Close X
Friday, September 27, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Chinese Parents Are Taking Kids as Young as Three to 'CEO Training Courses'

Darpan News Desk IANS, 01 Oct, 2016 03:22 PM
  • Chinese Parents Are Taking Kids as Young as Three to 'CEO Training Courses'
In a bid to give their children a head start in life, wealthy Chinese parents are enrolling them in all kinds of early education programs, including CEO training courses.
 
Chinese state media reports that an early education institute in Guangzhou, China's Guangdong province, is offering a 'CEO training course' for kids aged between 3 and 12, at a price of 50,000 yuan ($7,500) per year. 
 
Kids attend two classes per week, during which they engage in activities such as filing in missing words in sentences and stacking up toy bricks. That doesn't sound like anything special, but according to a promotional brochure released by the institute, the course "enables young children to become a powerful, competitive leader".
 
There's no denying that China probably has the most competitive educational environment in the world, which means parents would do almost anything to make sure their children don't get left behind, but experts believe such extravagant courses ultimately benefit the parents rather than the children. They regard their kids' attendance to such classes as evidence of the family's social status, completely disregarding the fact that the syllabus they offer is of no real value.
 
One parent interviewed by news agency Xinhua admitted that the children were playing rather learning most of the time, but because many other children living in the same residential complex were attending, he decided to pay the $7,500 so his child could go to. "We certainly don't want to be left behind," he said.
 
 
Experts argue that it is impossible to turn a child into a leader at the age of three, and that these elite courses actually do more harm than good. With an already exhausting school schedule to deal with, sacrificing what little free time kids have left to have them stacking blocks is only going to make them tired of learning at a very young age.
 
But peer pressure is very high and China, so as long as some families are willing to pay tens of thousands of yuan for such silly extracurricular courses, others will to, if only to maintain their social status. The more expensive the course, the more popular it becomes, one dressage training institute in Shenzhen told Xinhua.
 
Other elite courses for extremely young Chinese kids cited in the recent report include "royal equestrianism courses for young kids" and "golf summer camps for little children", both of which cost tens of thousands of yuan.

MORE Interesting ARTICLES

Plumpest pumpkin: 2,058-pound gourd sets record at Northern California competition

Plumpest pumpkin: 2,058-pound gourd sets record at Northern California competition
HALF MOON BAY, Calif. - A gourd weighing 2,058 pounds took first prize and set a new tournament record Monday at an annual pumpkin-weighing contest in Northern California.

Plumpest pumpkin: 2,058-pound gourd sets record at Northern California competition

Why friends stalk Facebook profiles of failed buddies

Why friends stalk Facebook profiles of failed buddies
When feeling down and out, do you scan through Facebook profiles of friends who are not so successful to find some solace that you are not alone struggling with life?

Why friends stalk Facebook profiles of failed buddies

113-year-old woman fudges date of birth to join Facebook

113-year-old woman fudges date of birth to join Facebook
Anna Stoehr, one of the oldest living people in the world at age 113, has finally got herself a Facebook account. What she had to do was to lie about her actual age as the earliest birth year listed on Facebook to create a new profile is 1905.

113-year-old woman fudges date of birth to join Facebook

Sentencing in B.C. gang case set for December as defence attempts to toss case

Sentencing in B.C. gang case set for December as defence attempts to toss case
VANCOUVER - A sentencing hearing for two gang members convicted in a mass killing in the Vancouver area may happen in early December, but only if the court refuses to hear a defence application to have the case tossed out.

Sentencing in B.C. gang case set for December as defence attempts to toss case

Dark matter in Milky Way half of what we thought

Dark matter in Milky Way half of what we thought
A new measurement of dark matter in the Milky Way has revealed there is half as much of the mysterious substance as previously thought.

Dark matter in Milky Way half of what we thought

How 'love hormone' regulates sexual behaviour

How 'love hormone' regulates sexual behaviour
Researchers have uncovered a new class of oxytocin-responsive brain cells that regulates an important aspect of female sexual interest in male mice, suggesting that the same mechanism is followed in humans for selecting mate.

How 'love hormone' regulates sexual behaviour