Do you think parents' educational background will directly affect children's personal development?

Parents' education will definitely directly affect their children's personal development. Because your height is the starting point for children. Parents of Stanford University and Tsinghua University, their children have made Tsinghua and Peking University their goals. For example, Gu Ailing wanted to go to Stanford since she was a child, but if she was an ordinary parent, it might be good to get a 985, or even worse, to get into a university. For parents who didn't go to college, it's already carp yue longmen.

Apart from children's long-term goals, what other aspects of parents' education have a far-reaching impact on children?

First of all, vision. Parents have received higher education, and children see things deeply and thoroughly, and will not care about the gains and losses of the present, because they know that they have a better future. It's not that they don't care about their grades, but that they have a good attitude and are easy to adjust. This all comes from the education of parents. An American institution has done experiments on children from different backgrounds, such as children from ordinary families and children with higher education. When they were young, they showed very different interests and values. The former watches The Wall Street Journal every day, while the latter's children are immersed in the bloody plot of TV series. It is conceivable where their future is poor. The difference is at the starting point.

Second, behavior habits. Such children are generally self-disciplined. I said just so-so. I don't rule out some children whose parents have high academic qualifications. Being spoiled, children also need parents to urge them to study. But it is undeniable that these children will have other hobbies under the influence of their parents. Relatively speaking, highly educated parents are more tolerant and will give their children certain choices.

In addition, children raised by parents with higher education are more organized and logical. Parents who have passed the college entrance examination, postgraduate examination and even doctoral examination will always pass on their methods and ideas to their children consciously or unconsciously after many years. Their behavior, words and actions, as well as their self-confidence and ability to resist pressure, will become children's wealth.

When the child introduced to her university teacher and the leader of the internship unit that her father and I both graduated from prestigious schools, I knew that the education given to her over the years also included the confidence and encouragement we brought to her because of our hard work and academic qualifications.

So you say that parents' high academic qualifications will not affect their children's development?