage and enforce: They
spent hours working with me, answering questions, teaching workarounds,
patiently (and sometimes impatiently) putting as much effort into my education
as I did. Would that be true of parents who don’t speak English, or didn’t
graduate from high school, or who work 80-hour weeks at a restaurant and come
home exhausted? You could make a case that for parents whose backgrounds and
cultural context don’t allow them to roll up their sleeves and help, being
Supportive could certainly produce better results than being Harsh or Tiger.
If a parent spends hours helping a child to do homework or
to practice piano, is that overly harsh or is that, dare we say, supportive? Surely, she is more active, involved and engaged than would be a more permissive parent.
Jones interviewed Amy Chua for his article, and she has the
last word:
I think
‘traditional’ Asian parenting often is too
harsh and oppressive in a nonproductive way, and it’s important to highlight
the costs. But then again, if it’s true that Chinese parents are just like
Western ones — and if tiger parenting leads to lower grades — then why are
Chinese Americans so wildly over-represented at Stuyvesant and Bronx Science
and in the best U.S. conservatories and in the Ivy Leagues? I don’t believe
that Asians are ‘naturally smarter,’ or that they’re inherently more
self-motivated.
Chua does accept that sometimes Asian parents are too
oppressive. She might have added that American parents are often too
permissive.
But she highlights the inescapable fact that, by all
standards of academic excellence, Asian children are largely outperforming
their American counterparts.
Chua might have mentioned that in the most competitive
public high school in New York, Stuyvesant, next year’s entering class will be
over 70% Asian. And it has been widely reported that Asian students are so good
that they face quotas at top Ivy League colleges.
Whatever the research says, reality is telling a different story.
Important cultural issues are at play here.
First, American
schoolchildren are underperforming in relation to their counterparts in places
like Shanghai and Singapore.
Second, many Americans believe that Asian
nations are outperforming and outcompeting us economically.
Third, we have refused to do what normal cultures do when they
are being outcompeted: that is, to emulate the habits that are succeeding in
the other places.
Fourth, it’s about values. Does happiness consist in high
achievement or does it come from being well-rounded, from being a dilettante
who knows how to have a good time.
In fact, time will tell. The truth will not emerge from a
social science study that defies common sense, but from the arena of
international economic competition.
3 comments:
"Acting white" was demonstrated to be effective but alleged to be discriminatory. Fortunately, nations in Asia were not beneficiaries of politically correct indoctrination.
They also don't participate in an elective genocide. Perhaps the sanity of Western nations should be reviewed in a referendum. I vote that the corruption is progressive and we are approaching a dysfunctional convergence.
Please note that there is a difference between Asian and Asian-American. There are a few instances in your post where you mean Asian-American, NOT straight out of Asia (e.g., quotas for "Asian" students at Ivy League schools, or the number of "Asian" students at Bronx HS for Science and Stuyvesant). I think it gets confusing when you mention "American" students elsewhere in your post; these "Asian" students filling the halls of Stuyvesant and the Ivy League are Asian-American. They are no less American than their Caucasian classmates. I'm reminded of the time a gauche reporter in Seattle claimed that an American had beaten Michelle Kwan at the Olympics. Please don't make the same mistake!
" In fact, time will tell. The truth will not emerge from a social science study that defies common sense, but from the arena of international economic competition."
By which time it may be too late, or nearly so.
Post a Comment