tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7638578.post1642264900824501679..comments2024-03-23T09:33:28.184-07:00Comments on An Academic's Freedom: Authoritarian ParentingUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7638578.post-27974451284722056792017-04-26T23:17:54.752-07:002017-04-26T23:17:54.752-07:00Excellent service from you and i think most of the...Excellent service from you and i think most of the people are like this job in here. For get more academic support we find here more information from you.<br />cheap paper writing servicehttps://top5essaywritingservices.blogspot.com/noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7638578.post-57968529336109992082011-01-15T22:25:50.842-08:002011-01-15T22:25:50.842-08:00An update: An article by Jeff Yang in SF Gate (htt...An update: An article by Jeff Yang in SF Gate (http://bit.ly/fABUzf) suggests that the excerpt of Amy Chua's book printed in the WSG presented a one-sided view of what she actually wrote in the book. <br /><br />Jeff quotes Amy Chua: "I'm not going to retract my statements about Chinese parenting. But I'd also note that I'm aware now of the limitations of that model -- that it doesn't incorporate enough choice, that it doesn't account for kids' individual personalities. And yet, I would never go all the way to the Western ideal of unlimited choice. Give 10-year-olds total freedom, and they'll be playing computer games eight hours a day. I now believe there's a hybrid way of parenting that combines the two paradigms, but it took me making a lot of mistakes along the way to get there."<br /><br />I'm glad to see she's not (at least anymore, according to this article) quite the extremist the WSJ excerpt makes her out to be, but I still don't think she quite gets it.Bhaskarhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04794187138960706452noreply@blogger.com