From "kyoiku mama" to "taiga mother" : stereotypes of education practice in Japan and China and its effect on New Zealand.

A few decades ago when the Western world was caught off-guard by the unanticipated extent of the Japanese economic miracle, academics and media in and outside of Japan fiercely debated the benefits and pitfalls of the Japanese education system. Media reports about the high levels of achievement - es...

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Main Author: Kolesova, Elena
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: Unitec Institute of Technology 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10652/3294
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spelling ftunitecinst:oai:www.researchbank.ac.nz:10652/3294 2023-05-15T18:30:41+02:00 From "kyoiku mama" to "taiga mother" : stereotypes of education practice in Japan and China and its effect on New Zealand. Kolesova, Elena 2015-12 https://hdl.handle.net/10652/3294 en eng Unitec Institute of Technology http://www.otago.ac.nz/asianmigrations/about/otago109305.html https://hdl.handle.net/10652/3294 Kolesova, E. (2015, December). From "kyoiku mama" to "taiga mother": Stereotypes of education practice in Japan and China and its effect on New Zealand. Paper presented at Asia and Education Conference, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand. All rights reserved Author Chinese mothers Japanese mothers mothers parenting kyoiku mamas taiga mothers education practices stereotypes national characteristics tiger moms international students Chua Amy (1962- ) 200101 Communication Studies Conference Item 2015 ftunitecinst 2022-08-04T18:00:10Z A few decades ago when the Western world was caught off-guard by the unanticipated extent of the Japanese economic miracle, academics and media in and outside of Japan fiercely debated the benefits and pitfalls of the Japanese education system. Media reports about the high levels of achievement - especially in maths and science – attained by Japanese high school students in international exams at the time, strongly contributed to the idea that the secret of Japan’s economic success must be connected with its education system. Eventually the negative images of examination hell, kyôiku mama (mothers obsessed with education of their children) and gakureki shakai (society based on academic credentials) overshadowed Japanese education success and became enduring points of criticism. In a new millennium, it is Chinese economic growth that has captured the world’s imagination, even though the Chinese education system remains far less enigmatic and popular than Japan’s was in recent decades. The heated media debate that followed the publication in 2011 of “Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother” written by Amy Chuo, a daughter of Chinese immigrants to America who lived all her life in the US, further dramatized the existing divide in the public imagination between Chinese, or broadly speaking “Asian”, and Western (or Anglo-Saxon) education practice. In this presentation I contrast some generalisations about education practice in Japan, and in China, with New Zealand, by recognising the specific cultural traditions and values attached to education practice in these countries. I will also use some specific case studies to discuss the effects of these different education practices on New Zealand. Are Our Kids Tough Enough, Chinese School (YouTube) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DYGxAwRUpaI Conference Object taiga Unitec Research Bank New Zealand
institution Open Polar
collection Unitec Research Bank
op_collection_id ftunitecinst
language English
topic Chinese mothers
Japanese mothers
mothers
parenting
kyoiku mamas
taiga mothers
education practices
stereotypes
national characteristics
tiger moms
international students
Chua
Amy (1962- )
200101 Communication Studies
spellingShingle Chinese mothers
Japanese mothers
mothers
parenting
kyoiku mamas
taiga mothers
education practices
stereotypes
national characteristics
tiger moms
international students
Chua
Amy (1962- )
200101 Communication Studies
Kolesova, Elena
From "kyoiku mama" to "taiga mother" : stereotypes of education practice in Japan and China and its effect on New Zealand.
topic_facet Chinese mothers
Japanese mothers
mothers
parenting
kyoiku mamas
taiga mothers
education practices
stereotypes
national characteristics
tiger moms
international students
Chua
Amy (1962- )
200101 Communication Studies
description A few decades ago when the Western world was caught off-guard by the unanticipated extent of the Japanese economic miracle, academics and media in and outside of Japan fiercely debated the benefits and pitfalls of the Japanese education system. Media reports about the high levels of achievement - especially in maths and science – attained by Japanese high school students in international exams at the time, strongly contributed to the idea that the secret of Japan’s economic success must be connected with its education system. Eventually the negative images of examination hell, kyôiku mama (mothers obsessed with education of their children) and gakureki shakai (society based on academic credentials) overshadowed Japanese education success and became enduring points of criticism. In a new millennium, it is Chinese economic growth that has captured the world’s imagination, even though the Chinese education system remains far less enigmatic and popular than Japan’s was in recent decades. The heated media debate that followed the publication in 2011 of “Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother” written by Amy Chuo, a daughter of Chinese immigrants to America who lived all her life in the US, further dramatized the existing divide in the public imagination between Chinese, or broadly speaking “Asian”, and Western (or Anglo-Saxon) education practice. In this presentation I contrast some generalisations about education practice in Japan, and in China, with New Zealand, by recognising the specific cultural traditions and values attached to education practice in these countries. I will also use some specific case studies to discuss the effects of these different education practices on New Zealand. Are Our Kids Tough Enough, Chinese School (YouTube) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DYGxAwRUpaI
format Conference Object
author Kolesova, Elena
author_facet Kolesova, Elena
author_sort Kolesova, Elena
title From "kyoiku mama" to "taiga mother" : stereotypes of education practice in Japan and China and its effect on New Zealand.
title_short From "kyoiku mama" to "taiga mother" : stereotypes of education practice in Japan and China and its effect on New Zealand.
title_full From "kyoiku mama" to "taiga mother" : stereotypes of education practice in Japan and China and its effect on New Zealand.
title_fullStr From "kyoiku mama" to "taiga mother" : stereotypes of education practice in Japan and China and its effect on New Zealand.
title_full_unstemmed From "kyoiku mama" to "taiga mother" : stereotypes of education practice in Japan and China and its effect on New Zealand.
title_sort from "kyoiku mama" to "taiga mother" : stereotypes of education practice in japan and china and its effect on new zealand.
publisher Unitec Institute of Technology
publishDate 2015
url https://hdl.handle.net/10652/3294
geographic New Zealand
geographic_facet New Zealand
genre taiga
genre_facet taiga
op_relation http://www.otago.ac.nz/asianmigrations/about/otago109305.html
https://hdl.handle.net/10652/3294
Kolesova, E. (2015, December). From "kyoiku mama" to "taiga mother": Stereotypes of education practice in Japan and China and its effect on New Zealand. Paper presented at Asia and Education Conference, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.
op_rights All rights reserved
Author
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