View previous topic :: View next topic |
Author |
Message |
Bigfeet

Joined: 29 May 2008 Location: Grrrrr.....
|
Posted: Wed Aug 13, 2008 2:43 pm Post subject: China following SK, means lotsa jobs for us! |
|
|
Plight of the Little Emperors
Coddled from infancy and raised to be academic machines, China's only children expect the world. Now they're buckling under the pressure of their parents' deferred dreams.
By: Taylor Clark
When Dawei Liu was growing up in the coastal city of Tai'an during the 1990s, all of his classmates�95 percent of whom were only children�received plenty of doting parental support. One student, however, truly stood out from the rest. Every day, this boy went from class to class with an entourage of one: his mother, who had given up the income of her day job to monitor his studies full-time, sitting beside him constantly in order to ensure perfect attention. "The teacher was OK with it," Liu shrugs. "He might not focus as much on class if his parent wasn't there."
Across China, stories of parents going to incredible lengths to give their only children a competitive edge have become commonplace. Throughout Jing Zhang's youth in Beijing, her parents took her to weekly resum�-boosting painting classes, waiting outside the school building for two hours each time, even in winter. Yanming Lin enjoyed perfect silence in her family's one-room Shanghai apartment throughout her five-plus hours of nightly homework; besides nixing the television, her mother kept perpetual watch over her to make sure she stayed on task. "By high school, my parents knew I could control myself and only do homework," Lin says. "Because I knew the situation."
http://www.psychologytoday.com/articles/index.php?term=pto-20080623-000004&print=1 |
|
Back to top |
|
 |
blaseblasphemener
Joined: 01 Jun 2006 Location: There's a voice, keeps on calling me, down the road, that's where I'll always be
|
Posted: Wed Aug 13, 2008 3:15 pm Post subject: |
|
|
Quote: |
At one top Beijing kindergarten, students must know pi to 100 digits by age 3. |
(singing)
What a wonderful world. Oooooh, yeah! |
|
Back to top |
|
 |
rebel_1812
Joined: 17 May 2008 Location: Seoul
|
Posted: Wed Aug 13, 2008 4:46 pm Post subject: |
|
|
blaseblasphemener wrote: |
Quote: |
At one top Beijing kindergarten, students must know pi to 100 digits by age 3. |
(singing)
What a wonderful world. Oooooh, yeah! |
I'm sure they will still remeber it by age 4. lol. |
|
Back to top |
|
 |
diver
Joined: 16 Jun 2003
|
Posted: Wed Aug 13, 2008 7:00 pm Post subject: |
|
|
Quote: |
At one top Beijing kindergarten, students must know pi to 100 digits by age 3. |
Seems very Korean (re: inefficient) to me.
Why not just teach them to use a calculator or computer by age two? Then they could use all the time they saved not having to remember pi to do so something else. |
|
Back to top |
|
 |
Kiarell
Joined: 29 Mar 2008
|
Posted: Wed Aug 13, 2008 7:22 pm Post subject: |
|
|
but it's important in the Orient to test students based on abilities of arbitrary memorization than skills. As the vandalized wikipedia page said "at least with multiple choice you can be assured that people in high places got where thye are because they deserved it. Using subjective standards like participation, short answer, and essays open the door to corruption"
It also gives them an objective criteria by which to beat others and maintain the best face. |
|
Back to top |
|
 |
Guri Guy

Joined: 07 Sep 2003 Location: Bamboo Island
|
Posted: Wed Aug 13, 2008 9:08 pm Post subject: |
|
|
My students told me that it is very easy to cheat on Toeic listening exams. Just watch for the reaction of other students.
As far as China goes, the more competition the better.  |
|
Back to top |
|
 |
|