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'Tiger Mom' comes to China

'Tiger Mom' comes to China

BEIJING—The school term may be

coming to a close for summer, but education remains a hot topic.

At least that’s the way the China Timessees it.

The Taiwan-based newspaper invited Amy Chua, author of the controversialBattle Hymn of the Tiger Mother, to Beijing for several public speaking engagements earlier this week.

“She uses the Chinese way to educate her kids, and it’s very successful,” said Shao Jian Biao, the deputy editor in chief atChina Times. “But parents here in China have been trying the western way, because they thought it was better. A lot of parents are confused.”

East or West?
Monday morning saw a small group of Chinese reporters—all of them female—turn up a hotel business center, eager to get Chua to expound on her views on raising children.

“I’m a mother, and I read her book very carefully,” said Shen Feng Li, Vice Director of Shanghai Morning Post. “In China, we pay a lot of attention to education.”

At a corporate gathering in another hotel, the audience was again largely female. “I have a little boy, and I read her book. I agreed with it,” said a stylishly-dressed executive who did not want to give her name.

For any parent who might have been living under a rock this year, Chua’s book was excerpted in theWall Street Journal in January with a headline that served as a wake-up call (of sorts) to Americans already anxious about a rising China: “Why Chinese Mothers Are Superior.”

As it turned out, her book isn’t really about how the Chinese make better parents. It’s a much more personal account of the challenges facing a mother wanting to the very best for her children.

“I actually wrote this book in a moment of crisis, when my younger daughter, Lulu, turned 13, became a teenager, and rebelled against my very strict parenting,” Chua explained.

In fact, Chua took great pains to set the record straight.

Ryan & Maria enjoying DVHS graduation


IMG_0638
Originally uploaded by Ryan Yee.

Our original little "homeschooler" graduated from high school a couple days ago. Maria started homeschooling Alexandra oh some 13 years ago. In a blink, she's a grown young lady moving onto college. But that was one of the reasons we homeschooled in the first place—to have a MUCH time with the kids as possible before they move onto their own lives. Certainly don't feel cheated...congrats Alexandra!