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Fourteen years ago, Amy Chua published Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother. It was received less like a book and more like a nuclear bomb. Here are some headlines from the time: “Why I Will Never Be a Tiger Mom.” “Why Amy Chua Is Wrong About Parenting.” “Amy Chua Is a Circus Trainer, Not a Tiger Mother.” “The Human Race Needs Elephant Mothers, Not Tiger Mothers.” “Amy Chua's Recipe for Disaster and the Externalized Cost of Book Sales.” Then, just as the publicity around Tiger Mother died down, Amy came out with The Triple Package, about why some ethnic groups succeed. People called her racist. Then she came out in support of Brett Kavanaugh's court nomination in an op-ed in The Wall Street Journal (before he was accused of sexual assault by Christine Blasey Ford). Afterward, people accused her of misogyny and grooming. And she was almost forced out of Yale for it. Then, in 2021, she was accused of hosting boozy dinner parties during COVID lockdowns and “dinner party-gate” was born. Yale punished her by barring her from teaching her “small group” first-year student contingency. Fast-forward to 2025. And the tables have turned. Being a strict “tiger mom”? In. Free speech? In. Wokeness and hypersensitivity? Out. Covid lockdowns? Definitely out. Vicious character assassinations at Senate confirmations? Out. As Free Press reporter Peter Savodnik just wrote: “The ideas that Chua was pilloried for are suddenly back in fashion.” Just a few weeks ago, she attended the inauguration of the incoming president and vice president—one of whom happens to be her former student and mentee. It's easy to be a weather vane—to go where the wind blows. It's hard to be Amy Chua—to stand up for your beliefs even when they are not popular, even when it means personal consequences. On today's episode, live in D.C. during inauguration weekend, Chua explains how and why she won—and what it feels like to be vindicated. If you liked what you heard from Honestly, the best way to support us is to go to TheFP.com and become a Free Press subscriber today. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
We're back with a brand new season featuring the wonderful Iris Chen from @untigering! Iris shares her personal experiences of transitioning from being a "tiger mother" to a parent who fosters connection, collaboration, and respect with her children.In this episode:- Defining Untigering: What does it mean to be a “deconstructing tiger mother”? Iris breaks down the concept of "untigering" and how it challenges the traditional authoritarian approach, especially within the Asian community.- Non-Coercive Parenting: Cara and Rythea ask Iris about parenting two teens- her journey with non-coercion, unschooling, and creating a family culture of connection.- From Authoritative to Collaborative Parent: Iris shares the pivotal moments that led to this shift and the changes she saw in her relationship with her children. She breaks down the results and positive impact of making this choice. Rythea and Cara chime in on the “A-ha” moments that brought them into this approach.- Biggest Blocks for Parents: Drawing from her coaching experience, Iris discusses the common challenges and mental blocks parents face when making the shift toward non-authoritarian parenting. She offers advice and insights on overcoming these obstacles.- Cultural Resistance: Iris takes a special focus on the Asian community's unique challenges with authoritarian parenting. She opens up about why it's hard for some families to let go of strict, obedience-focused methods, and how to create space for healing and transformation.- Unschooling and Its Purpose: Iris talks about her experience with unschooling and how it aligns with her values and mission to foster freedom, autonomy, and joy in learning for her children.Join us for an insightful conversation about parenting, culture, activism, and how we can build healthier relationships with our children by embracing connection over control.Tune in to hear how Iris's journey can inspire your own parenting transformation!Connect with Iris:Instagram: @untigeringhttps://untigering.comuntigering@gmail.com--It's important and essential to put our voices (Rythea and Cara) in a context. We are two white, cis-gender, straight, middle-class women living with financial and societal privilege. Because of this, our perspectives are limited and do not reflect the realities of all our listeners. This podcast will feature guests with expertise around conscious parenting who differ in gender, race, class, abilities, sexual orientation, and histories from us, to broaden the conversation and reflect the lives of as many people as possible. 25% of the proceeds of this podcast will go to creators of color who have been mentors and influences on our work and in our growth as parents. You can donate to this podcast by going to https://linktr.ee/yourkidsdontsuck
A memoir about parenting very badly and then getting weirdly defensive when anyone asks you about it.Where to find us: Peter's other podcast, 5-4Mike's other podcast, Maintenance PhaseSources:Effects of Authoritative Parental Control on Child Behavior, Child DevelopmentTypes of Parenting Styles and Effects On ChildrenDoes “Tiger Parenting” Exist? Parenting Profiles of Chinese Americans and Adolescent Developmental OutcomesAssociations of parenting dimensions and styles with externalizing problems of children and adolescents: An updated meta-analysisDo the associations of parenting styles with behavior problems and academic achievement vary by culture? Results from a meta-analysisParenting Styles: A Closer Look at a Well-Known ConceptImpact of Behavioral Inhibition and Parenting Style on Internalizing and Externalizing Problems from Early Childhood through AdolescenceThe One Weird Trait That Predicts Whether You're a Trump SupporterInvestigating Correlates of Self-Regulation in Early Childhood with a Representative Sample of English-Speaking American FamiliesAmy Chua thinks identity politics on both sides are to blame.How the 'Tiger Mom' Convinced the Author of Hillbilly Elegy to Write His Story Thanks to Mindseye for our theme song!
On this episode of Currently Reading, Kaytee and Meredith are discussing: Bookish Moments: book signings and reading retreats Current Reads: all the great, interesting, and/or terrible stuff we've been reading lately Deep Dive: revisiting what is working and what isn't working in our current reading lives The Fountain: we visit our perfect fountain to make wishes about our reading lives Show notes are time-stamped below for your convenience. Read the transcript of the episode (this link only works on the main site) . . . . . 1:23 - Our Bookish Moments of the Week 2:45 - CR Season 5: Episode 37 4:17 - An Unlikely Story bookshop 4:45 - Long Way Down by Jason Reynolds 6:20 - Our Current Reads 6:51 - One of the Good Guys by Araminta Hall (Meredith) 12:21 - My Other Husband by Dorothy Koomson (Kaytee) 12:26 - The Friend by Dorothy Koomson (amazon link) 15:23 - Blackwell's 16:33 - The Golden Gate by Amy Chua (Meredith) 18:15 - The Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother by Amy Chua (Penguin Random House link) 21:42 - @pieladybooks on Instagram 22:43 - A Song Below Water by Bethany C. Morrow (Kaytee) 25:48 - The Deep by River Solomon 25:51 - Stone Blind by Natalie Haynes 25:53 - Sing Me To Sleep by Gabi Burton 27:17 - Near the Bone by Christina Henry (Meredith) 28:54 - @mother.horror on Instagram 32:10 - No Two Persons by Erica Bauermeister (Kaytee) 35:50 - Deep Dive: Revisiting What Is Working and Not Working In Our Reading Lives 44:06 - Eye of the World (Wheel of Time #1) by Robert Jordan 44:18 - @thewilltoread on Instagram 57:14 - Meet Us At The Fountain 57:27 - I wish if you buddy read, find a reader who reads in different genres than you do. (Meredith) 59:32 - I wish to implement SSR in my home. (Kaytee) 1:00:05 - @books.are.word.tacos on Instagram Support Us: Become a Bookish Friend | Grab Some Merch Shop Bookshop dot org | Shop Amazon Bookish Friends Receive: The Indie Press List with a curated list of five books hand sold by the indie of the month. March's IPL comes to us from our Anchor store An Unlikely Story! Trope Thursday with Kaytee and Bunmi - a behind the scenes peek into the publishing industry All Things Murderful with Meredith and Elizabeth - special content for the scary-lovers, brought to you with the special insights of an independent bookseller The Bookish Friends Facebook Group - where you can build community with bookish friends from around the globe as well as our hosts Connect With Us: The Show: Instagram | Website | Email | Threads The Hosts and Regulars: Meredith | Kaytee | Mary | Roxanna Affiliate Disclosure: All affiliate links go to Bookshop unless otherwise noted. Shopping here helps keep the lights on and benefits indie bookstores. Thanks for your support!
More than a decade after she was labeled as “Tiger Mom” for her 2011 memoir “The Battle Hymn of a Tiger Mother,” Amy Chua reflects on her strict parenting style as she traces the roots of her culture to Fuzhou, China. Why did Amy feel right about raising her daughters the same way she was raised by her immigrant parents? What lessons has she learned from her critics in the West? What prompted her to pursue a career in corporate law before teaching law at Yale? And now, what motivated her to write her first novel “The Golden Gate?” Amy Chua is a Yale law school professor with expertise in international business transactions, ethnicity and conflict, and globalization. She is an author of five non-fiction titles including Political Tribes: Group Instinct and Fate of Nation, and The Triple Package: How Three Unlikely Traits Explain the Rise and Fall of Cultural Groups in America. Photo Credit: Joel Griffith Music used: I Will Not Let You Let Me Down by Josh Woodward Your Mothers Daughter by Chris Zabriskie On The Clock by Pictures of the Floating World Tumbling Dishes Like Old-Mans Wishes by Jahzzar One in a Billion Theme Song by Brad McCarthy
In this episode of the Bill Walton Show, my conversation is with Amy Chua, a provocative and original thinker about culture, world politics, and political tribes. Our main topic is her latest book, The Golden Gate, is a novel set in the San Francisco Bay Area in the 1930s and 1940s. Best known for her Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother, a memoir about her parenting journey using strict Confucianist child rearing techniques, she is a highly accomplished professor at Yale Law School, and has been named one of Time magazine's 100 most influential people, The Atlantic's “Brave Thinkers” and Foreign Policy's “Global Thinkers.” The Golden Gate is compelling historical thriller that paints a portrait of a California from another era beset by the crosswinds of a world at war and an American society about to undergo massive changes in how race and class define the essence of power, sex, and justice. It's also filled with fascinating details, like groundbreaking forensic advances, the story of the construction of the Golden Gate Bridge and the presence of China's Madame Chiang Kai-shek in Berkeley in the 1940's Amy brings to this book - and our conversation - her depth of understanding about class structures, culture and ethnic divisions seen in her non-fiction writings. Her first book, World on Fire: How Exporting Free Market Democracy Breeds Ethnic Hatred and Global Instability, explored the ethnic conflict caused in many societies by "market dominant minorities.” In her Day of Empire: How Hyperpowers Rise to Global Dominance - and Why They Fall examined seven major empires and the theory that their success depended on their tolerance of minorities. Political Tribes: Group Instinct and the Fate of Nations, examined how group loyalty often outweighs any other ideological considerations and argues that the failure to recognize the place of group loyalty has played a major role in the failure of US foreign policy. The Triple Package: How Three Unlikely Traits Explain the Rise and Fall of Cultural Groups in America was called by the Financial Times' Lucy Kellaway, “the best universal theory of success I've seen." This is a wide ranging and fun conversation. Highly enjoyable. Listen in.
In this episode, I explore the work and ideas of Amy Chua.Amy is not only a tenured Professor of Law at Yale University, she is also a bestselling author of several books. Her most famous books was published in 2011 and is called "The Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother."Amy told me that she was a huge fan of Thomas Sowell but what I didn't know at the time is that Thomas Sowell is also a huge fan of Amy Chua. Find out why in this episode, as I explore Amy's ideas about political tribalism and why some groups succeed more than others, a theme which is right up Sowell Alley.Amy just wrote her first novel called "The Golden Gate," which I highly recommend you read. Here are her other, non-fiction books:2002: World On Fire: How Exporting Free Market Democracy Breeds Ethnic Hatred and Global Instability.2007: Day of Empire: How Hyperpowers Rise to Global Dominance – and Why They Fall.2011: Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother.2014: The Triple Package: How Three Unlikely Traits Explain the Rise and Fall of Cultural Groups in America.2018: Political Tribes: Group Instinct and the Fate of Nations.THERE ARE 3 WAYS TO SUPPORT THE PODCAST:1) Support the show financially by subscribing with a monthly contribution on Patreon: www.Patreon.com/SowellGeniusThe money raised through Patreon supports our efforts to popularize the books and ideas of Thomas Sowell.----------------------------------------------2) Rate and review the podcast on Apple Podcasts. This helps a lot by nudging the show to the top of Google searches. I really appreciate the many positive reviews, especially this one by Jonsby: "This is one of the few podcasts that I actually slow down so I can savor it!"----------------------------------------------3) Purchase our Thomas Sowell Post It Note pads: You can find all 250+ digital images of the post it notes HERE, feel free to download them and use them however you like.To purchase pads of printed post it notes, please visit our shop at: GeniusSowell.etsy.com I know you have thousands of other podcasts you could be listening to, and I truly appreciate the time and interest you show in mine.Alan WolanSupport the show
Amy Chua, bestselling author of Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother, joins Andrew to talk about tribal dynamics, media narratives, the source of drive, and her new novel — The Golden Gate. Watch this episode on YouTube: https://youtu.be/K_0P-7P4fx8 The Golden Gate - https://us.macmillan.com/books/9781250903600/thegoldengate Follow Amy Chua: https://amychua.com | https://twitter.com/amychua Follow Andrew Yang: https://andrewyang.com | https://twitter.com/andrewyang To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit davidlat.substack.comWelcome to Original Jurisdiction, the latest legal publication by me, David Lat. You can learn more about Original Jurisdiction by reading its About page, and you can email me at davidlat@substack.com. This is a reader-supported publication; you can subscribe by clicking on the button below. Thanks!As a new academic year gets underway, many of us are wondering: what law-school scandals lie in store? To discuss current hot-button issues facing legal academia, including free speech, intellectual diversity, and affirmative action, I could think of no better podcast guest than Professor Amy Chua. As a longtime member of the Yale Law School faculty, she's had a front-row seat to—and personal involvement in—several of YLS's recent controversies. Yale Law insanity aside, there was another reason I wanted to interview Amy, the author of two New York Times bestsellers—most notably, her 2011 memoir, Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother (2011). This month, Minotaur Books, Macmillan's mystery- and thriller-focused imprint, is publishing her first novel, The Golden Gate. I devoured it in two days, and I can attest that it's a great read—a historically rich page-turner that will teach you about California history while keeping you on the edge of your seat.One other thing: loyal listeners might notice this episode is going up on Thursday rather than its usual day of Wednesday. There's a good reason for that: my sound engineer Tommy Harron and his wife just welcomed their second child to the world. Congratulations to them on this great news.Show Notes:* Amy Chua bio, Yale Law School* The Golden Gate, Amazon* All About Amy (Chua), The Law Professor We Can't Stop Talking About, by David Lat for Original JurisdictionPrefer reading to listening? For paid subscribers, a transcript of the entire episode appears below.Sponsored by:NexFirm helps Biglaw attorneys become founding partners. To learn more about how NexFirm can help you launch your firm, call 212-292-1000 or email careerdevelopment@nexfirm.com.
This episode brings you another Success Story from the ImpactParents Community! Dorothy Liu is a recovering Tiger Mother and a work in progress. All her efforts to NOT be the tiger mother archetype she despised still turned her into a Tiger Mom, just one with different stripes As a certified Personal Development & Leadership Coach & Facilitator, Dorothy leverages her lived experience as a daughter of immigrants and the mother of an adopted daughter born in China in a multi-race family to provide a unique lens to parenting complex kids. Many of Dorothy's clients are third-culture kids who balance their deep ethnic or ancestral identity with the context of their Western upbringing. Together, she and her clients work to bridge that gap and integrate all sides of their identity to give voice to who they uniquely are. Ten Tips for Calm and Confident Parenting of Complex Kids Parenting complex kids can be difficult, even mind-numbing at times. In this FREE Guide you'll find clear, quick guidance to help you calm the chaos and more confidently prepare your child for greater independence and success! Learn techniques parents all over the world are using to reduce friction and (believe it!) rediscover the joy of parenting. Listen to this inspiring Success Stories Edition of Parenting With Impact episode with Dorothy Liu about overcoming crippling guilt and fear to find the courage to let her daughter "lean into her weird" and become her own empowered person. Here is what to expect on this week's show: Helping children actualize their optimal potential while respecting cultural expectations Employ strategies to create a balance between family life and work life Empowering children to become independent and embrace their unique qualities Connect with Dorothy: resonant-strategies.com LinkedIn Related Links: About Dorothy Liu A Team to Support Parents & Families To Worried Parents of Complex Kids: You are Not Alone Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Akashic Messages for December-Thank you for your patience! In this episode: light codes and irrational thinking, pay attention to the decolonizing steps that are happening all around. I love you all so much! Listener support helps keep this podcast going. You can contribute in many ways. Patreon: www.patreon.com/theinfinitedance where you can become a dancer and your support also gets you bonus episodes, Akashic guided meditations and discounts on sessions and merch like The Infinite Pillow. Venmo: @Carri-Arata or PayPal.Me/ancientbodyworks *Have you been wanting an Akashic reading? I have a new program where I give you a reading/clearing and it will be a podcast episode. Please contact me directly through email to set this up *Solstice Meditation and Conscious Breath work 21 December -Two chances to join 8 am & 6pm PST, donation based *The Infinite Academy begins 5 Mar 2023 Classes held on Zoom. More info on my website *Book a private reading or sign up for Akashic Guideship Program : ancientbodyworks.co Email: carrilynnarata@gmail.com Subscribe to my channel on YouTube: The Infinite Dance-The Akashic Podcast-guided meditations pre recorded here. I'm going to continue to post these help lines until we begin to see change We must take action now to change the gun violence that has been getting worse in the US. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/carri-arata/support
Douces, sensibles, gentilles … On a longtemps assigné des traits de personnalité saux femmes. Et si une femme à le malheur de se mettre en colère, ce serait à cause de ses hormones ! Dans ce nouvel épisode, Clémentine Gallot et Julie Hamaïde reviennent sur ses différents clichés en explorant la violence des femmes.Côté pop culture, il sera question de l'actrice Ellen Ripley et de son rôle dans Alien, mais aussi du livre « King Kong Théorie » de Virginie Despentes, et du film « Les Veuves » de Steve McQueen prochainement sur nos écrans.Enfin, Clémentine et Julie répondent à Margaux, auditrice, qui a des difficultés à gérer ses relations avec son entourage qui voit le monde différemment de son engagement dans le féminisme intersectionnel.L'actu féministe de Clémentine Gallot de Julie Hamaïde (01:58)Le thème de l'épisode : La violence des femmes (03:11)Expériences personnelles de Clémentine Gallot et de Julie Hamaïde (21:07)Le moment Pop culture (35 :04)Les recommandations culturelles (43 :37)Le courrier des auditrices (45:31)Les références entendues dans l'épisode :Le 25 novembre : Journée internationale pour l'élimination de la violence à l'égard des femmesLe livre « Penser la violence des femmes » de Coline CARDI et Geneviève PRUVOST, (2017).Le mouvement des suffragettes anglaises au 19ème siècle qui s'est divisé avec deux grandes leaders anglaises : Millicent Garrett Fawcett et Emmeline PankhurstLe film Suffragettes de Sarah Gavron (2015)Le livre « Women Crime and Criminology » de Carol Smart, Frances Heidensohn, Richard Collier, Joe Sim et Helen Monk (2017).Le livre de Mona Chollet « Sorcières ». (2018)Le livre « Les monstres n'existent pas » de Ondine Millot (2018)Le livre d'Amy Chua "Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother" (2011)Le téléfilm « Jacqueline Sauvage : C'était lui ou moi » avec Muriel Robin, de Yves Renier. (2018)Le livre « Lorsque je me suis relevée j'ai pris mon fusil » de Valentine Faure. (2018)Le livre « Good and Mad: The revolutionary Power of Women's Anger” de Rebecca Traister. (2018)Le livre « On ne naît pas soumise on le devient » de Manon Garcia. (2018)Le passage sur les violences conjugales, de Muriel Robin dans « C à vous ».Le Amazon Training conseillée par Clémentine GallotLa militante écoféministe, écrivaine et journaliste : “Starhawk” qui prône l'action directe non violente`La pièce de théâtre « Up your Ass » en 1966 de Valérie SolanasLe livre « King Kong Théorie » de Virginie Despentes. (2007)Le pamphlet « Scum Manifesto » de Valérie SolanasL'actrice Ellen Ripley, première vraie héroïne d'action du cinéma grand public pour son rôle dans « Alien » réalisé par Ridley Scott. (1979)La série « Killing Eve » de Emerald Fennell et Phoebe Waller-Bridge avec l'actrice Sandra Oh de “Grey's Anatomy”. (2018)La romancière américaine Gillian Flynn et ses romans « Gone Girl » et “Sharp Objects » adaptés au cinéma en 2014 et 2018.La série « Sweet/Vicious » de Jennifer Kaytin Robinson. (2016)Le livre « Confessions d'un gang de filles » de Joyce Carol Oates. (2014)La BD « Perdy » de Kickliy. (2018)La BD « Camel Joe » de Claire Duplan (2018)Le film « Millenium : ce qui ne me tue pas » de Fede Alvarez. (2018)Le film « Les veuves » de Steve McQueen. (2018) Les recommandations culturellesJulie : Le livre « La violence » de Cécile Collette (2013)Clémentine : « Les heures rouges » de Leni Zumas (2018)Pour poser une question à la team Quoi de meuf : hello@quoidemeuf.netPour s'inscrire à la géniale newsletter Quoi de meuf : http://quoidemeuf.net/Quoi de Meuf est une émission de Nouvelles Écoutes, animée par Clémentine Gallot et Julie Hamaide. Réalisée par Aurore Meyer Mahieu, montée et mixée par Laurie Galligani, coordonnée par Laura Cuissard.Vous pouvez consulter notre politique de confidentialité sur https://art19.com/privacy ainsi que la notice de confidentialité de la Californie sur https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Are you having arguments with your child about their participation in a sport or another extracurricular activity? Is your child losing interest or facing a temporary setback? It can be difficult to know whether the right move is to encourage your child to keep trying or support their decision to quit. Both can help your child become more resilient, depending on the situation. In today's episode, we're sharing a really fascinating story from a popular memoir called Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother by Amy Chua. You'll hear one mom's take on this dilemma as she raises her two daughters to become talented musicians. The link to the book on Amazon is listed below. Resources: https://www.huffpost.com/entry/when-to-let-kid-quit-sports_l_61f18840e4b04f9a12b7cd84 Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother, Amy Chua --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/everydaystrong/message
My guest today is Iris Chen, author of the wonderful book, Untigering: Peaceful Parenting for the Deconstructing Tiger Parent. Iris and her husband have two boys, who are 12 and 14, and in the book Iris charts her journey from strict, perfectionist mother to advocate of peaceful parenting and unschooling. Iris is Chinese American, as is her husband, so her book addresses the cultural conditioning that she had to shed in order to parent in a way that felt truly coherent to her. Among other things, we talk about how we can go about untangling all our own conditioning, how to hold ourselves with compassion as we do the work, and the healing that naturally arises from the work. I hope you enjoy the conversation,You can find out more about Iris' work at https://untigering.comIris' book is available on Amazon.
The Purple Principle celebrates July 4th with its first episode in a miniseries on America's great independent voices. Amy Chua, known for her bestselling Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother, is a Yale law professor and author of Political Tribes. “Every group feels attacked, pitted against other groups not just for jobs and spoils, but for the right to define the nation's identity. In these conditions, democracy devolves into zero-sum group competition. Pure political tribalism.” In a conversation with TPP host Rob Pease, Chua talks about the challenges of speaking to a fragmented student body. She also discusses the degradation of our shared national identity as marginalized groups increasingly denigrate traditional American ideals. These and related topics explored on this special July 4th episode. Enjoy the show, and don't forget to rate & review us at: ratethispodcast.com/purple How'd you hear about The Purple Principle? Click here for a 1-question survey: https://fluentknowledge.com/tpp-survey Original music by Ryan Adair Rooney. SHOW NOTES Our Guest Amy Chua: John M. Duff Professor of Law at Yale Law School and author of Political Tribes: Group Instinct and the Fate of Nations, Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother, and World on Fire: How Exporting Free Market Democracy Breeds Ethnic Hatred and Global Instability. Check out her website and follow her on Twitter @amychua. More episode resources on our website: https://fluentknowledge.com/shows/the-purple-principle/great-american-independents-part1 Join Us for Premium Content: Apple: https://link.chtbl.com/PurpleApple Patreon: patreon.com/purpleprinciplepodcast Find us online! Twitter: @purpleprincipl Facebook: @thepurpleprinciplepodcast Instagram: @thepurpleprinciplepodcast Our homepage: https://bit.ly/2ZCpFaQ Sign up for our newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/purpleprinciple/the-purple-principle-report
Legal scholar. Lawyer. Professor. Writer. Time Magazine's Most Influential Person. Tiger Mom.There's not much that Amy Chua hasn't done—or can't do. She clerked for the U.S. Court of Appeals, worked on Wall Street, and authored an international bestseller. It wasn't until she published her wildly popular memoir, Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother, that Amy Chua became a household name. People around the world read about her unique, and often controversial, approach to parenting, i.e. “tiger mothering.”Described as an “ox” by her father, Amy credits her own parents' strict—and sometimes merciless—“tough love” style of parenting for her success. A daughter of immigrants, Amy learned from an early age to persevere against all odds, to eschew victimhood, and to take pride in her identity as an armor against discrimination.But despite her fierce public persona, Amy is a lot like the rest of us: replete with self-doubt and struggle. In this episode of Beyond the Prescription, Amy shares her failures and successes as a parent, a hospitalized patient, and a self-described “work in progress.” A new episode launches every Tuesday. Beyond the Prescription is hosted by Dr. Lucy McBride (https://lucymcbride.com/podcast) and produced by kglobal (https://kglobal.com/podcast-studio).
Hello from Andy’s couch! We take a break from the NBA finals to record Andy’s last ep as co-host : (Per his request, the podsquad talks Amy Chua’s now decade-old book, Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother—and argues about everything in it. Is the Chinese Tiger Mother actually a thing? Does it matter that Chua is an upper-class second-generation parent? What kind of Asian America does the book describe? Can the satirical bent of the book erase its meanness and cultural essentialism? (Note: we focus pretty narrowly on the memoir and don’t get into her husband’s suspension from Yale for sexual harassment or her own professorial misconduct… but yeah, a lot there.)Then, we send Andy off with thanks and
When Iris Chen saw her own childhood experiences with Tiger parenting repeating with her own children, she knew she needed a complete mental and emotional shift. Tiger parenting refers to an approach to parenting that is common in immigrant Asian families, specifically Chinese families. It involves very strict and controlled parenting, with high academic expectations. The term was originally started by Yale Law School professor Amy Chua in her 2011 memoir ‘Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother'. Iris experienced tiger-parenting in her own childhood and realized that she was still dealing with the trauma from it, and inevitably projecting that onto her own children. Iris shares: “I learned how to respect my children, how to share power with them, and treat them with dignity. All of that spilled over into how I saw myself in empowering them in their education, which follows all these peaceful parenting principles of autonomy, consent, and respect. So I felt like unschooling was definitely just a natural result of practicing peaceful parenting with my children.” This episode explores more of Iris's thoughts on the Un-tigering movement, education, parenting, and unschooling. Happy listening and happy learning! Let's keep the inspiring discussion going! Discover our events, articles, and more with these links:InspirEd MagazineInspirEd EventsJoin our mailing listYou Tube
Division is nothing new in America, but something about this moment feels different. Why are we so angry, fearful, and ever more deeply entrenched in our safe little bubbles of like-minded people? More importantly, how do we get out? In this episode, the root causes of toxic polarization in America today, practical advice on bridging our differences, and the story of one man trying to change the narrative one difficult conversation at a time. Guests: Dylan Marron, author, “Conversations with People Who Hate Me.” Amy Chua, Yale Law School professor, author, “Political Tribes,” and “Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother.” Peter Coleman, social psychologist, Columbia University, author, “The Way Out: How to Overcome Toxic Polarization.”
Psychologists Off The Clock: A Psychology Podcast About The Science And Practice Of Living Well
Dr. Emily Oster, author of The Family Firm, Expecting Better and Cribsheet, has dedicated her career to discovering the hard, data-backed truths about parenting strategies. In this episode of POTC, she delivers some of those parenting truths to you. Emily then delights Yael by going beyond the world of data-driven parenting to discuss how to ask good questions in complicated parts of life (and how to answer them!). Emily also shares tools for gathering good information from the media—even if you aren't someone with a science background. Join the conversation as Yael and Emily discuss The Family Firm and making wise choices within very complicated life roles. Listen and Learn: Yael and Jill discuss strategies to approaching thorny parenting decisionsDifferences between parenting in early versus middle years of childhoodThe benefits to thinking about family, co-parenting, and marriage as a firmHow Emily's family has applied this data to their personal lives (and her family's mission statement!)Practical advice for staying engaged as a parent while maintaining a demanding careerThe importance of framing good questions and evidence-based strategies for doing soThe Family Firm approach to making decisions: The Four F'sWhat the data says about social pressure and extracurricularsConsideration of how scientists should be interacting with systems outside of science Emily's personal experience with being outspoken about data with people who have strong feelings otherwiseHow those interested in evidence can interact with media in ways that are less biasedThe inside scoop on Emily's data-driven newsletter Resources: Pick up your copy of Emily's book, The Family Firm: A Data-Driven Guide to Better Decision Making in the Early School Years!Sign up for Emily's newsletter, Parent Data.Check out this article on AlloparentingLearn about the Sunk Cost Fallacy. Read Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother by Amy Chua Check out Debbie, Yael, and Jill's websites to access their offerings, sign up for their newsletters, buy their books, and more! About Emily Oster: Emily Oster, PhD, is a Professor of Economics at Brown University and the author of Expecting Better, Cribsheet, and The Family Firm. She holds a PhD in Economics from Harvard. Prior to being at Brown she was on the faculty at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business. Oster's academic work focuses on health economics and statistical methods. She is interested in understanding why consumers do not always make “rational” health choices — why do people not eat a fully healthy diet, or pursue all recommended preventative health behaviors? Her work also concerns methods for learning causal effects from observational data. Sign up for her newsletter and check out her website for all the most recent updates on data related to pregnancy and parenting! Related Episodes: Episode 33. Couples with Young Children: Relationship Challenges and Strategies with Yael SchonbrunEpisode 86. Mom Brain with Ilyse Dobrow DiMarcoEpisode 87. Cribsheet with Emily OsterEpisode 143. Happier Parenting KJ Dell'AntoniaEpisode 149. How Not Lose It with Your Kids with Carla NaumburgEpisode 200. Growing Grit with Angela DuckworthEpisode 214. How to Raise Kids Who Aren't Jerks with Melinda Wenner MoyerEpisode 223. Mom Brain Returns with Ilyse Dobrow DiMarcoEpisode 235. The Urge: The Shaping of Addiction & Mental Health with Carl Erik Fisher Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
It's hard to think of an institution in American life that's more broken than higher education. As universities have abandoned core liberal principles like free speech, bending to students' demands for censorship, perhaps the most striking feature of all has been the cowardice and silence of tenured professors. Yale Law professor Amy Chua is not one of them. Since Chua wrote her bestselling parenting memoir Battle Hymn of The Tiger Mother in 2011, she has been no stranger to controversy. She wrote a book, The Triple Package: How Three Unlikely Traits Explain the Rise and Fall of Cultural Groups in America, about why certain cultural groups succeed—and was accused of “cultural racism.” She refused to recant her support for Brett Kavanaugh—and was accused of misogyny. The list goes on. None of this has stopped her from speaking her mind. Today, why Amy Chua remains an optimist in the face of unprecedented political tribalism; how her students continue to inspire her even as she's lost faith in Yale; and why she did, indeed, threaten to burn her daughter's stuffed animals if she didn't practice her piano perfectly. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
WX: jessica66001,获得卡卡老师的英语学习干货分享更多卡卡老师福利公号:卡卡课堂有哪些英语虎里虎气?虎年就要到啦!你身边有没有属虎的朋友或是家人呢?虎年的在英文中的表达是:The year of Tiger。今天我们分享一些和老虎相关的俚语,快点学起来哦!1. have a tiger by the tail—骑虎难下该短语系指“牵涉到某项重大的行动中,处境比预想的困难很多,但又不能轻易或安全脱身”。这与谚语“骑虎难下”非常接近(直译意思是有老虎尾随,也大概能看出难以甩掉的痛苦)。If you push me down again you might find you have a tiger by the tail.你要是再推我,你就麻烦了。2. tiger(‘s) milkTiger('s) milk是杜松子酒的俚语说法。又指斯洛文尼亚的一种餐后甜酒。总之这个是与牛奶无关,全是酒精的短语。Give me some of that tiger milk, will ya?给我点杜松子酒,好吗?3.paper tiger—-纸老虎这个短语源于中国,所以很容易理解,比喻那些外强中干的人或事。There ‘ s nothing to worry about. He is just a paper tiger.不用担心,他就是个纸老虎。4.tiger mother—虎妈这个短语系指”严格、近乎苛刻地要求孩子取得极高成就的母亲。尤其在中国和东南亚其他地区,该育儿方法非常典型。"Tiger Mother" generally refers to a Chinese parenting style.“虎妈”一般指的是一种中式的育儿方式。5. a tiger cannot change his strips—江山易改,本性难移换一种更常见的表达,即 ”a leopard cannot change his spots",老虎身上的标志性条纹与豹子的斑点如何能轻易改变呢?这一习语的意思是江山易改,本性难移。He is a conservative, no matter what he says, a tiger cannot change his strips.他是个保守派,不管他说什么,江山易改,本性难移。
Welcome to another episode of Conversations with Coleman. My guest today is Amy Chua. Amy Chua is a professor at Yale Law School. Her books include World on Fire, Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother, The Triple Package, Political Tribes, and many more. She's made Time magazine's list of 100 most influential people in 2011 and has been a guest on many TV shows, including Good Morning America, The Today Show, and Real Time with Bill Maher. Amy and I spoke on August 26 and discussed the situation in Afghanistan. We talked about how our failure to recognize the importance of ethnic differences hampered our military efforts there. We talk about our inept withdrawal and abandonment of our allies. And on a lighter note, we discuss a now resolved situation with her employer, Yale Law School.#ConversationswithColeman #CwC #ColemanHughes #AmyChua #Afganistan #Americanforeignpolicy #Tribes #Whatwentwrong #America #War #Withdrawal
Welcome to another episode of Conversations with Coleman. My guest today is Amy Chua. Amy Chua is a professor at Yale Law School. Her books include World on Fire, Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother, The Triple Package, Political Tribes, and many more. She's made Time magazine's list of 100 most influential people in 2011 and has been a guest on many TV shows, including Good Morning America, The Today Show, and Real Time with Bill Maher. Amy and I spoke on August 26 and discussed the situation in Afghanistan. We talked about how our failure to recognize the importance of ethnic differences hampered our military efforts there. We talk about our inept withdrawal and abandonment of our allies. And on a lighter note, we discuss a now resolved situation with her employer, Yale Law School. #ConversationswithColeman #CwC #ColemanHughes #AmyChua #Afganistan #Americanforeignpolicy #Tribes #Whatwentwrong #America #War #Withdrawal
Amy Chua, professor at Yale Law School and author of Political Tribes: Group Instinct and the Fate of Nations, World on Fire: How Exporting Free Market Democracy Breeds Ethnic Hatred and Global Instability, and Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother, joins The Realignment to discuss how political and ethnic tribalism undermines American foreign policy and domestic politics.
In this episode, host Lina Forrestal chats with mom of three, Stephanie Feng, about postpartum anxiety (PPA) and growing up with fear-based parenting style, “tiger parenting”. Both Stephanie Feng and Lina Forrestal suffered with postpartum anxiety and recount their experiences, specifically around not being able to leave their babies, scary thoughts, and feeling crippled by their anxiety.They break down their experiences and start to unpack why they felt the way they did, which led them to explore their relationship with their parents and how they grew up with fear-based parents. Growing up with immigrant parents in America, both Stephanie and Lina grew up with fear-based parenting. They were often told that if they didn't do something right, something bad would happen to them: for example, being told that if they didn't finish their food the ‘bad man' would take them away from their family. Symptoms of postpartum anxiety:Excessive worryFeelings of dreadRacing thoughtsLack of concentrationChanges in eating and sleeping patternsDizzinessHot flashesRapid heartbeatNauseaWhile any new mom can develop postpartum anxiety, some factors can increase your risk:A personal or family history of anxietyPrevious experience with depressionCertain symptoms of PMS (such as feeling weepy or agitated)Eating disordersObsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD)Tiger parenting is the term coined by Yale professor Amy Chua a few years ago, in her book Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother, to describe her fear-based and hard-driving parenting style. Connect with Stephanie on Instagram at @simplystephsfavs Connect with Lina:Personal Instagram: @linaforrestalBlog: www.linaforrestal.comPodcast Instagram: @newmamaspodcastClubhouse Username: @newmamaspodcastArtwork Credit: Gabi's MediaSupport the show (https://paypal.me/linaforrestal?locale.x=en_US)
Ian, Joe and Nick achieve their collective maximum potential on this week's episode. Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother by Amy Chua (2011) vs Bringing Up Bebe: One American Mother Discovers the Wisdom of French Parenting by Pamela Druckerman (2012).
Ayaan talks with Amy Chua about how America has always demonstrated a poor understanding of tribal relations in other cultures, a weakness that makes the country ill-prepared to navigate the increasing tribalism of its own domestic politics. Amy shares her work on ‘market dominant minorities’ and ‘super-groups,’ as both women express concern about the growing political “us vs them” mentality in the United States. Amy Chua is a Professor of Law at Yale Law School. She received both her A.B. and her J.D. from Harvard University and was Executive Editor of the Harvard Law Review. After practicing on Wall Street, she joined the Yale Law faculty in 2001. She is the bestselling author of numerous books, including World on Fire: How Exporting Free Market Democracy Breeds Ethnic Hatred and Global Instability, The Triple Package (coauthored with Jed Rubenfeld), and her 2011 memoir Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother, a runaway international bestseller that has been translated into 30 languages. Her latest book is Political Tribes: Group Instinct and the Fate of Nations. In 2011, she was named one of Time magazine's 100 most influential people in the world, one of the Atlantic Monthly's Brave Thinkers, and one of Foreign Policy's Global Thinkers. She also received the Yale Law School's “Best Teaching” award. Follow her on Twitter @amychua or visit her website at amychua.com.
As the country's ‘model-minority', Asian-Americans have experienced different forms of discrimination compared to other ethnic groups, but the recent spate of Asian-American violence and rise in anti-China rhetoric has thrown this tension into sharper focus.There is perhaps no public intellectual better equipped to give an insight into these issues than Amy Chua, a Law Professor at Yale and author of five books, including the famous book ‘Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother', which advocated strict Chinese-style parenting. Chua is the child of two ethnically Chinese parents, who emigrated from the Philippines to the US when she was a baby. She has written extensively about her Confuscian upbringing at home (respect for elders, deference to authority) as well as her schooling in America, both of which gave her a deeper understanding of the values that underpin those two countries. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
This week, Ayoto meets one of his traumas on the subject of Tiger Moms, and speaks to peaceful parenting advocate, intersectional unschooler, anti-oppression activist and deconstructing tiger mom, Iris Chen. She is the author of Untigering: Adventures of a Deconstructing Tiger Mother.Additional references and links can be found on this episode's entry on AsianProvocation.comBe a supporter of this podcast and its stories by becoming a patron on Patreon.com/AsianProvocation for as little as $5 a month, which keeps this show independent and alive.
My guest today is Amy Chua. Amy is a professor at Yale Law School. Her books include 'World on Fire', Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother', 'The Triple Package', and 'Political Tribes'. She made Time Magazine's list of 100 most influential people in 2011 and has been a guest on many TV shows including Good Morning America, the Today Show, and Real Time with Bill Maher. Amy and I talk about tribalism, highly successful minority groups, and how ethnic tensions have undermined the US foreign policy. We also talk about the sources of racial and ethnic disparity, color blindness, and much more.#Ad This week's episode is sponsored by our friends at Indeed. Hiring is one of those things you don't want to mess up. To take your business to the next level you need to hire great people with Indeed instant match. Indeed searches through the millions of resumes in their database to help show you great candidates, instantly. This way you can do the part you really need faster – meeting and hiring great people. As a listener of my podcast, you can redeem your free $75 credit at indeed.com/CONVERSATIONS. This offer is valid through March 31.Terms and conditions apply.
Welcome to another episode of Conversations with Coleman. My guest today is Amy Chua. Amy is a professor at Yale Law School. Her books include 'World on Fire', Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother', 'The Triple Package', and 'Political Tribes'. She made Time Magazine's list of 100 most influential people in 2011 and has been a guest on many TV shows including Good Morning America, the Today Show, and Real Time with Bill Maher. Amy and I talk about tribalism, highly successful minority groups, and how ethnic tensions have undermined the US foreign policy. We also talk about the sources of racial and ethnic disparity, color blindness, and much more. #Ad This week's episode is sponsored by our friends at Indeed. Hiring is one of those things you don't want to mess up. To take your business to the next level you need to hire great people with Indeed instant match. Indeed searches through the millions of resumes in their database to help show you great candidates, instantly. This way you can do the part you really need faster – meeting and hiring great people. As a listener of my podcast, you can redeem your free $75 credit at indeed.com/CONVERSATIONS. This offer is valid through March 31.Terms and conditions apply.
Xuan, Charlotte, and Summer talk about the stereotypes of eastern and western parenting styles, the pros and cons of each, their personal stories, and their thoughts on the book "Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother" by Amy Chua. Please give us a positive rating and leave your feedback! Follow us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/btwnhereandthere Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/btwnherethere/
It's been almost a decade since Amy Chua wrote the notorious “Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother” which caused an uproar in many American parenting circles. A tiger mom refers to a mother who is strict, and demands high levels of both academic excellence from her children as well as obedience. While we may see the Tiger Mom as one style of parenting, Chua points out strictness and obedience are inextricable from the cultural norms of Asian societies ---which view children in a very different way but also in a different role --- than the often more permissive and emotionally supportive Western approach to children . Now Tiger Parenting has become a fixture in the parenting lexicon along with Free Range Parenting, Helicopter Parenting, and the Snow Plow or Lawn Mower Parent which we'll discuss as well. Our special guest today is Mick Kubiak a psychotherapist in private practice who also works as a parent coach.
Erica, Carter, and returning guest Alex Yam, live from Canada, discuss Frank "literary Panda Express" Zhang. Parenting stereotypes, shapeshifting analysis, Frazel, and of course, jasmine-scented everything. More on Asian-American representation in tv/film: https://www.nytimes.com/2018/11/06/t-magazine/asian-american-actors-representation.html https://www.npr.org/sections/codeswitch/2014/10/28/358307426/a-timeline-of-51-family-sitcoms-with-people-of-color https://www.academia.edu/43772191/The_Bourgeois_Cinema_of_Boba_Liberalism Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother: https://www.npr.org/2011/01/11/132833376/tiger-mothers-raising-children-the-chinese-way An alternative Frazel timeline: https://flightfoot.tumblr.com/post/186863810212/so-i-was-thinking-about-the-age-gap-in-frazel-and Show Merch: https://www.teepublic.com/stores/seaweed-brain-podcast?ref_id=21682 Alex’s grandpa’s Wikipedia page: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ren_Yuandao
When one academic delves behind the 'tiger mother' stereotype, she finds aspirational parents who see education as the key to social mobility.
David Epstein, the brilliant author of Range and The Sports Gene talks to me about lots of topics from why children should sample lots of different sports from a young age, to why making mistakes as you learn leads to holding onto the knowledge longer and why being OK with being misunderstood as you navigate your career can lead to a more fulfilling job.Some of the books that we mention are Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother and Grit.If you like the episode, please check out our previous ones and be sure to rate the podcast on iTunes.
「微信」或者「微博」搜索关注[早安英文],查看更多有趣实用的中英双语节目。笔记:tiger mother 虎妈The phrase comes from a book named Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother.这个短语来自一本名为《老虎母亲的战歌》的书。The tiger mother orders her daughters to get straight A's and become the best in every subject except gym and drama.虎妈要求她的女儿们都得A,除了体育和戏剧以外,其他每门课都要成为班上最好的。获取节目完整音频、笔记和片尾的歌曲名,请关注威信公众号「早安英文」,回复「加油」即可。更多有意思的英语干货等着你!
「微信」或者「微博」搜索关注[早安英文],查看更多有趣实用的中英双语节目。笔记:tiger mother 虎妈The phrase comes from a book named Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother.这个短语来自一本名为《老虎母亲的战歌》的书。The tiger mother orders her daughters to get straight A's and become the best in every subject except gym and drama.虎妈要求她的女儿们都得A,除了体育和戏剧以外,其他每门课都要成为班上最好的。获取节目完整音频、笔记和片尾的歌曲名,请关注威信公众号「早安英文」,回复「加油」即可。更多有意思的英语干货等着你!
Serina Declares a Tea War with Tommy from The Project! You can save $1.3million by drinking tea instead of coffee! Take that Tommy! Serina’s been on Sunrise, Today, Studio 10, Your Money Life and The Project to tell all about being Frugal! Madam Chan and Serina confuse bubble tea cashier with their language abilities in Downtown Chinatown. Serina gives advice on surviving the Tiger Mother-in-Law, how to keep your grocery under $50/week (hint: RICE!) and how to have the best wedding for under $5000! THANK YOU LISTENERS! Thank you for listening to Captain Bagrat and supporting our Mission to Fight Boring News in Asia and Australia! YOUR MISSION should you dare to accept it is to click on a Captain Bagrat episode of your persuasion and leave a review onApplePodcast! Click here https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/captain-bagrat/id1488838852 SHOUT OUT + U R A WINNER | We will give everyone who have reviewed Captain Bagrat a special shout out! We will pick a winning review each month. The lucky winner will have the chance to podcast with Captain Bagrat in Downtown Chinatown! You pick the topic! Madam Chan will prep a cocktail of your choice and Liam will croon your fav song! #DoIt FANCLUB | Throw a few bucks at us each month on Patreon + TELL US WHAT YOU WANT! That’ll keep us busy at the recording studio. Your support will forever be honoured with early access to new episodes, behind the scenes, patron only messages and more. Click here https://www.patreon.com/CaptainBagrat SPONSOR | Why not throw a few ’00s or even ‘000s at us. In-kind sponsorship is also great. WE WILL NEVER SAY NO TO BEERS!Like Trump, we love quid pro quo deals! Contact us at Captain.Bagrat@gmail.comor Facebook to strike a deal and get your brand noticed! FOLLOW US: Facebook https://www.facebook.com/captainbagrat/ Instagram https://www.instagram.com/captainbagrat/?hl=en Apple Podcast https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/captain-bagrat/id1488838852 Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/6Vue3tjzKWoY6g70xrW3yp?si=XIRWKSDcS2SrL5uiejrukA Youtube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCT9jjT1khKsG4UwZRngYa2g Patreon https://www.patreon.com/CaptainBagrat Thanks for your support! Bagrat Out! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/captainbagrat/message
An interview with Quinton Morris, a Seattle-based violinist, professor, educator, founder, filmmaker, radio host, and entrepreneur. We discuss his path from South King County, WA to some of the nation's premier educational institutions and back. Quinton has toured the nation and the world as a violinist and is a professor at Seattle University and the founder of Key to Change, a remarkable educational organization. Highlights Quinton’s background - 8:26 Creating meaningful changes for students - 9:37 Playing an instrument to go to college - 12:32 Having a part-time job to pay for music lessons - 15:37 Being a very reflective teacher - 17:11 Keeping kids engaged - 30:09 Increasing the level of impact - 32:06 An inspirational person in his life - 47:32 Quinton’s bad experience at school - 50:18 Playing in a local community orchestra - 53:31 His experience in Boston - 59:01 Quinton’s performing career - 1:12:18 The importance of relationships- 1:15:10 Being a cancer survivor - 1:20:10 Episode Resources Connect with Robert Hunt Simonds: roberthuntsimonds@gmail.com http://roberthuntsimonds.com/ http://craigwagnermusic.blogspot.com Connect with Quinton Morris: https://twitter.com/quintonimorris?lang=en Quinton's bio: https://www.seattleu.edu/artsci/about/faculty-and-staff/quinton-morris-dma.html Key to Change: http://keytochangestudio.org "Our Declaration" by Danielle Allen: https://www.amazon.com/Our-Declaration-Reading-Independence-Equality-ebook/dp/B00FPT5KYW "Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother" by Amy Chua: https://www.amazon.com/Battle-Hymn-Tiger-Mother-Chua-ebook/dp/B004CLYKLI/ref=sr_1_1?crid=RCKCTFFZ6MC3&dchild=1&keywords=battle+hymn+of+the+tiger+mother&qid=1599097297&s=digital-text&sprefix=battle+him%2Cdigital-text%2C167&sr=1-1 "Ahead of the Curve" by Philip Delves Broughton: https://www.amazon.com/Ahead-Curve-Harvard-Business-School-ebook/dp/B001D6FIQ6/ref=sr_1_1?crid=J3EAVUJW3H48&dchild=1&keywords=ahead+of+the+curve&qid=1599097362&s=digital-text&sprefix=ahead+o%2Cdigital-text%2C172&sr=1-1
New York Times bestselling author Adam Grant calls it, “one of the best books I've read on AI.” And with other stellar endorsers including Eric Schmidt (former CEO and executive chairman of Google), Muhammad Yunus (Nobel Peace Prize winner), Sean Carroll (theoretical physicist at the California Institute of Technology), Amy Chua (NYT bestselling author of Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother), and Jeremy Bash (former chief of staff for the CIA and DoD), and even NFL Hall of Fame Quarterback Joe Montana, T-Minus AI has already become an essential addition to the robust conversation around AI.As the U.S. Air Force’s first chairperson of artificial intelligence while at the Pentagon, Kanaan speaks about:- How intelligence is defined in the digital age, and why consciousness should no longer confuse the conversation- Breaking down other common misconceptions surrounding AI- The state of AI around the world, and the ideologically opposing applications already applications already occurring in the East and West - The aggressive and politically-purposed strategies of China and Russia- The importance that the U.S. government and private industry work cooperatively in the development and implementation of AI- The critical importance of ensuring that AI is used in legal, moral, and ethical ways moving forward Dr. Rollan Roberts is an advisor and resource to national governments on strong Artificial Intelligence and quantum-proof Cybersecurity and was nominated to Central Command's Department of Defense Civilian Task Force. He is the CEO of Courageous!, a superhuman AI and Cybersecurity research and product development think tank that serves advanced national security initiatives of national governments. He served as CEO of the Hoverboard company, creating the best-selling consumer product worldwide in 2015, and has a record of crafting viral global brands as CEO of both public and private SMB to multi-billion dollar companies. Dr. Roberts hosts the annual African Diplomatic Entrepreneur Summit in partnership with multiple African governments and United Nations SDGs, and was bestowed the diplomatic designation of "His Excellency" when awarded Peace Ambassador to World Governments by the International College of Peace Studies.Dr. Roberts has addressed world leaders at Harvard University, Bloomberg BusinessWeek, and China’s government and business leaders in Tiananmen Square at the Great Hall of the People (China’s Congress). He served as an advisor to the Top 20 Startup companies in the world (in Spain) and advisor on the U.S.-China Trade War.In addition to being a private pilot, he holds a Doctorate degree in Global Business and Entrepreneurship, authored 6 best-selling international books on business and entrepreneurship, founded the International Down Syndrome CEO Camp for entrepreneurs (www.DownsCEO.com corporate diversity and inclusiveness), and continues to educate and empower leaders and entrepreneurs by hosting the annual CEO Cruise and women’s empowerment BeautyPro Cruise as Chairman of the Board for the International Association of Pageantry.- Recognized industry authority in consumer goods, cybersecurity, artificial intelligence, energy, technology, manufacturing, direct sales/network marketing, cannabis, and biotech sectors. - Formulated natural baby formula that was closest alternative to breast milk. - Founded nutraceutical company as natural alternative/supplement to chemotherapy.- Top 100 Most Influential Floridians of 2015 by Insight Magazine.- Marketing & Branding strategist with Tom Feltenstein, Creator of the McDonalds Happy Meal & opened first Ronald McDonald House.
When one academic delves behind the 'tiger mother' stereotype, she finds aspirational parents who see education as the key to social mobility.
Love to travel and discover new cultures, but unable to set off on your next adventure because of the pandemic? Fear not! Wild China and Caixin Global’s latest offering will help you escape into a new world. Every month, our new podcast series dives into a different, fascinating book from across the globe. Our first show is dedicated to the international best seller Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother. We are delighted to chat to the global phenomenon behind this captivating read - Amy Chua. Tune in for highlights of this eye-opening conversation.
Diana Nguyen is Chasing Keanu Reeves. She is a Vietnamese- Australian comedian and actor she has featured in many comedy festivals, TED talks and television. But its far deeper than that. Her mother was a refugee and that story and legacy is wound through all of her work. It's unique…. And after wanting to be nothing more than to be an Australian, she now weaves ethnicity, gender and tiger-mothers into her work. She is edgy and funny. We talk comedy, gender and ethnicity, sex and intergenerational conflict. Just the light stuff! INTSUM 1:00 The tapestry of themes to Dianna. 2:00 What happened that she didn't become a lawyer (or similar). 3:00 Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother…. And its applicability (or not). 10:00 Racism and its influence on Dianna. 12:45 Why she chooses not to see colour. 13:15 On trying to fit in. 14:30 Does Dianna speak Vietnamese? 15:40 Did Dianna hide a boyfriend in her cupboard? 17:30 An alternate solution to cupboards. 18:00 Paradigm shifting and role models. 20:10 Parasite- The Movie. 22:45 Other people's opinions…. Do they matter? 23:45 Performing on stage. 25:30 Presence and body language- the power pose. 27:10 Chasing Keanu Reeves- Being sad on a bench. 29:45 Being happy with yourself. 31:20 Quick Questions/ Quick Answers. Links http://www.diananguyen.com.au LinkedIn Twitter Facebook #PhiandMeTV #DancingDiana #JustDoingKaraoke #ChasingKeanuReeves2021 Diana works for The Humour Foundation. If you would like to donate, click on this link. Contact Us Email: debrief@unforgiving60.com Website: www.unforgiving60.com Music The Externals …. ‘Butterfly' ….Available on Spotify Mitchell Martin …. ‘I Can't Stop Singing' …. Available on Spotify Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mitchellmartinmusic/
Serina Declares a Tea War with Tommy from The Project!You can save $1.3million by drinking tea instead of coffee! Take that Tommy! Serina’s been on Sunrise, Today, Studio 10, Your Money Life and The Project to tell all about being Frugal! Madam Chan and Serina confuse bubble tea cashier with their language abilities in Downtown Chinatown. Serina gives advice on surviving the Tiger Mother-in-Law, how to keep your grocery under $50/week (hint: RICE!) and how to have the best wedding for under $5000! THANK YOU LISTENERS!Thank you for listening to Captain Bagrat and supporting our Mission to Fight Boring News in Asia and Australia!YOUR MISSION should you dare to accept it is to click on a Captain Bagrat episode of your persuasion and leave a review onApplePodcast! Click here https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/captain-bagrat/id1488838852SHOUT OUT + U R A WINNER | We will give everyone who have reviewed Captain Bagrat a special shout out! We will pick a winning review each month. The lucky winner will have the chance to podcast with Captain Bagrat in Downtown Chinatown! You pick the topic! Madam Chan will prep a cocktail of your choice and Liam will croon your fav song! #DoIt FANCLUB | Throw a few bucks at us each month on Patreon + TELL US WHAT YOU WANT! That’ll keep us busy at the recording studio. Your support will forever be honoured with early access to new episodes, behind the scenes, patron only messages and more. Click here https://www.patreon.com/CaptainBagratSPONSOR | Why not throw a few ’00s or even ‘000s at us. In-kind sponsorship is also great. WE WILL NEVER SAY NO TO BEERS!Like Trump, we love quid pro quo deals! Contact us at Captain.Bagrat@gmail.comor Facebook to strike a deal and get your brand noticed! FOLLOW US: Facebook https://www.facebook.com/captainbagrat/Instagram https://www.instagram.com/captainbagrat/?hl=en Apple Podcast https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/captain-bagrat/id1488838852Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/6Vue3tjzKWoY6g70xrW3yp?si=XIRWKSDcS2SrL5uiejrukA Youtube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCT9jjT1khKsG4UwZRngYa2gPatreon https://www.patreon.com/CaptainBagrat Thanks for your support! Bagrat Out!
Hi everyone! On this week's episode, I get to speak with the “No Superwoman” doc- Dr. C. Nicole Swiner, about why tackling the Superwoman epidemic among moms of color is so critical for our health and well-being and practical solutions we can use to stop it from showing up in our motherhood journeys. This interview quickly turned into a fabulous chat that spanned a bunch of topics including our connection as dance moms of two little girls and reigning in our “tiger mom” tendencies. We also spoke about why tackling being a supermom is not something we can do alone and the importance of getting support and guidance from others. This aligned so perfectly with why group coaching is essential for moms of color,and many of you know, I run my Mama First coaching program for helping working moms of color experiencing stress learn how to invest in themselves. Also, if you are listening to this episode on November 3rd, I actually have a Masterclass tonight at 8:30PM Eastern where I will be teaching my framework on “How Working Moms of Color Can Stop Supermom Stress and Avoid Burnout.” Listen at the end for how to register! Mentioned in the episode: The impact of the book, The Superwoman Syndrome by Marjorie Hansen Shaevitz Dr. Swiner’s books on Superwoman Complex: How to Avoid the Superwoman Complex: 12 steps to balance mind, body and spirit. The Superwoman Complex: A Follow-Up Visit. How training as a woman of color in medicine her reinforced the superwoman syndrome in her life How moms can mask the difficulties with being a supermom and the impact on mental health, which she observed in her own mother. The five elements of the superwoman schema Dr. Amani Allen’s article on the influence of racial discrimination, superwoman syndrome on stress and the article on the relationship between superwoman syndrome and early aging and hypertension Navigating the balance between supporting and motivating your kids and helping them to not stress your kids and the importance of demonstrating growth mindset. "The Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother" by Amy Chua The harms of being a superwoman on our physical health and the harmful message it teaches our kids The essential reason why we have to have a village of “paid” friends and unpaid friends Practical tips on how to stop the stress in motherhood and nurturing your relationship with your partners More about Dr. C. Nicole Swiner DocSwiner is a family physician, 2-time best-selling author, owner of Swiner Publishing Company, blogger, speaker, wife and mother in Durham. She is also affectionately known as the Superwoman Complex expert and has written 2 books on the topic. She loves taking care of the family as a whole—from the cradle to the grave. She attended Duke University and completed medical school at the Medical University of South Carolina,. She finished her residency at UNC-Chapel Hill and continues teaching as an Adjunct Associate Professor with the Family Medicine department. When she’s not treating patients at Durham Family Medicine, she’s speaking locally and nationally, blogging, teaching others to self-publish and spending time with her family. Her passion is making medicine “plain” to her patients, and helping them understand how to take better care of themselves and their families. You can contact her at cnswiner@gmail.com and follow her @docswiner on all social media platforms
What are the assumptions used in "tiger" parenting, and what is the goal? This episode is a review of The Battle Hymn of The Tiger Mother by Amy Chua.
Trying to help your kids succeed in life? These mothers have a strong idea of what to do!
Get Tiger Mom results without the Tiger Mom bite! In her article, “A Lion Mom Roars,” Susan Pascale discusses her methods for getting high-level results without sacrificing a child’s childhood or the parent-child relationship. She explains how to have high expectations for excellence and ambition for your children and students – without the negativity that can go along with being a Tiger Mom (a term that because a household phrase with the publication of Amy Chua’s excellent book, “Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother”). Links and notes related to this episode can be found at https://mpetersonmusic.com/podcast/episode11 Facebook Page Instagram LinkedIn
On this episode of No Coast Oriental, James and Stevie talk about parents. Join us as we discuss parenting styles, independence, tiger parents, how our parents shaped us, and how we shaped our parents. Follow the Pod on Twitter & Instagram: @nocoastoriental and tweet us your questions/comments with the hashtag #NoCoastOriental Business inquiries and longer messages: nocoastoriental@gmail.com Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/user?u=17297277)
It's Thursday, and time for our weekly visit with theater critic J. Wynn Rousuck, who joins Tom with her review of Tiger Style!, now on stage at Olney Theatre Center in Olney, Maryland.Tiger Style! is playwright Mike Lew's response, in part, to the criticisms of Chinese-American author Amy Chua's Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother, a 2011 bestseller which argued that a strict Chinese style of parenting is superior to Western methods. Lew's play, first performed in Boston in 2016, satirizes the rampant stereotypes of Asian-American culture, and examines the timely issues of identity and immigration.Directed by Natasu Onada Power, Tiger Style! features Regina Aquino as Jennifer Chen, Sean Sekino as Albert Chen, and Michael Glenn, Kurt Kwan, and Eileen Rivera in multiple roles.Tiger Style! continues at the Olney Theatre Center through August 18. For ticket info, click here.
Prov. 31:1-9 (NKJV) Amy Chua made The New York Times Best Sellers list in 2011 for her book, Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother. Chua is a mother of two girls, Sophia and Lulu. She is also a law professor at Yale Law School and is married to Jeb Rubenfeld, another professor at Yale Law […]
Cam and Timmy discuss The Blindfolded Chess Master, A Chubby Tiger, A Mother Helping her son find love, A lady smashing up a cafe and the way Swedish people say 'yes'
Show #228 | Guest: Wesley Yang | Show Summary: From the “Tiger Mother” to take-out, Asian-American culture is so deeply entrenched in our understanding of the American fabric, we sometimes don’t know we’re talking about it when we’re talking about. Collecting a decade’s worth of essays, from his award-winning analysis of the Virginia Tech murderer to his cult classic looks at mandarin zombies, pickup artists, and immigrant strivers, Wesley Yang’s highly anticipated new book, The Souls of Yellow Folk is a watershed of engaging and provocative new perspectives on what it truly means to have and hold an American Dream.
#50 Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother by Amy Chua Шинэ оныхоо эхний дугаараараа бид зочин Маякаг урьж Ази гэр бүлийн хүүхэд хүмүүжлийн талаар хамгийн сонирхолтой, сургамжтай номын нэг "Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother" номыг тоймлон хүргэж байна. Yale Law School-ийн хуулийн профессор болох зохиогч нь энэ номондоо 2 охиноо багаас нь хичээл сурлага, хөгжмийн онцгой авьяастай болгон өсгөн хүмүүжүүлэхдээ ямар арга барилаар хэрхэн хөдөлмөрлөж ирсэн болоод өөрийн амжилт, алдаа дутагдалтай талыг шударгаар өгүүлж чадсанаараа Дэлхийн сая сая уншигчдаас шүүмж болон магтаалыг харамгүй хүртсэн ажээ. Энэ ном бол хүүхдийнхээ нөөц боломжинд итгэдэг, том мөрөөдөлтэй эцэг эх бүрийн унших ёстой номын нэг юм.
Episode Twenty-Three Angela Chan Angela Chan holds a Bachelor of the Arts in Music from Texas Womans University. She started studying piano at the age of 4 and made her first public debut at age 8 in Dallas, TX where she performed with a Suzuki touring group from Japan in front of an audience of 2,000 people. She went on to win various competitions in the state of Texas including the Collin County Young Artist Competition in which she performed with the Plano Symphony at age 13. During this time, she also studied the harp and French horn, and performed in the high school concert, marching, and jazz bands. Angela went on to attend the University of North Texas on a piano performance scholarship studying with Joseph Banowetz. She also taught piano lessons and creative music classes before discovering her love for musical theater. After graduation, she worked at various theaters, including Barrington Stage in Massachusetts, Seaside Music Theater in Daytona Beach, and The MUNY in St Louis, the largest outdoor theater in the country. Since then she has toured all over the US, Canada, Mexico, and Puerto Rico as the Musical Director of “A Christmas Carol,” and as the Associate Conductor and keyboard player on the national tours of “South Pacific,” “Sound of Music,” “CATS,” Andrew Lloyd Webber's "Wizard of Oz," "Ghost," and “Phantom of the Opera.” She has performed in Las Vegas in “The Producers,” “Spamalot,” “Mamma Mia,” Disney’s “The Lion King,” “Phantom: The Las Vegas Spectacular”, the Las Vegas Philharmonic, “Jersey Boys,” “KA” by Cirque du Soleil, and is currently the Associate Conductor/Keyboardist for "Le Reve: The Dream" at Wynn Las Vegas. In 2012, she became an Associate Music Director for Choozi Entertainment, which produced the shows for the "Artists of Silver Sea" on Silver Sea Cruise lines all over the world! Angela is also an award winning lyricist and composer, capturing “Best of the Fringe Festival” awards for her shows “Legacy of the Tiger Mother” in San Francisco in 2012, (a self produced show that played in Las Vegas, New York, Adelaide, Australia, and San Francisco) and “Sudoku the Musical” at the Las Vegas Fringe Festival in 2013! In 2014 Angela also became a Notary Public in the state of Nevada and a licensed wedding officiant in Clark County. Ms. Chan currently resides in Las Vegas with her husband, drummer and percussionist Alex Stopa. Angela is a proud member of the American Federation of Musicians! www.AngelaChanMusic.com www.TigerMotherTheMusical.com www.BrunchToBroadway.com www.Youtube.com/user/CalamityChan Twitter: @CalamityChan Instagram: Ellahcj Egg Nog https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HjqIhVwM3D8 Sad Penis Christmas https://youtu.be/bkTsRI6XjiA
Douces, sensibles, gentilles … On a longtemps assigné des traits de personnalité saux femmes. Et si une femme à le malheur de se mettre en colère, ce serait à cause de ses hormones ! Dans ce nouvel épisode, Clémentine Gallot et Julie Hamaïde reviennent sur ses différents clichés en explorant la violence des femmes. Côté pop culture, il sera question de l’actrice Ellen Ripley et de son rôle dans Alien, mais aussi du livre « King Kong Théorie » de Virginie Despentes, et du film « Les Veuves » de Steve McQueen prochainement sur nos écrans. Enfin, Clémentine et Julie répondent à Margaux, auditrice, qui a des difficultés à gérer ses relations avec son entourage qui voit le monde différemment de son engagement dans le féminisme intersectionnel.L'actu féministe de Clémentine Gallot de Julie Hamaïde (01:58)Le thème de l'épisode : La violence des femmes (03:11)Expériences personnelles de Clémentine Gallot et de Julie Hamaïde (21:07)Le moment Pop culture (35 :04)Les recommandations culturelles (43 :37)Le courrier des auditrices (45:31)Les références entendues dans l'épisode : Le 25 novembre : Journée internationale pour l’élimination de la violence à l’égard des femmes Le livre « Penser la violence des femmes » de Coline CARDI et Geneviève PRUVOST, (2017).Le mouvement des suffragettes anglaises au 19ème siècle qui s’est divisé avec deux grandes leaders anglaises : Millicent Garrett Fawcett et Emmeline PankhurstLe film Suffragettes de Sarah Gavron (2015)Le livre « Women Crime and Criminology » de Carol Smart, Frances Heidensohn, Richard Collier, Joe Sim et Helen Monk (2017).Le livre de Mona Chollet « Sorcières ». (2018)Le livre « Les monstres n’existent pas » de Ondine Millot (2018)Le livre d'Amy Chua "Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother" (2011)Le téléfilm « Jacqueline Sauvage : C’était lui ou moi » avec Muriel Robin, de Yves Renier. (2018)Le livre « Lorsque je me suis relevée j’ai pris mon fusil » de Valentine Faure. (2018)Le livre « Good and Mad: The revolutionary Power of Women’s Anger” de Rebecca Traister. (2018)Le livre « On ne naît pas soumise on le devient » de Manon Garcia. (2018)Le passage sur les violences conjugales, de Muriel Robin dans « C à vous ».Le Amazon Training conseillée par Clémentine GallotLa militante écoféministe, écrivaine et journaliste : “Starhawk” qui prône l’action directe non violente`La pièce de théâtre « Up your Ass » en 1966 de Valérie SolanasLe livre « King Kong Théorie » de Virginie Despentes. (2007)Le pamphlet « Scum Manifesto » de Valérie Solanas L’actrice Ellen Ripley, première vraie héroïne d’action du cinéma grand public pour son rôle dans « Alien » réalisé par Ridley Scott. (1979) La série « Killing Eve » de Emerald Fennell et Phoebe Waller-Bridge avec l’actrice Sandra Oh de “Grey’s Anatomy”. (2018) La romancière américaine Gillian Flynn et ses romans « Gone Girl » et “Sharp Objects » adaptés au cinéma en 2014 et 2018. La série « Sweet/Vicious » de Jennifer Kaytin Robinson. (2016)Le livre « Confessions d’un gang de filles » de Joyce Carol Oates. (2014)La BD « Perdy » de Kickliy. (2018)La BD « Camel Joe » de Claire Duplan (2018)Le film « Millenium : ce qui ne me tue pas » de Fede Alvarez. (2018)Le film « Les veuves » de Steve McQueen. (2018) Les recommandations culturelles Julie : Le livre « La violence » de Cécile Collette (2013)Clémentine : « Les heures rouges » de Leni Zumas (2018)Pour poser une question à la team Quoi de meuf : hello@quoidemeuf.netPour s'inscrire à la géniale newsletter Quoi de meuf : http://quoidemeuf.net/Quoi de Meuf est une émission de Nouvelles Écoutes, animée par Clémentine Gallot et Julie Hamaide. Réalisée par Aurore Meyer Mahieu, montée et mixée par Laurie Galligani, coordonnée par Laura Cuissard.
Amy Chua, author of Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother, on being a tough parent. Her memoir outlines her strict "Chinese" style of parenting which saw her daughters Sofia and Lulu follow a strict routine of studying and violin practice with no time allowed for TV or sleepovers.
In this episode, Yale law professor Amy Chua describes the effect of political tribalism on America's domestic and foreign policy, along with the strong reaction to her bestselling memoir, "Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother." The episode was recorded on March 23, 2018. This podcast should not be copied, distributed, published or reproduced, in whole or in part, or disclosed by any recipient to any other person. The information contained in this podcast does not constitute a recommendation from any Goldman Sachs entity to the recipient. Neither Goldman Sachs nor any of its affiliates makes any representation or warranty, express or implied, as to the accuracy or completeness of the statements or any information contained in this podcast and any liability therefore (including in respect of direct, indirect or consequential loss or damage) is expressly disclaimed. The views expressed in this podcast are not necessarily those of Goldman Sachs, and Goldman Sachs is not providing any financial, economic, legal, accounting or tax advice or recommendations in this podcast. In addition, the receipt of this podcast by any recipient is not to be taken as constituting the giving of investment advice by Goldman Sachs to that recipient, nor to constitute such person a client of any Goldman Sachs entity. Copyright 2018 Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC. All rights reserved.
What are political tribes, and how do they influence domestic and international politics? How has blindness to group instinct led to follies in U.S. foreign policy? How can nations deal with groups as basic political units? Find out in this episode, featuring Professors Amy Chua and Bill Burke-White! Amy Chua is the John M. Duff Professor of Law at Yale Law School. She is an expert in ethnic conflict, and globalization and the law. Her most recent book, "Political Tribes: Group Instinct and the Fate of Nations," studies how tribalism causes problems at home and abroad. She is also the author of the 2011 memoir, "Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother." 0:20 – Intro conversation between Mike Horowitz and Bill Burke-White 8:25 – Chua's biographical background. 12:00 – What are political tribes? 14:54 – What are the defining characteristics of a tribe? 17:10 – How can the U.S. better understand tribalism abroad. 22:05 – What can be done about tribalism, both domestically and internationally? 28:40 – How should international law, which traditionally focuses on the state, integrate the realities of tribal politics? 30:30 – What is the most important challenge that the world must face over the next two years? 31:40 – What is the most important challenge that the world must face over the next twenty years? 32:35 – Interesting Global Fact. 33:45 – Career advice for students. 35:10 – Cause for optimism. Music and Produced by Tre Hester
点击每期节目可以看到具体文稿内容Your perfectionist parenting style may be detrimental to your childBy Ariana Eunjung ChaEven if you were horrified at the idea of hovering over your child as Amy Chua did in her polarizing 2011 bestseller "The Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother," I'm betting there was a part of you that looked at her perfect children with at least a tinge of envy. As portrayed in the book, Chua's magic formula of no playdates, no TV and always being No. 1 in everything (except for gym and drama, of course) ended up producing two girls who were straight-A students and who also were wildly talented in music. Oh, and they both ended up going to Harvard University.Critics predicted that daughters Sophia and Lulu would end up being "mentally ill, friendless robots," according to a recent "where are they now" profile in the Telegraph. Instead, they ended up being "polite, modest and thoughtful" as well as successful, the article says, and they remember their childhood as tough — but happy.But are the sisters the norm or exception to this type of parenting?A new study out of the notoriously high-pressure, high-performing Asian city-state of Singapore takes a stab at this question and comes to worrisome conclusions. The research, published in the Journal of Personality, involved 263 children in primary school who were 7 years old when it began and were followed for five years from 2010 to 2014.The work looks at the dark side of perfectionism — maladaptive perfectionism, in research parlance — and how this develops in schoolchildren.Scientists measured what they called "parental intrusiveness" in the first year of the study by asking the child to solve some puzzles while a parent — whichever one was more involved in care — was present. They told the parents that they should feel free to help the child whenever necessary and then secretly rated their behaviors. Their goal was to figure out whether the parents interfered with the child's problem-solving and whether that help was needed.At the extreme end of the spectrum were parents with what they called highly intrusive behavior. These were the moms and dads who "took over the game to retract a move made by the child," the researchers said. Each of these attempts was logged and coded. Similar tests were repeated as the children aged — at 8, 9 and 11.The researchers then assessed aspects of the child's mental health from talking to both the child and parent.And here's the part where the study becomes alarming. The children with intrusive parents were more likely to be overly critical of themselves, and this tendency increased over the years. And that high or increased level of self-criticism was correlated to elevated levels of depression or anxiety.968重庆之声每周一至周五8点56分每天三分钟养成良好英语听说习惯
Tribalism has always existed, but is now playing a far more pivotal role in society: from the rise of gender and ethnic affiliation, to nationalist parties in Europe and even the appeal of Donald Trump. Amy Chua, author of "Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother" and "Political Tribes", explains why the politics of sharp-edged identities have become so powerful. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Tribalism has always existed, but is now playing a far more pivotal role in society: from the rise of gender and ethnic affiliation, to nationalist parties in Europe and even the appeal of Donald Trump. Amy Chua, author of "Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother" and "Political Tribes", explains why the politics of sharp-edged identities have become so powerful. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
(Recorded: March 27, 2018)A conversation w/ Amy Chua (@amychua), Yale law professor and author of numerous books including: "Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother", "The Triple Package", "World on Fire", and her latest book "Political Tribes: Group Instinct and the Fate of Nations".“Today, no group in America feels comfortably dominant. Every group feels attacked, pitted against other groups not just for jobs and spoils but for the right to define the nation's identity. In these conditions, democracy devolves into zero-sum group competition — pure political tribalism.” - Amy Chua, 'Political Tribes' - Identity, Ethnicity, and Culture- Super-groups, Market Dominate Minorities- Tribes of America and the State of Her Politics- The Immutability of Tribalism and the Limits of Democracy See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
(Recorded: March 27, 2018)A conversation w/ Amy Chua (@amychua), Yale law professor and author of numerous books including: "Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother", "The Triple Package", "World on Fire", and her latest book "Political Tribes: Group Instinct and the Fate of Nations".“Today, no group in America feels comfortably dominant. Every group feels attacked, pitted against other groups not just for jobs and spoils but for the right to define the nation's identity. In these conditions, democracy devolves into zero-sum group competition — pure political tribalism.” - Amy Chua, 'Political Tribes' - Identity, Ethnicity, and Culture- Super-groups, Market Dominate Minorities- Tribes of America and the State of Her Politics- The Immutability of Tribalism and the Limits of Democracy See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
She flipped the notion of parenting on end with her last book Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother. Now she takes her latest shot and claims the way we act is destroying the world. Her latest book, Political Tribes: Group Instinct and the Fate of Nations offers a bold new remedy for reversing foreign policy failures and overcoming our own destructive political tribalism at home. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Amy Chua is the John M. Duff, Jr. Professor at Yale Law School. She is a noted expert in the fields of ethnic conflict and globalization, and the author of the bestselling books World on Fire: How Exporting Free Market Democracy Breeds Ethnic Hatred and Global Instability, Day of Empire: How Hyperpowers Rise to Global Dominance—and Why They Fall, Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother, and The Triple Package: How Three Unlikely Traits Explain the Rise and Fall of Cultural Groups in America, co-written with Jed Rubenfeld. Amy's new book is Political Tribes: Group Instinct and the Fate of Nations. She was in the Northwest to speak at University Lutheran Church, presented by Town Hall Seattle as part of the Civics series.
Why are there so many Chinese maths and music prodigies? Because Chinese mothers believe schoolwork and music practice come first, that an A-minus is a bad grade, that sleepovers, TV and computer games should never be allowed and that the only activity their children should be permitted to do are ones in which they can eventually win a medal - and that medal must be gold.These methods certainly seem to get results but do they make for the rounded individuals Western parents are striving to bring up? Isn't it better that our children should be happy rather than burnt-out brain boxes? Who's right and who's wrong?In this debate from June 2011, Amy Chua, author of the best-selling Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother, and Theodore Dalrymple, the writer and psychologist, speak for the motion.Justine Roberts, co-founder of Mumsnet, and Frank Furedi, emeritus professor of sociology at the University of Kent and parenting expert, speak against the motion.The debate was chaired by columnist and broadcaster Jenni Russell See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Bill Spitz was the longtime head of Vanderbilt University’s endowment before retiring, for the first time, in 2007. He has received numerous lifetime achievement awards for his work and is one of the legends in the business. After failing in his retirement, he joined Diversified Trust Company, a wealth manager with $6.5 billion in assets under management that he co-founded back in 1994. Our conversation discusses managing an endowment in the early years, implementing unconventional investments, creating an edge as an allocator, selecting managers and conducting due diligence, exiting managers, challenging current landscape, and working with families. For more episodes, go to capitalallocatorspodcast.com/podcast Follow Ted on twitter at @tseides Show Notes 1:21 - (INTERVIEW STARTS) 1:30 – Early days at Vanderbilt and the landscape for university investment offices 3:17 – Career before working at Vanderbilt 3:59 – Transition from Wall Street to going back to his alma mater 4:48 – Pioneering Portfolio Management: An Unconventional Approach to Institutional Investment 5:23 – Out of the box ideas when he first got started 6:25 – Convincing the board to approve unconventional ideas 8:28 – Why Bill retired 9:28 – Diversified Trust White Papers 9:31 – What is the edge that allocators have when it comes to investing 9:33 – Paul Johnson and Paul Sonkin podcast episode 9:35 – Pitch the Perfect Investment: The Essential Guide to Winning on Wall Street 10:05 – Gaining an Edge in Investing 12:30 – Where can skill from an allocator perspective be applied 14:32 – Judging the skill of managers as an allocator 15:16 – Looking out to the future, how will the endowment model stack up against the traditional 60/40 portfolio 17: 47 - How do you manage clients when your strategy may not be keeping up with the S&P 500 in the short term 19:15 – Thoughts on bitcoin 20:00 – How Bill was able to get involved with Diversified Trust while working at Vanderbilt 21:47 – Differences in managing endowments vs taxable pools of capital 23:22 – Stories that either derail an investment process or educate someone to stay the course 24:23 – Manager selection process and what Bill looks for when choosing the right one 28:01 – Bill’s view on exiting managers 29:55 – How do you measure the evolution of a manager’s investing strategy, especially as the market changes 31:41 – What is different today about investing vs when Bill first started 33:56 – Do alternative and emerging investment streams deliver the returns that many hope for 35:13 – Why don’t endowments, foundations, or pension funds feel comfortable with moving chunks of their portfolio to cash 37:00 – How does Bill think about the balance of investments with higher return potentials against their higher costs 38:13 – Any categories that really pique Bill’s interest 39:22 – What does the asset management industry look like in 10-20 years from now 41:56 – What should aspiring money managers think about as they move forward in this business 43:09 – What Bill is most proud of in his career 43:54 – Favorite sports moment 45:01 – What teaching from Bill’s parents has most stayed with him 45:14 – Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother 45:18 – The Triple Package: How Three Unlikely Traits Explain the Rise and Fall of Cultural Groups in America 46:10 – What information does Bill read that he gets a lot out of 46:20 – The Economist 46:33 – Wall Street Journal 46:34 – Bloomberg 46:45 – Life lesson that he wished he knew a lot earlier 47:29 – In his waning days, what advice would Bill give himself today
Professor Amy Chua on being a Tiger Mother - a fascinating insight into the difference between Western and eastern parenting. Yale Professor Amy Chua talks about parenting - the Chinese way- and the controversy her book Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother, sparked on both sides of the Atlantic. Her book imparted the secret behind the stereotypical Asian child's phenomenal success: the Chinese mother. Chua's parenting memoir told how she raised her two children: no sleep overs, hours of piano practice everyday, never accepting an A- grade, insisting on instilling respect for authority. This was very different from indulgent and permissive Western parents she saw in the rest of America. Chua discusses the highs and lows of raising her two girls, what she regrets and what she learned. 5x15 brings together five outstanding individuals to tell of their lives, passions and inspirations. There are only two rules - no scripts and only 15 minutes each. Learn more about 5x15 events: 5x15stories.com Twitter: www.twitter.com/5x15stories Facebook: www.facebook.com/5x15stories Instagram: www.instagram.com/5x15stories
Why are there so many Chinese maths and music prodigies? Because Chinese mothers believe schoolwork and music practice come first, that an A-minus is a bad grade, that sleepovers, TV and computer games should never be allowed and that the only activity their children should be permitted to do are ones in which they can eventually win a medal - and that medal must be gold. These methods certainly seem to get results but do they make for the rounded individuals Western parents are striving to bring up? Isn't it better that our children should be happy rather than burnt-out brain boxes? Who's right and who's wrong? In this debate from June 2011, Amy Chua, author of the best-selling ‘Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother’, and Theodore Dalrymple, the writer and psychologist, speak for the motion. Justine Roberts, co-founder of Mumsnet, and Frank Furedi, emeritus professor of sociology at the University of Kent and parenting expert, speak against the motion. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Now we know why so many dyslexics and people who lost a parent young make it to the top See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
You know Melissa Francis as the beautiful and talented anchor of “Money with Melissa Francis” on the Fox Business Network. And some of you may also remember her as the adorable adopted daughter of the Ingalls' family on “Little House on the Prairie.” But, in her book, Diary of a Stage Mother's Daughter, Melissa is opening up about the little known facts of her difficult childhood. Her engrossing memoir is a page-turner indeed and has been dubbed The Glass Castle meets Tiger Mother. So tune in and catch this riveting story of children, stage mothers and the dubious rewards of early fame.
Yale Law School Professor Amy Chua is the author of the controversial parenting memoir "Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother." She says she is widely misunderstood - her book is an apology, not a "how to."
We celebrate Mother's Day by showing love to some of our favorite moms in the sports world, plus address the role of women as mothers in sports and hip-hop. Can women really "have it all"? How much did Candace Parker lose once she decided to have a family? Why is Kobe Bryant taking his mother to court? Could you picture Nicki Minaj as a mom? Does the public treat women differently once they have children? We discuss all this and more, plus get some royal help. This is Sports Without Borders... http://twitter.com/Section357 Show Tags: Candace Parker, Lil Kim, Tiger Woods, Michael Phelps, Stephen Curry, LeBron James, Kobe Bryant, Nicki Minaj, Pam McGee, Campbell's Soup, Remy Ma, Louisville, Victor Cruz, Donovan McNabb, Janelle Monae Search: The Section 357 Show (On iTunes, Apple Podcasts, and Stitcher)
The Yale professor, author, and outspoken mom talks about her life and family and explains her take on child-rearing— and why the firestorm around her 2011 book Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother took her by surprise. Speakers: Amy Chua
Amy Chua appears at the 2011 National Book Festival. Speaker Biography: "Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother" has created a sensation with its depiction of the strict, traditional child-rearing of the author's children. Amy Chua's two daughters were never allowed to watch television or play computer games, be in a school play, have a play date, get any grade less than an A or attend a sleepover. Chua is the John M. Duff Professor of Law at Yale. Her first book, "World on Fire: How Exporting Free Market Democracy Breeds Ethnic Hatred and Global Instability," was a New York Times best-seller. Her second book, also a best-seller, is the critically acclaimed "Day of Empire: How Hyperpowers Rise to Global Dominance -- and Why They Fall." For captions, transcript, and more information visit http://www.loc.gov/today/cyberlc/feature_wdesc.php?rec=5406.
She ignited a firestorm when she dared to tackle the subject of who raises better children—Chinese parents or American parents. She explains how her book was a memoir and not a manifesto, her own adventure in extreme parenting and the result of her approach on her two daughters. About The Women's Eye Radio: with host Stacey Gualandi, is a show from , an Online Magazine which features news and interviews with women who want to make the world a better place. From newsmakers, changemakers, entrepreneurs, best-selling authors, cancer survivors, adventurers, and experts on leadership, stress and health, to kids helping kids, global grandmothers improving children's lives, and women who fight for equal rights,"It's the world as we see it." The Women's Eye Radio Show broadcasts on in Phoenix, live-streams on 1480KPHX.com, and is available as on-demand talk radio on iTunes and at . Learn more about The Women's Eye at
Segment A: Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother On the first half of our program, Cathy's joined by Yale law professor and author Amy Chua, whose parenting memoir, "Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother," was described by the Washington Post as "the single cultural moment of 2011." We'll talk with Chua about her parenting philosophy and how to survive a media maelstrom. Segment B: Taking Back Childhood The average American child spends 66% more time watching television than attending school - and the images that they are digesting are often age-inappropriate. On the second half of our program, we'll talk with the author of "Taking Back Childhood" about how parents can best navigate the social currents of our media-saturated environment.
The trend in parenting that seems to be getting the most attention these days is that of the Tiger Mother: the super-strict, no playtime, achievement-oriented, hard-driving parent. But many in our culture have a problem with that approach, and our panel is here to discuss different means of parenting. Guests are Armin "Mr. Dad" Brott, author of The Expectant Father, psychologist Dr. John Duffy (author The Available Parent), Lynette Louise (author Miracles Are Made—A Real Life Guide To Autism), psychologist Dr. Nancy Buck (creator of Peaceful Parenting and author of Why Do Kids Act That Way), CPA Cheryl Smith, and real life parent Paula.
SaTP_34_Cal_Leage_of_Schools_PLC_and_Tech_Conference.mp3 Listen on Posterous News of the week: 1) In Florida, virtual classrooms with no teachers - NYTimes MIAMI — On the first day of her senior year at North Miami Beach Senior High School, Naomi Baptiste expected to be greeted by a teacher when she walked into her precalculus class. “All there were were computers in the class,” said Naomi, who walked into a room of confused students. “We found out that over the summer they signed us up for these courses.”Naomi is one of over 7,000 students in Miami-Dade County Public Schools enrolled in a program in which core subjects are taken using computers in a classroom with no teacher. A “facilitator” is in the room to make sure students progress. That person also deals with any technical problems. 2) (On a related note) Bill Gates Says Tech Is The Key to Driving Down College Costs (3 min clip) “trying to provide a $200,000 education to every kid who wants it- and only technology can bring that down not just to $20,000 but to $2,000” pro-KIPP & charter schools’ immersing students in learning - “Thank god for charters. There’s no room for innovation in the standard system.... There should be about 20 times as much [experimentation] as there is.” note he doesn’t predict radical changes in K-12 by virtue of parents’ need for someone to “babysit” - ouch Dissent Magazine on Bill Gates in education via Arts & Lettershttp://dissentmagazine.org/article/?article=37813) New MIT OpenCourseWare Initiative Aims to Improve Independent Online Learning These aren't distance learning classes - there is no instructor, no contact with MIT, no credit. But the courses are meant to be stand-alone offerings, not requiring any additional materials for learning.4) Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother, Amy Chua I haven’t read the book, but I’ve been enjoying the national dialog over it. Anyone else? - KBhttp://www.huffingtonpost.com/margaret-heffernan-/if-youll-do-anything-for-_b_810350.htmlhttp://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/18/opinion/18brooks.html?src=me&ref=homepagehttp://www.montereyherald.com/entertainment/ci_170877055) 3 Big Reasons Harvard Has A Record Number of Applicants - Edudemic - CT (#1 and # also fit for Stanford according to recent articles...Stanford received 23,956 applications for admission to the Class of 2011. This number represents an increase of more than 7 percent from last year. 2,465 applicants, or 10.3 percent, were admitted.) Harvard had nearly 35,000 applications versus last year’s 30,489. That’s 15 percent more applicants than last year, which was also a record-setting year. This meteoric rise has a reason. It’s not just because Harvard is a good school with a good reputation. It’s in part due to the generous financial aid program. -- Harvard College’s financial aid program requires no contribution from families with annual incomes below $60,000, and asks, on average, no more than 10 percent of income from families with typical assets who make up to $180,000 Two other factors also may have played a role in this year’s record total. The new School of Engineering and Applied Sciences continues to attract greater numbers of students who aspire to study engineering, computer science, and related fields. In addition, more students than ever before, nearly 99 percent, are using online application services. Such services enable students, especially those with few counseling or economic resources, to apply to college more easily. -- Applications increased from all geographic areas, but particularly from the South, the Midwest, the Mountain states, the Pacific region, and abroad. Gender breakdown is close to last year’s 50/50 ratio, and minority numbers have continued to rise. Main Topic: Kevin’s Snapshot from the CLMS & CLHS Professional Learning Communities and Tech Conference Google Moderator - feedback and questions/comments during presentations for differentiated instruction Rushton Hurley - simple multimedia tools for instructional use; teachers as meaningful professionals Audience Response Systems in the Classroom - “dedicated clickers” vs. “poll anywhere” Tim's Tech Tidbit:Recording voice for making poetry mp3s the low-brow way - Audacity (Windows or Mac) http://www.how-to-podcast-tutorial.com/17-audacity-tutorial.htm - Sound Recorder (Windows) http://www.ccc.commnet.edu/dl/dl-help/help-SoundRecorder.htm - TapeDeck (Mac) http://tapedeckapp.com/Endorsements: Cammy: Chaser the Border Collie and Animal Cognition - NYT Kevin: ctrl-f or command-f the mini search engine that can save you tons of time Tim: Why and How I Switched to a Standing Desk - SmarterWare.com Permalink | Leave a comment »
After yesterday's bloody crackdown, Friday prayers were followed by an uneasy calm in Cairo's Tahrir Square. The military has increased its presence, and visitors have included Defense Minister Marshal Mohamed Tantawi, who was cheered while reviewing the soldiers. Protesters are still calling this the "Day of Departure." Also, a conversation with Amy Chua, author of Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother, and some of her critics.
Hanna Rosin, Ann Hulbert, and Nina Shen Rastogi discuss Amy Chua's book, "Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother." We recommend, but don't insist, that you read the book before listening to this audio program. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In our latest podcast, we discuss the implications of Andy Coulson's exit from Downing Street; Ed Balls's appointment; the rise of the Tiger Mother; and Ricky Gervais's turn at the Golden Globes
Analysis of Gov. Rick Snyder's first State of the State address, a look at President Obama's approval two years in, and "Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother" on this week's Talking Michigan Politics podcast with Grand Rapids Press editors Jeff Cranson and Ed Golder.