Competition and Compassion in Chinese Secondary Education

Author:   Xu Zhao
Publisher:   Palgrave Macmillan
Edition:   1st ed. 2015
ISBN:  

9781137479402


Pages:   192
Publication Date:   29 September 2015
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Competition and Compassion in Chinese Secondary Education


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Overview

Competition and Compassion in Chinese Secondary Education examines the nature of academic competition in Chinese schools and documents its debilitating effects on Chinese adolescents' social, moral, and civic development.

Full Product Details

Author:   Xu Zhao
Publisher:   Palgrave Macmillan
Imprint:   Palgrave Macmillan
Edition:   1st ed. 2015
Dimensions:   Width: 14.00cm , Height: 1.40cm , Length: 21.60cm
Weight:   3.747kg
ISBN:  

9781137479402


ISBN 10:   113747940
Pages:   192
Publication Date:   29 September 2015
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

"PART I 1. Promoting Competition: A Dramatic Shift of Discourse 2. Reducing Competition: The Cat and Mouse Game 3. The Friendship Dilemma: Competition and Emotional Isolation 4. ""What's Your Friend's Ranking Position?"" Parental Peer-Related Beliefs and Practices PART II 5. The Ratty Shoe Case: Friendship and Compassion 6. The Social Problems Facing China: Adolescents' Civic Perspectives 7. Can Education be Both Competitive and Compassionate?"

Reviews

China's 'success' on international benchmarks has generated a wave of stereotypes, distortions, and mythologies. This important book is an unprecedented picture of the complex emotional and educational lives of Chinese adolescents. It is, in Xu Zhao's words, a soul-searching study - for the author, for these young people, and, indeed, for China. - Allan Luke, Professor Emeritus, Queensland University of Technology, Australia Xu Zhao delivers a comprehensive and critical analysis of the policies and teaching, learning, and parenting practices that perpetuate a hyper-focus on academic achievement in Chinese schools. Her ground-breaking research opens a window for readers to appreciate the contextual influences in China that have historically fueled the focus on competitive academic success. Posing hard questions about the costs of academic achievement at the expense of social integration, Zhao offers practical suggestions for achieving the balance between these two critical aspects of adolescent development. - Nancy Arthur, Professor, Associate Dean Research, Werklund School of Education, University of Calgary, Canada This hugely important book carries a message to China and the world: balancing compassion and competition in schools is necessary to build trust in Chinese civil society and foster cooperative international relations. China's meteoric economic rise is impressive. Yet success does not come without costs. Focusing on education and youth from an empirical psychological perspective, Zhao challenges the success narrative through splendid analysis of escalating competition in schools in the post-Mao era and suggests a sound resolution to the current predicament. - Johan Lagerkvist, Professor of Chinese Language and Culture, Stockholm University, Sweden and author of Tiananmen Redux: The Hard Truth about the Expanded Neoliberal World Order (2015) In examining the twin poles of competition and compassion among Chinese youth, Zhao creates a moving narrative linking human development to societal development. Based on years of research with hundreds of Chinese youth, Zhao shows a disturbing developmental change between younger and older adolescents, in which competition and survival gradually overwhelm compassion, empathy, and prosocial moral values in the pursuit of educational success. This book is a landmark achievement in the study of China as well as the study of adolescence. - Hirokazu Yoshikawa, Courtney Sale Ross Professor of Globalization and Education, New York University, USA


China's 'success' on international benchmarks has generated a wave of stereotypes, distortions, and mythologies. This important book is an unprecedented picture of the complex emotional and educational lives of Chinese adolescents. It is, in Xu Zhao's words, a soul-searching study - for the author, for these young people, and, indeed, for China. - Allan Luke, Professor Emeritus, Queensland University of Technology, Australia Xu Zhao delivers a comprehensive and critical analysis of the policies and teaching, learning, and parenting practices that perpetuate a hyper-focus on academic achievement in Chinese schools. Her ground-breaking research opens a window for readers to appreciate the contextual influences in China that have historically fueled the focus on competitive academic success. Posing hard questions about the costs of academic achievement at the expense of social integration, Zhao offers practical suggestions for achieving the balance between these two critical aspects of adolescent development. - Nancy Arthur, Professor, Associate Dean Research, Werklund School of Education, University of Calgary, Canada This hugely important book carries a message to China and the world: balancing compassion and competition in schools is necessary to build trust in Chinese civil society and foster cooperative international relations. China's meteoric economic rise is impressive. Yet success does not come without costs. Focusing on education and youth from an empirical psychological perspective, Zhao challenges the success narrative through splendid analysis of escalating competition in schools in the post-Mao era and suggests a sound resolution to the current predicament. - Johan Lagerkvist, Professor of Chinese Language and Culture, Stockholm University, Sweden and author of Tiananmen Redux: The Hard Truth about the Expanded Neoliberal World Order (2015) In examining the twin poles of competition and compassion among Chinese youth, Zhao creates a moving narrative linking human development to societal development. Based on years of research with hundreds of Chinese youth, Zhao shows a disturbing developmental change between younger and older adolescents, in which competition and survival gradually overwhelm compassion, empathy, and prosocial moral values in the pursuit of educational success. This book is a landmark achievement in the study of China as well as the study of adolescence. - Hirokazu Yoshikawa, Courtney Sale Ross Professor of Globalization and Education, New York University, USA


China's 'success' on international benchmarks has generated a wave of stereotypes, distortions, and mythologies. This important book is an unprecedented picture of the complex emotional and educational lives of Chinese adolescents. It is, in Xu Zhao's words, a soul-searching study - for the author, for these young people, and, indeed, for China. - Allan Luke, Emeritus Professor, Queensland University of Technology, Australia


China's 'success' on international benchmarks has generated a wave of stereotypes, distortions, and mythologies. This important book is an unprecedented picture of the complex emotional and educational lives of Chinese adolescents. It is, in Xu Zhao's words, a soul-searching study - for the author, for these young people, and, indeed, for China. - Allan Luke, Emeritus Professor, Queensland University of Technology, Australia Xu Zhao delivers a comprehensive and critical analysis of the policies, teaching, learning, and parenting practices that perpetuate a hyper-focus on academic achievement in Chinese schools. Her ground-breaking research opens a window for readers to appreciate the contextual influences in China that have historically fueled the focus on competitive academic success. Posing hard questions about the costs of academic achievement at the expense of social integration, Xu Zhao offers practical suggestions for achieving the balance between these two critical aspects of adolescent development. - Nancy Arthur, Professor, Associate Dean Research, Werklund School of Education, University of Calgary, Canada This hugely important book carries a message to China and the world: balancing compassion and competition in schools is necessary to build trust in Chinese civil society and foster cooperative international relations. China's meteoric economic rise is impressive. Yet success does not come without costs. Focusing on education and youth from an empirical psychological perspective, Xu Zhao challenges the success narrative through splendid analysis of escalating competition in schools in the post-Mao era and suggests a sound resolution to the current predicament. - Johan Lagerkvist, Professor of Chinese Language and Culture, Stockholm University, Sweden and author of Tiananmen Redux: The Hard Truth about the Expanded Neoliberal World Order (2015) In examining the twin poles of competition and compassion among Chinese youth, Xu Zhao creates a moving narrative linking human development to societal development. Based on years of research with hundreds of Chinese youth, Zhao shows a disturbing developmental change between younger and older adolescents, in which competition and survival gradually overwhelm compassion, empathy, and pro social moral values in the pursuit of educational success. This book is a landmark achievement in the study of China as well as the study of adolescence. - Hirokazu Yoshikawa, Courtney Sale Ross Professor of Globalization and Education, New York University , USA


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Robert L. Selman, Harvard Medical School, USA Helen Haste, Harvard Graduate School of Education, USA

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