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Zhao, Kang; Biesta, Gert J. J. – Interchange: A Quarterly Review of Education, 2011
Current theory, policy, and practice of lifelong learning are strongly influenced by ideas about the transformations that are taking place in contemporary societies. One influential set of ideas emphasizes that because of the rapid changes that are taking place in the (late-) modern world and because of the erosion of traditions, there is a…
Descriptors: Confucianism, Lifelong Learning, Self Concept, Moral Values
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Mok, Magdalena Mo Ching – Learning and Individual Differences, 2010
This commentary reflects upon Lazar Stankov's thesis which regards "unforgiving nature of Confucian Asian societies" as the driving force underpinning academic success of students from these societies. The commentary considers theoretical perspectives put forward by Jian Wang and Emily Lin (2008), and by Chiu and Klassen (2010) as two alternative…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Test Anxiety, Confucianism, Asian Culture
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Ji, Li-Jun – Learning and Individual Differences, 2010
Stankov (2010) has offered an original and provoking theory to account for higher achievement, anxiety, and self-doubt among Asians. Unfortunately, several empirical and conceptual gaps must be closed before the author can make a convincing argument on the relationship between "unforgiving" Confucian culture and high achievement/test…
Descriptors: High Achievement, Politics of Education, Test Anxiety, Asian Culture
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Ho, Irene T.; Hau, Kit-Tai – Learning and Individual Differences, 2010
In "Unforgiving Confucian culture: A breeding ground for high academic achievement, test anxiety and self-doubt?" Stankov (in press) provides three reasons for caution against over-glorifying the academic excellence of Confucian Asian learners, namely that it may lead to a reluctance to change their rote learning approach which is not conducive to…
Descriptors: High Achievement, Academic Achievement, Rote Learning, Psychological Patterns
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Zhao, Guoping – Educational Theory, 2007
The postmodern critique of modernity has focused on the construction of the modern subject and the self-disciplining and self-cancellation tendencies within it. This critique, however, fails to consider what happens during the early years of children's development--the period during which the modern subject is made, and the one in which the…
Descriptors: Ideology, Child Development, Cultural Influences, Self Concept