On Parenting

What Immigrant Parents Can Teach Us About Raising Good Kids

By Nancy Shute

Posted: June 8, 2009

Culture has a big effect on how parents raise children, and since 20 percent of children in the United States were born to immigrant parents, with that number expected to rise to 30 percent by 2015, those families have a big impact on American culture, too.

As a member of an immigrant family (my husband grew up in Russia), I’m intensely curious about how parents use their native culture for better or worse in raising children. The current issue of the Journal of Family Psychology, which is all about immigrant families, gives clues as to how culture affects child rearing. For instance, immigrant Chinese-American moms and dads are much better at being on the same page in their expectations for children than are European-American mothers and fathers, who vary much more in their parenting style and behavioral standards, according to research by Carol Huntsinger and Paul Jose. The Chinese-American parents present much more of a united front.

“Chinese parents have a more similar idea of how children need to be guided,” Huntsinger, a professor of education at Northern Illinois University, told me. “The European-American parents tend to have much more individual ideas and do their own thing. That’s what we emphasize in this country.” That’s for sure, I thought, thinking of my husband’s and my very different ideas on discipline, which I think comes more from American culture than from his Russian heritage.

Compared with the European-American kids, the Chinese-American children were better behaved and did better scholastically, Huntsinger found in following 35 Chinese-American families and 38 European-American families in the Chicago area. This was based on reports from the children themselves from ages 5 to 9, as well as their parents and teachers. The Chinese-American children also had fewer behavioral problems if their fathers endorsed the Chinese notion of chaio shun, or training: that the parents supervise children very closely, and children don’t have a lot of freedom to make their own choices.

“It really addresses how close they keep their children,” says Huntsinger, a child development expert who has been studying immigrant families for almost 20 years. “They’re with them most of the time. They’re there to correct them at most points in their early lives. They don’t let misbehavior pass.”

The take-home message: “If mothers and fathers can be consistent, there will be fewer behavior problems,” Huntsinger says. That’s a message that makes sense in any culture.

I’m fascinated by research into how parents raise kids, and I wrote about behavioral psychology’s approach to “evidence-based parenting” last year.

G'day

Hi There,

I'm Vicky from the land down under, just thought i'd say Hi :)

V x x

evagsalkawl of AL @ Jul 04, 2009 20:19:00 PM

On Parenting

Please explain why my post has been censored? Are you lying to the American People by withdrawing from them an alternative opinion?

Bohdan Szejner, STL of AK @ Jun 16, 2009 04:03:03 AM

Result of Overprotection and Close Supervision

I completely agree with Caroline of IN - most Asian American kids/peers I know resent the overprotection and close supervision when they are old enough to understand it. By then, the damage has been done. I have quite a few Asian American friends who spent most of their schooling (incl undergrad and grad) doing what their parents thought was best for them, only to realize that they are miserable and have wasted precious time, energy, and MONEY. Some have continued bc they are somewhat in denial, while others have painfully started over knowing they cannot get back the time they lost.

As an Asian American, I've always envied my Caucasian and African American friends who got to pursue their interests and make their own mistakes and, really, discover life at their own pace. I, on the other hand, was sheltered: I never had chores to do, I never washed the dishes or did the laundry, I never cooked. I was expected to focus only on my studies. This, I thought, was a luxury...until I got to college and realized there were many things I didn't know how to do. Not to mention, it was a source of teasing by my peers - I was called spoiled, even though A) it wasn't my fault and B) it's supposedly part of my culture to focus only on studying.

I'm currently living abroad in Taiwan, and I can attest that it is 10 times worse here, esp among men. Single men and women live with their parents until they get married, so they don't really learn to do anything themselves, even into their 30's. It is generally looked down upon for women to live alone (they can bring men back?), and most men take the easy way out by staying with parents (they don't have to cook/clean for themselves). Taiwan is an extreme example, but I'm sure there are similar cases in the US in immigrant families. (This is why I can't date Asians - I don't want to perpetuate the lifestyle/culture.)

Conclusion: I think there is a happy medium that can be found in terms of how to raise a well-behaved, industrious, happy child that becomes a productive part of the greater community. It doesn't have to be super-crazy-strict Asian style or wishy-washy-do-what-you-want-all-the-time American style. The writer's situation seems perfect - you can take both you and your husband's methods and find a compromise that takes the best of both disciplinary/child-rearing styles. At least that's what I plan to do when I intermarry!

Justine of CA @ Jun 12, 2009 05:35:44 AM

Add Your Thoughts
About You

advertisement

On Parenting

On Parenting

Parenting may be an art, but there's a lot of science behind raising healthy, thriving children. Contributing Editor Nancy Shute explores the latest discoveries and developments affecting children's health and parenting. Send her your comments and questions at onparenting@usnews.com.

Health Check

advertisement

Blog Favorites

Subscribe

U.S. News Digital Weekly

A weekly insider's guide to politics and policy — in a multimedia, digital format. 52 issues for $19.95!

U.S. News & World Report

6 months of U.S. News & World Report's print edition for only $15. Save up to 67% off the cover price!