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    school. My childhood job dream, is to be a doctor. My favorite subject is Calculus. It probably did not take long for you to assume that I have described most of the Asian stereotypes known to man. However, Asian stereotypes show that Asians are hardworking, smart, and successful. With all these being such positive feature why do Asians care to be stereotyped as the model minorities? It’s because even these positive stereotypes have negative connotations that strip people of their individuality and

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    Asian Americans’ exceptional educational and occupational outcomes despite their racial minority status in the United States have been central to the debate of race and achievement in both academic and popular discourse. While some pundits argue that the Asian American achievement is a result of the “right” culture that values education and hard work, scholars of race, immigration, and education reject such claims. Hsin and Xie’s quantitative investigation reveals that Asian Americans’ strong emphasis

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    Who Is An Asian American?

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    Who is an Asian American? The name “Asian American” holds different meaning to people. According to Tamura (2003), “Asian American is a relatively recent term that was first used by non-Asians and then adopted by Asian American themselves during the late 1960s in the heyday of ethnic and political activism” […] (Tamura, 2003). The simplest definition of an Asian American is an American with an Asiatic background. Therefore, making assumptions about an Asian would be absurd because the term is broad

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    In US sports, Asian or Asian American athletes are almost nonexistent, particularly in basketball, football, and hockey. When they do appear, “these athletes may be devalued, dismissed, and/or simply go unnoticed and unconsidered.” In a sports world dominated by Black and White, Asian athletes are being denied roles due to their perceived abilities. According to “The Jeremy Lin Effect: Being an Asian Sport Psychology Consultant in a Black and White World”, Alexander Brian Yu, Thomas Nguyen, and

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    Asian parents: the concept brings lots of assumptions and stereotypical ideas to people. Asian parents are scary. Asian parents are strict. Asian parents raise the perfect A+ children who excel in anything and everything. True but not quite true. It is easy to assume all those from the outside looking in, but if people took a chance to look closer, even generations back, they’d see the truth behind the strict upbringing of the Asian households, ran by love. Historically and even today, Asian - even

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    Asian Immigrant Children

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    health observed in Asian immigrant children is their mental health. When you google ‘Asian immigrant children’, the first websites and articles that come up are titled with phrases like ‘why Asian children excel in school’, ‘ why children of immigrants do better in school’, generally describing their academic performances. This is a dangerous mental health issue to the Asian American children. Asian immigrant children suffer with the label of model minority. Studies show Asian American girls have

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    Asian culture has been slandered throughout America's history by the term 'Model Minority', and through it's toxic ideals has lead to outstanding rates of depression, and the inhumane backlash has proven fatal to the Asian-American population. The term 'Model Minority' was coined to categorize Asian-Americans in 1966, during the United States civil liberties movement. During this time period white politicians were in a state of agitation because African-Americans were demanding their civil rights(Chin)

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    A lot of Asians have positive stereotypes for their characteristic and they are being called “Asians are smart” and later when they are being called smart to often they will be known as “Asians are smart because they are Asian” Sometimes these kind of stereotyping is interesting but at times it is so offensive and humiliating. The other children calling them they are smart type is sometimes hurtful and its making like competing or something like that. Asian are smart but. When Asian go to a different

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    Asian Healthcare Beliefs

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    The Asian Culture and Healthcare Beliefs Diane M. Leary Framingham State University   The Asian Culture and Healthcare Beliefs Since the first documented arrival of Japanese immigrants to the United States (U.S.) in 1843, the population of Asian Americans living the in the U.S. has steadily risen. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, in 2011 roughly 18.2 million Asians lived in the U.S. The C.D.C. estimates that by the year 2050, there will be more than 40.6 million Asians

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    For many years Asian people have been degraded, oversexualized and belittled due to their cultural differences and appearance. Asian women are often portrayed differently than their American counterpart as the submissive or seductive type in movies, shows and books. Asian men are seen as ‘unmanly’ compared to other men. In school, the Asian youth are held to a higher standard. Asian youth are being ingrained with the stereotypes and “fetishization” placed upon them by the media and western world

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