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Life Arts    H2'ed 1/19/11

The Tiger Mom in (Scientific) Perspective

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Chua argues that kids don't necessarily know what's good for them, and she has a point, but I'd rather spend my energy modeling the behavior I want to see and showing its benefits than demanding outcomes and imposing a punishment if the outcomes are not achieved. The bottom line is that I'll take "happy" and "compassionate" over "academically successful" any day, and while Chua argues that these are not mutually exclusive, that in fact children are happier when they achieve success, the reality is that everything has a cost and super academic achievement is no exception.  Just look at the suicide among physicians and students at elite universities .

Our different priorities aside, Chua's piece works marvelously as a sociocultural case-study and may even inspire some parents to create a home environment that is more conducive to educational success yet still allows the children to have some autonomy.   What Chua recognizes (and this is far from trivial) is that IQ is at least partly malleable.  As PT blogger Jefferson Fish explains , this has important implications:

Whatever strengths and weaknesses people begin with, the way to get smarter is to take advantage of formal education; and the way to do that is to work hard. When a child doesn't learn something, instead of thinking "It's too bad he isn't smarter," we should be thinking "He'll just have to work harder." Instead of the question "Why are some groups smarter than others?" we should be asking "How do groups that are really good at getting their kids to work hard at school do it?"

This is not to say that the rest of us should do what these groups do (or even that all parents from such groups parent the same way). All choices, all strategies, have costs as well as benefits. I am not questioning Chua's choices. To the contrary, it sounds like she and her husband made their choices with considerable care and that the choices were well-aligned with their priorities.  For parents that similarly want to prioritize educational or musical achievement, Chua's article seems to provide a blueprint for success.

Except it doesn't!

In his 2003 bestseller The Blank Slate: The Modern Denial of Human Nature, Steven Pinker asserts that "The three laws of behavioral genetics may be the most important discoveries in the history of psychology." Never mind whether or not he's right about their place in history, there is no doubting that behavioral genetics is changing the way we understand human behavior.

Here are the three laws:

Law 1: All human behavioral traits are heritable.

Law 2: The effect of being raised in the same family is smaller than the effect of the genes.

Law 3: A substantial proportion of the variation in complex human behavioral traits is not accounted for by the effects of genes or families.

Pinker wrote an entire book about this, and I don't want to oversimplify what is a complex theory based on sophisticated methodologies, but the quick and dirty version is that, while parenting matters, genes matter more and that a very substantial proportion of who we are and how we behave is determined not by genes, not by family, but by our unique experiences.

What this means in this particular context is that Chua's own accomplishments (she is a professor at Yale law school), as well as those of her daughters should be attributed at least as much to their genetics as to how they were parented and more to their unique experiences (e.g., with their teachers and friends) than to either genetics or parenting. No doubt that the parental non-compromising demand for achievement was instrumental in Chua and her children reaching their potential in those areas, but the potential must have been there in the first place.  To point to the academic/musical results of children and argue that they are a product of the parenting they received is to ignore an entire body of scholarship that suggests otherwise.

My own academic and professional history underscores this scholarship.

I am different from my parents in several very important ways: They are both engineers (mathematically inclined), while I am a psychologist who never had much interest in mathematics (though I do enjoy statistical analysis). They are devoted Republicans, while my own politics are decidedly liberal, especially around social and human rights issues. They certainly didn't raise me to be different from them in these important ways. They probably could not have done that, even if they tried. We're different, my parents and I, because I had very different life experiences. Though they parented me with Russian-Jewish values, I spent most of my life in the United States, while they grew up and spent their young adulthood in what was then the Soviet Union. But it's not just that. I also watched different films, read different books, and was taught by different teachers. And of course I had different friendships and different romantic relationships and, obviously, different challenges and obstacles...and opportunities.

This is the take home point from behavior genetics - that our tendencies and certainly the limits of our potential are genetically influenced but that we still have ample room to grow and change and that we have the ability to shape how we grow and change through our choices, and yes, through our parents' choices too.

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Mikhail Lyubansky, Ph.D., is a teaching associate professor in the Department of Psychology at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, where he teaches Psychology of Race and Ethnicity and courses on restorative justice.

Since 2009, Mikhail has been studying and working with conflict, particularly via Restorative Circles (a restorative practice developed in Brazil by Dominic Barter and associates) and other restorative responses to conflict. Together with Elaine Shpungin, he now supports schools, organizations, and workplaces in developing restorative strategies for engaging conflict, building conflict facilitation skills and evaluating the outcomes associated with restorative responses via Conflict 180.

In addition to conflict and restorative (more...)
 

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