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Educational desires, intensive parenting and shifting notions of childhood and learning among Chinese Singaporeans

Göransson, Kristina LU (2023) CHERN - China in Europe Research Network
Abstract
This paper seeks to expand our lens on educational desires, parenting and shifting notions of childhood and learning in East Asia and beyond. While not explicitly centered on migration, I suggest that the educational mobilities needs to be understood in relation to a growing tension between parents’ desire to achieve conventional success and the desire to nurture the child’s emotional well-being. East Asian education systems are globally renowned for their high academic standards and for producing students who excel in international assessment tests and rankings. At the same time, there has been a shift of attention in education policy towards social-emotional competencies and well-being. While a top-notch education is still considered... (More)
This paper seeks to expand our lens on educational desires, parenting and shifting notions of childhood and learning in East Asia and beyond. While not explicitly centered on migration, I suggest that the educational mobilities needs to be understood in relation to a growing tension between parents’ desire to achieve conventional success and the desire to nurture the child’s emotional well-being. East Asian education systems are globally renowned for their high academic standards and for producing students who excel in international assessment tests and rankings. At the same time, there has been a shift of attention in education policy towards social-emotional competencies and well-being. While a top-notch education is still considered crucial to foster a competitive population, childhood is increasingly supposed to be happy and stress free. In this context, parents, mothers in particular, are expected to perform task-oriented educational work, but also to cultivate their children’s desire to learn. It is well established in previous research that children’s education and development is a pivotal dimension of (middle-class) parenting, but there is a lack of ethnographically grounded studies on the complex and contradictory demands surrounding contemporary parenthood in the domain of education. By highlighting the complex emotional and moral dimensions of Chinese Singaporean parents’ educational labor, this paper attempts to contest simplistic interpretations ‘Asian parenting cultures’. (Less)
Abstract (Swedish)
This paper seeks to expand our lens on educational desires, parenting and shifting notions of childhood and learning in East Asia and beyond. While not explicitly centered on migration, I suggest that the educational mobilities needs to be understood in relation to a growing tension between parents’ desire to achieve conventional success and the desire to nurture the child’s emotional well-being. East Asian education systems are globally renowned for their high academic standards and for producing students who excel in international assessment tests and rankings. At the same time, there has been a shift of attention in education policy towards social-emotional competencies and well-being. While a top-notch education is still considered... (More)
This paper seeks to expand our lens on educational desires, parenting and shifting notions of childhood and learning in East Asia and beyond. While not explicitly centered on migration, I suggest that the educational mobilities needs to be understood in relation to a growing tension between parents’ desire to achieve conventional success and the desire to nurture the child’s emotional well-being. East Asian education systems are globally renowned for their high academic standards and for producing students who excel in international assessment tests and rankings. At the same time, there has been a shift of attention in education policy towards social-emotional competencies and well-being. While a top-notch education is still considered crucial to foster a competitive population, childhood is increasingly supposed to be happy and stress free. In this context, parents, mothers in particular, are expected to perform task-oriented educational work, but also to cultivate their children’s desire to learn. It is well established in previous research that children’s education and development is a pivotal dimension of (middle-class) parenting, but there is a lack of ethnographically grounded studies on the complex and contradictory demands surrounding contemporary parenthood in the domain of education. By highlighting the complex emotional and moral dimensions of Chinese Singaporean parents’ educational labor, this paper attempts to contest simplistic interpretations ‘Asian parenting cultures’. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to conference
publication status
published
subject
conference name
CHERN - China in Europe Research Network
conference dates
2023-02-03 - 2023-02-03
project
Parenting strategies around children's education in urban China, South Korea and Singapore: A comparative ethnographic study
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
08cebcf5-e169-4e4c-83e7-14798010a23a
date added to LUP
2023-03-16 15:28:11
date last changed
2023-03-21 10:54:49
@misc{08cebcf5-e169-4e4c-83e7-14798010a23a,
  abstract     = {{This paper seeks to expand our lens on educational desires, parenting and shifting notions of childhood and learning in East Asia and beyond. While not explicitly centered on migration, I suggest that the educational mobilities needs to be understood in relation to a growing tension between parents’ desire to achieve conventional success and the desire to nurture the child’s emotional well-being. East Asian education systems are globally renowned for their high academic standards and for producing students who excel in international assessment tests and rankings. At the same time, there has been a shift of attention in education policy towards social-emotional competencies and well-being. While a top-notch education is still considered crucial to foster a competitive population, childhood is increasingly supposed to be happy and stress free. In this context, parents, mothers in particular, are expected to perform task-oriented educational work, but also to cultivate their children’s desire to learn. It is well established in previous research that children’s education and development is a pivotal dimension of (middle-class) parenting, but there is a lack of ethnographically grounded studies on the complex and contradictory demands surrounding contemporary parenthood in the domain of education. By highlighting the complex emotional and moral dimensions of Chinese Singaporean parents’ educational labor, this paper attempts to contest simplistic interpretations ‘Asian parenting cultures’.}},
  author       = {{Göransson, Kristina}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{02}},
  title        = {{Educational desires, intensive parenting and shifting notions of childhood and learning among Chinese Singaporeans}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}