The Delaware Gazette

In South Korea, US education means split families

ALAN SCHER ZAGIER

Asso­ci­ated Press

COLUMBIA, Mo. — As Amer­i­can teenagers go, Sally Kim is pretty typ­i­cal. She’s crazy about singer Bruno Mars and the Plain White T’s rock band, spends way too much time on Face­book and can’t wait to start col­lege in the fall.

Yet when it comes to that famil­iar bane of her fel­low high school seniors — uncool par­ents — Kim has few wor­ries. Hers are nearly 7,000 miles away in Seoul, South Korea. They sent their only child to live with rel­a­tives in Mis­souri a decade ago, when she was just 8.

The three keep in touch over Skype, but Kim craves per­sonal con­tact even more than when she first arrived.

“As I get older, it def­i­nitely gets harder,” said Kim, who lives with an aunt and uncle, a col­lege pro­fes­sor, and returns to her native coun­try in the sum­mer. “I look back, and I think I’ve missed out on so many years of being with my mom and dad.”

Such relo­ca­tions, known as early study abroad, have surged in pop­u­lar­ity in South Korea, where a rigid, test-driven edu­ca­tion sys­tem, com­bined with intense social pres­sure to suc­ceed in an English-first global econ­omy, often means break­ing up fam­i­lies for the sake of school.

Some chil­dren, like Kim, live with rel­a­tives or fam­ily friends. Oth­ers move with their moth­ers and sib­lings while the fathers remain alone in Asia to work. Among Kore­ans, the fam­i­lies are known as kirogi, or “wild geese,” because they visit home briefly once or twice a year before return­ing to their over­seas outposts.

The Korean Edu­ca­tional Devel­op­ment Insti­tute reports that the num­ber of pre-college stu­dents who left the coun­try solely to study abroad increased from just over 2,000 in 1995 to a peak of nearly 30,000 in 2006. And that num­ber did not include stu­dents whose par­ents work or study overseas.

The num­ber has since declined to more than 18,000 in 2009, the most recent year for which sta­tis­tics are available.

Unlike Amer­i­can stu­dents who usu­ally wait until high school or col­lege to study abroad — and gen­er­ally limit the expe­ri­ence to a semes­ter or two — 77 per­cent of Korean stu­dents in the U.S. in 2009 were in ele­men­tary or mid­dle school, a time when they are seen as best able to learn English.

Wild geese fam­i­lies are par­tic­u­larly com­mon in col­lege towns such as Colum­bia and Champaign-Urbana, Ill., where researchers are study­ing the effects on fam­ily life, cul­ture and the econ­omy in both countries.

Sumie Okazaki, an asso­ciate pro­fes­sor of applied psy­chol­ogy at New York Uni­ver­sity who pre­vi­ously taught at the Uni­ver­sity of Illi­nois, said that many young Korean stu­dents feel intense pres­sure to suc­ceed and are reluc­tant to share any doubts or mis­giv­ings, whether the topic is fam­ily finances or their own well-being.

“The par­ents are so moti­vated by what they think may be help­ful to the kids,” Okazaki said. “Because they know the fam­ily has sac­ri­ficed so much, that the par­ents are stretch­ing them­selves, they feel like they can’t complain.”

The stu­dents often iso­late them­selves. “We hear a lot of prob­lems with depres­sion, dis­tress and wor­ries,” she added.

Send­ing their chil­dren to school abroad can also strain mar­riages, par­tic­u­larly when the father stays behind.

Hyoshin Lee, a mother of four, is now back in Colum­bia for the third time since she and her hus­band came to study at the Uni­ver­sity of Mis­souri 25 years ago. Each time, her hus­band either even­tu­ally returned to Korea or did not accom­pany the fam­ily at all.

Their two old­est chil­dren are grown and study­ing at Amer­i­can grad­u­ate schools. Another child is a high school senior soon headed to col­lege. The youngest is a ninth-grader who wants to fin­ish high school here.

Lee, once again, is torn.

“There are pros and cons,” she said. “I strongly believe it was my turn to sup­port my chil­dren. I had to fol­low my chil­dren … I feel like it’s his turn now. He sac­ri­ficed his wife for three years.”

Mas­tery of Eng­lish isn’t the only rea­son Korean par­ents send their chil­dren abroad. In South Korea, a single-minded empha­sis on college-entrance exams means stu­dents fre­quently leave home at dawn and do not return until late evening. The school day is fol­lowed by long ses­sions with pri­vate tutors at “cram schools.”

And status-conscious Amer­i­can par­ents who proudly dis­play their children’s col­lege choices on bumper stick­ers have noth­ing on their Asian coun­ter­parts, Lee and oth­ers said. In South Korea, a pres­ti­gious col­lege is seen as even more vital to pros­per­ity, social stand­ing and mar­i­tal prospects. That mes­sage is dri­ven home early.

“If you are not a very good stu­dent, they treat you like you’re noth­ing,” Lee said. “That kind of pres­sure gives too much stress to chil­dren. They are not happy.”

Kim, a senior at Colum­bia Inde­pen­dent School who’s been accepted to the Uni­ver­sity of Illi­nois’ hon­ors pro­gram but hopes to attend Brown, recounts a sim­i­lar expe­ri­ence as a young stu­dent in Seoul, where her father is a mar­ket­ing exec­u­tive and her mother owns an Ital­ian restaurant.

In high school, she’s been able to study mar­tial arts, join the orches­tra, work on the year­book, play var­sity ten­nis and par­tic­i­pate in the model United Nations club.

Back in Korea, she said, she would have far fewer extracur­ric­u­lar choices.

Many Amer­i­can par­ents would strug­gle with send­ing away their chil­dren so young or leav­ing a spouse behind. But Rick Williams, a for­mer dean of stu­dents at a pri­vate Chris­t­ian school in Cham­paign, cau­tioned against mak­ing judg­ments based on U.S. attitudes.

At Judah Chris­t­ian School, the num­ber of high school stu­dents from Korea increased ten­fold from 2000 to 2007.

“That was a hard call for us, as an evan­gel­i­cal school,” Williams said. “I had my stu­dents and fam­i­lies take me to task for not being able to under­stand the fab­ric and struc­ture of Korean fam­i­lies. We were often called to task for hav­ing too much of a West­ern perspective.”

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