Article
Chinese Journal of Sociology
2021, Vol. 7(1) 3–21
Deconstructing ! The Author(s) 2020
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attainments of
second-generation Asian
Americans only due to
their class background?
Arthur Sakamoto1 and
Sharron Xuanren Wang2
Abstract
Recent studies by Jennifer Lee and Min Zhou claim that “hyper-selectivity” is the pri-
mary causal factor accounting for the high average educational attainment of second-
generation Asian Americans. We critically assess hyper-selectivity, which has not been
carefully evaluated in prior research. We argue that hyper-selectivity is inadequately
conceptualized and is not clearly supported by data on immigration or income mobility.
Hyper-selectivity ignores accumulated facts about Asian American family processes
relating to cultural factors and educational attainment. Rather than being a class phe-
nomenon, Asian cultural factors have important effects for most second-generation
Asian Americans regardless of the socioeconomic status of their parents.
Overemphasizing hyper-selectivity inadequately acknowledges the cultural heritage of
Asian Americans and ignores the agency of immigrant Asian American families.
Keywords
Asian Americans, immigration, selective migration, second generation, educational
attainment, racial inequality
1
Department of Sociology, Texas A&M University, United States of America
2
Department of Sociology and Criminal Justice, Delaware State University, United States of America
Corresponding author:
Arthur Sakamoto, 4351 TAMU College Station, Texas 77843, United States of America.
Email: asakamoto@tamu.edu
4 Chinese Journal of Sociology 7(1)
Introduction
Tran et al. (2019) argue that “hyper-selectivity” is the key underlying causal factor
accounting for the high average socioeconomic attainments of second-generation
Asian Americans. Lee and Zhou (2015) presented closely related arguments in The
Asian American Achievement Paradox which have been widely acclaimed by
American sociologists.1 Lee and Zhou’s view was further reiterated in “Hyper-
selectivity and the remaking of culture” (Zhou and Lee, 2017). In the following,
we critically assess these influential studies and argue that, despite its popularity,
hyper-selectivity is inadequate as the primary explanation for the higher socioeco-
nomic attainments of second-generation Asian Americans.
The hyper-selectivity view
Tran et al. (2019: 4) state:
Despite the diversity within the US Asian immigrant population, a distinguishing
feature is their positive immigrant selectivity, and, more specifically, their hyper-
selectivity . . . Lee and Zhou (2015) coined the term hyper-selectivity to describe a
dual positive immigrant selectivity in which immigrants are not only more likely to
have graduated from college than their non-migrant counterparts from their countries
of origin, but also more likely to have a college degree than the host society. This
hyper-selectivity helps to explain the favourable socioeconomic outcomes of the first
generation, as well as the second generation’s exceptional educational outcomes.
For example, as Zhou and Lee (2017: 8) stated:
Among Vietnamese immigrants [to the US], more than one quarter (26%) had at least
a bachelor’s degree, while the comparable figure among adults in Vietnam was only
5%. Among Chinese immigrants, 51% had graduated from college, compared with
only 4% of adults in China, meaning that Chinese immigrants in the United States are
more than 12 times as likely to have graduated from college as Chinese adults who did
not immigrate. While both groups are highly selected, Chinese are hyper-selected, as
they are also more highly educated than the general U.S. population (51% vs. 28%).
Although not clearly explained in general analytical terms, “hyper-selectivity”
seems to imply that the Asians who immigrate to the US have privileged class
backgrounds in keeping with their unusually high levels of educational attainment.
As Lee and Zhou (2015: 6) state, Asian immigrants “selectively import class-spe-
cific cultural institutions, frames, and mind-sets from their countries of origin.”
Zhou and Lee (2017: 11) more fully explain that “it [hyper-selectivity] results in a
large and highly educated middle class, who selectively imports middle-class-
specific cultural frames, institutions, and mindsets from their countries of origin.”
Sakamoto and Wang 5
Hyper-selectivity is thus “middle-class-specific” rather than being associated with
Asian ethnic culture (Zhou and Lee, 2017: 8–9).
Tran et al. (2019) further emphasize how these middle-class origins enhance the
socioeconomic attainments of second-generation Asian Americans. They argue
that
hyper-selectivity has cultural, institutional, and social psychological consequences
that can boost the second generation’s educational outcomes in ways that defy the
status attainment model. Hyper-selected immigrants construct a strict and narrow
“success frame”–including high educational and occupational achievement – and,
critically, they create and sustain institutional resources, including after-school acad-
emies, tutoring services, and SAT preparatory classes, to ensure that their second-
generation children realize the success frame. (Tran et al., 2019: 4–5)
Despite being a “middle-class-specific” phenomenon, Asian Americans from lower
socioeconomic backgrounds are said to benefit from hyper-selectivity. As Zhou
and Lee state (2017: 12),
Hyper-selectivity helps to explain how the [Asian American] child of restaurant
employees or factory workers knows how to gain admission into the country’s top
universities, and how to draw on ethnic capital to pave his or her pathway . . . And
because these resources are preferentially available to co-ethnics from a wide range of
class backgrounds, children from working-class families are able to assuage their
socioeconomic disadvantage with co-ethnic advantages, supporting the idea that an
ethnic group’s socioeconomic heterogeneity is instrumental to group mobility. . ..
(Tran et al., 2019: 5)
Tran et al. (2019: 5) further state:
In addition, hyper-selectivity has social psychological consequences that have
“spillover effects” across ethnic origin groups. Residential proximity among Asian
ethnic groups in the United States also promotes spillover effects. This allows, for
example, Vietnamese immigrants to benefit from institutional resources like after-
school programmes that are available among Chinese communities.
The authors continue by claiming that
the hyperselectivity of Chinese immigrants leads to the perception that all Chinese are
highly educated, hard-working, and deserving . . . And because of the racialization
that occurs in the U.S. context, this perception extends to other Asian Americans,
despite differences among them.
These “spillover effects” and related high levels of socioeconomic attainment are
facilitated by “ethnic capital”:
6 Chinese Journal of Sociology 7(1)
Groups with high levels of human capital can convert this into ethnic community
resources, or ethnic capital, via entrepreneurship . . . These group-based resources
support and facilitate the actualization of the success frame. It is the access to
ethnic capital—in the form of tangible and intangible ethnic resources—that makes
the success frame tenable, even for working-class coethnics. In the Chinese immigrant
community, for example, ethnic capital comes in the form of academic tutoring
centers, test cram schools, and Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) preparatory
courses—all of which are run by ethnic entrepreneurs to support the success frame
. . . These ethnic resources are accessible and affordable to working-class immigrant
families, which help overcome their disadvantaged class status in order to effectively
navigate the U.S. educational system and achieve desirable outcomes. (Zhou and Lee,
2017: 9)
Stereotyping is the other process that facilitates “spillover effects” which lead to
the high educational attainment of Asian Americans, even when they are from
lower-income family backgrounds. As stated by Zhou and Lee (2017: 9):
The stereotype of Asian Americans as a hyper-selected group can result in “stereotype
promise”—the boost in performance that comes with being perceived by teachers,
guidance counselors, and peers as smart, high achieving, hardworking, and deserving.
According to Lee and Zhou (2015: 127):
Teachers’ positive stereotypes of Asian American students can change the behavior of
even some of the most mediocre students, thereby producing exceptional outcomes
and reinforcing the belief that Asian Americans are intrinsically brighter, more hard-
working, more diligent, and more promising than other students.
Hyper-selectivity does not reflect Asian culture in any way, and Zhou and Lee (2017:
8) are critical of the view that “there is something essential about Asian values or
traits that produce such exceptional outcomes. This is a popular argument often
made by pundits and journalists.” That is, “It is important to note that this success
frame is not intrinsically Asian; rather, it has been constructed and promoted by
hyper-selected Asian immigrant subgroups, which, in turn, can affect other Asian
subgroups as the U.S. society homogenizes Asians” (Zhou and Lee, 2017: 9).
Hidden assumptions implicit in an aggregate statistical
measure
An obvious problem with Zhou and Lee’s statistics on the hyper-selectivity (i.e.
Lee and Zhou, 2015: 30; Tran et al., 2019: 9–10; Zhou and Lee, 2017: 8) of Asian
immigrants is that the percentages are not broken down by cohort (Sakamoto,
2017). In East Asian societies that rapidly developed (e.g. South Korea and
Sakamoto and Wang 7
Taiwan region) or are still undergoing a relatively high pace of economic growth
(e.g. China and Vietnam), there are often major cohort differences in educational
attainment. Educational attainment among older cohorts is much lower due to the
smaller number of educational institutions as well as the generally lower level of
economic development in prior decades. With increased urbanization and econom-
ic development over time, however, younger cohorts typically obtain much
higher levels of education in a more modern society that often differs markedly
from that experienced by their parents when they were of school-going age (e.g.
Lin, 2007).
According to 2014 OECD statistics on tertiary education for China, for exam-
ple, only 2% of persons aged 55 to 64 years had any post-secondary education,
whereas that figure increases to 27% among persons aged 25 to 34. This cohort
differential does not mean, however, that Chinese aged 25 to 34 are over 13 times
more “selective” than Chinese aged 55 to 64. The younger cohort simply benefited
from a more advanced educational system associated with greater economic devel-
opment in recent decades as clearly documented by Treiman (2013). By not being
broken down by cohort, Lee and Zhou’s (2015: 30) statistics on the hyper-
selectivity are exaggerated.
Developing societies are often characterized by regional segmentation between
the major metropolitan centers and the more traditional and poorer, less developed
rural areas. In the case of China, this regional segmentation is codified and exac-
erbated by law and is well known as the hukou (i.e. 户口) household registration
system (Liu and Xie, 2015). Due to this system, children of Chinese parents who
migrate to urban areas outside of their state of birth cannot legally attend public
schooling in the urban area of their parents” current residence or place of work.
The availability of public schooling is restricted to persons in the province of their
official hukou household registration (Wu, 2019).
For example, if a migrant worker is employed in Shanghai (a highly developed
city in eastern China) but was born in Qinghai (a less developed province in west-
ern China), then the worker’s children cannot attend a public school in Shanghai.
They are instead restricted to attending public schools in Qinghai. Although they
are legally allowed to attend a private school in Shanghai, the costs of doing so are
typically exorbitant for the average migrant. Persons without a Shanghai hukou
face a more restricted housing market in Shanghai, which is already extraordinari-
ly expensive. Although China may be an extreme case, regional segmentation in
educational systems is common in developing nations (F€agerlind and Saha, 2016).
Lee and Zhou’s (2015: 30) statistics on the hyper-selectivity of Asian immigrants
are exaggerated because they implicitly assume that everyone in a given country
has been engaged in the same educational competition with everyone else in the
entire nation.
Another problem with Zhou and Lee’s (2017) statistical portrayal is that it
overlooks the implications of the fact that most Asian immigrants obtained their
college or university education in the United States (despite being casually
8 Chinese Journal of Sociology 7(1)
acknowledged by Lee and Zhou (2015: 30)). After having completed high school in
Asia, many Asian immigrants came to the United States to attend college or obtain
a graduate degree. Kim and Sakamoto (2010) refer to this group as the “1.25
generation” and analyze their distinctive labor market outcomes. The significance
of the 1.25 generation for Zhou and Lee’s (2017) educational statistics is that most
foreign-born Asians did not have such a high level of education at the time that they
emigrated from Asia to the United States.
Using data from the 2017 National Survey of College Graduates, the percent-
age of the 1.25 generation of foreign-born Asians may be ascertained based on
information about where they attended high school and college or university.
These data reveal that among foreign-born Asians aged 25 and older who have a
college degree, about 43% are 1.25 generation (results available upon request).
Although foreign-born, the 1.5 generation immigrated to the United States at a
young age and were therefore schooled primarily there (Kim and Sakamoto,
2010; Rumbaut, 2004). According to the 2017 National Survey of College
Graduates, the 1.5 generation comprises 24% of foreign-born Asians aged 25
and older who have college degrees. Therefore, only 33% of foreign-born Asians
with college degrees (i.e. 100% 43% 24%) did not receive any educational
degree in the United States (Kim and Sakamoto (2010) refer to this group as the
1.0-generation).
Because most Asian immigrants with college degrees (i.e. two-thirds) received
their highest degree in the U.S., they were simply availing themselves of the greater
opportunities of the American educational system. Most Asian immigrants were
not actually so highly educated at the time that they emigrated to the United
States, as indicated by the statistics discussed by Lee and Zhou (2015: 30), Tran
et al. (2019: 9-10), and Zhou and Lee (2017: 8). Indeed, data from the 2017
National Survey of College Graduates indicate that 40% of the Asian 1.25 gener-
ation have fathers who did not have a college degree (i.e. they are not from elite
families).
If Asian immigrants were really so selective and privileged, then one would
expect their children to score notably higher on standardized international
exams than the Asian children in their respective countries of origin (who are
supposedly not selective at all but rather are those with lower educational capac-
ities and performances). Hauser (2020) considers data on several standardized
international test scores on reading, math and science. He breaks down the data
by racial categories in the United States and reports that, for recent cohorts of
students, average test scores for Asian Americans are usually higher than those for
white Americans. Contrary to the hyper-selectivity explanation, the average test
scores for Asian Americans tend to be similar to the averages observed in East
Asian countries.2 If anything, Asian American average test scores in high school
math—although high by overall American standards—actually tend to be a little
lower than in East Asia, probably because those countries place greater emphasis
on that subject.3
Sakamoto and Wang 9
Drawing conclusions about educational attainment while
ignoring horizontal stratification
Zhou and Lee’s (2017) and Lee and Zhou’s (2015) characterization of hyper-
selectivity ignores the theoretical significance of educational stratification in East
Asian countries. Those countries are famously very status-oriented in terms of
evaluating educational credentials (Hannum et al., 2019). Horizontal sources of
education stratification are extremely important (in contrast with the traditionally
greater emphasis in the United States on the vertical dimension of highest level
completed). Prestige is a primary factor in determining the associated lifetime
rewards that are conferred by graduating from a particular university in Asia.
For example, a graduate from the University of Tokyo (i.e. the most prestigious
university in Japan) has a much higher chance than other college graduates of
becoming a Member of Parliament, a high-ranking executive in a major corpora-
tion, or a well-paid, successful professional in law or medicine (Reischauer and
Jansen, 1995; Sakamoto and Powers, 1995). Graduates from prestigious universi-
ties also have much greater success in the marriage market (Reischauer and Jansen,
1995). In order to be successfully admitted to a prestigious university, however,
Japanese students typically must, from an early age, undergo long hours of addi-
tional study at afterschool “cram schools” (known in Japanese as juku or 塾).
East Asian educational systems are famous for their highly rigorous college-
entrance exams (e.g. Bray and Lykins, 2012; Lee and Zhou, 2015: 75; Liu, 2015;
Reischauer and Jansen, 1995). High-achieving students must prepare at a “cram
school” (known in Chinese as a buxiban or 补习班, which is itself a lucrative
business industry) over the course of many years if they are to be successfully
admitted to a prestigious university (e.g. University of Tokyo, Peking
University, Seoul National University, National Taiwan University, National
University of Singapore). Many students study full-time at “cram schools” after
completing high school but before entering college (e.g. the so-called “masterless
samurai” or r onin in Japan) in order to improve their college-entrance exam scores
in a subsequent year.
Students who have spent many long hours of study for years during most of
their youth in order to score higher on college-entrance exams (e.g. the gaokao or
高考 in China) do not necessarily discard the associated career rewards from grad-
uating from a top university in their own country in order to emigrate to work in
the United States. These prestigious credentials are highly prized if not glorified in
their own status-oriented countries but are generally ignored and economically
unrewarded in the US labor market (Kim and Sakamoto, 2010; Zeng and Xie,
2004). Tran et al.’s (2019) and Lee and Zhou’s (2015) characterization of Asian
immigrants is exaggerated in that many successful educational elites choose to
remain in their countries of origin. They are unlikely to jettison the attractive
returns to their lifelong educational investments in college prestige by emigrating
to the United States in order (for example) to start up an arduous small business in
a low-wage industry such as a noodle shop or a hair salon.
10 Chinese Journal of Sociology 7(1)
Field of study and college prestige seem to be increasing in significance in the
United States labor market as well (Kim and Sakamoto, 2010; Kim et al., 2015). A
bachelor’s degree in many STEM fields actually yields higher lifetime earnings than
a graduate degree in many non-STEM areas (Kim et al., 2015). As is well-known,
Asian Americans are over-represented in prestigious American universities and in
higher-paying STEM-related fields of study (Kim and Sakamoto, 2010; Wang
et al., 2017; Zhou and Lee, 2017). For this reason, the claims made by Zhou
and Lee (2017: 10), Tran et al. (2019: 11-12), and Lee and Zhou (2015: 31-33)
about Asian intergenerational mobility are often simplistic because their statistics
are based on educational level, ignoring horizontal educational stratification.
Regarding field of study, a second-generation Asian American with a bachelor’s
degree in computer science from MIT or Stanford has much greater career and
earnings prospects than someone with a master’s degree in history or anthropology
from a small state college. Considering intergenerational mobility only in terms of
educational level, Lee and Zhou (2015: 43) emphasize that “the children of
Mexican immigrants exhibit the greatest educational gains” in comparison to
Chinese and Vietnamese, and “the children of Mexican immigrants are more suc-
cessful than those of Chinese immigrants” (Zhou and Lee, 2017: 10). However,
when the focus is shifted to intergenerational income mobility, Asian Americans
have extremely high rates of rising out of the bottom quintile as children and
attaining the highest income quintile as adults. As stated by Chetty et al. (2020:
736), “Asians have much higher rates of relative mobility than all other groups.”
More specifically, Chetty et al. (2020: 730) report that 26% of Asians born to
parents in the lowest income quintile obtain individual incomes in the highest
income quintile compared to 3% for African Americans, 7% for Hispanics, and
11% for whites. The much higher intergenerational income mobility for Asian
Americans is facilitated by their greater concentration in STEM fields of study
and prestigious colleges (Xie and Goyette, 2003), although these factors are not
considered in the mobility statistics in Zhou and Lee (2017), Tran et al. (2019), and
Lee and Zhou (2015).
Intergenerational mobility depends on family processes which
are partly cultural
Family processes and resources have been recognized as critically important
aspects of student achievement (Hanushek, 2016; Sewell et al., 1969). In the case
of Asian Americans, Goyette and Xie (1999) demonstrate that Asian American
parents tend to have extremely high educational expectations for their children,
which improves test score achievement. Every study based on data from probabil-
ity samples similarly finds that Asian Americans have, on average, higher academic
aspirations than other groups (Hsin and Xie, 2014; Kao, 1995; Kao and Tienda,
1998; Liu and Xie, 2016; Xie and Goyette, 2003), which is entirely consistent with
decades of qualitative studies reaching similar conclusions (e.g. Caudill and De
Sakamoto and Wang 11
Vos, 1956; Jimenez and Horowitz, 2013; Kasinitz et al., 2008; Kitano, 1976; Lee
and Zhou, 2015; Petersen, 1966; Schneider and Lee, 1990) . The higher levels of
educational attainment along with their chosen fields of study result in higher
levels of income and occupational attainment among Asian Americans (Kim
and Sakamoto, 2010; Sakamoto and Hsu, 2020; Wang et al., 2017; Xie and
Goyette, 2003).
Asian American parents make greater investments in promoting their children’s
education (Sun, 1998). They spend more money for their children’s educational
expenses, including supplemental educational activities (Lee and Zhou, 2015: 74–
75). Asian American parents save more for their children’s college education (Sun,
1998: 441). The amount saved is even more pronounced when calculated in terms
of the proportion of total family income (Sun, 1998: 443). Asian American parents
are more disciplined about educational development and Asian American children
study more hours per week, which greatly enhances their chances of enrolling in
college (Hsin and Xie, 2014; Stankov, 2010). Asian American parents are less likely
to get divorced, in part because they believe that doing so would be detrimental to
their children; parents do not suddenly suspend their values when deciding whether
to divorce (Sakamoto and Kim, 2018; Sakamoto et al., 2012; Sun, 1998).
Consistent with that view, recent research finds that even basic measures of
family structure (i.e. growing up in a two-parent family versus a single-parent
family) have important mediating effects on intergenerational income mobility
(Bloome, 2017; Harding and Munk, 2020).
Compared to women in other racial and ethnic groups in the United States,
including whites, Asian American women who become mothers do so at a signif-
icantly older median age, when they tend to be more educated, more financially
secure, and more emotionally mature. Compared to women in other American
groups, Asian American women have fewer children, and these children are much
more likely to be marital births (Cai and Morgan, 2019). In addition to being more
likely to have their own two biological parents, Asian American children benefit
from being more likely to have the supplementary adult supervision of grandpar-
ents in their home (Raley et al., 2019), who help to provide quality childcare as well
as to instill more traditional Asian values (Tam and Detzner, 1998).
Consistent with many Asian cultures (at least in comparison to the United
States), the social psychology of Asian American families involves more interde-
pendency and less individualism (Buchtel et al., 2018; Caudill and De Vos, 1956;
Caudill and Plath, 1974; Doi, 2001; Kitano, 1976; Sakamoto et al., 2012;
Sakamoto and Kim, 2018; Kim et al., 2019). Second-generation Asian
Americans are typically socialized to consider their self-esteem not as an a priori
right, but more as a reward that is contingent upon contributing to the status of the
family which, in the contemporary world, typically includes excellent educational
achievement (Buchtel et al., 2018; Tao and Hong, 2014). In contrast, given its
individualistic cultural ethos, mainstream American childrearing focuses more
on promoting independence, autonomy, and fostering the child’s “true self” to
ensure her happiness regardless of whether doing so optimizes her educational
12 Chinese Journal of Sociology 7(1)
achievement or long-term socioeconomic status (Markus and Kitayama, 1991;
Sakamoto et al., 2012).4
Due to more interdependent family relations, Asian American children are more
sensitive to pleasing their parents because Asian American children are less emo-
tionally independent from their parents” judgments (Asakawa, 2001; Nisbett,
2004; Stewart et al., 1999). It is not really harsh discipline by itself that matters
for Asian American educational attainment (cf., Chua, 2011) but rather the higher
educational expectations of Asian parents when combined with more interdepend-
ent childrearing practices (Kim et al., 2019). Asian parents are thereby able to
more successfully transmit their educational expectations to the children’s educa-
tional behaviors (Asakawa and Csikszentmihalyi, 2000; Goyette and Xie, 1999;
Hsin and Xie, 2014).
Although recognizing the existence of high academic expectations and some
family investment behaviors (Lee and Zhou, 2015: 70–75; Zhou and Lee, 2017:
11–12), Zhou and Lee inadequately consider the theoretical significance and causal
import of Asian American family structures and processes. Zhou and Lee (2017),
Tran et al. (2019) and Lee and Zhou (2015) dismiss the Asian American family as
an independent source of agency by implying that it is entirely derived from hyper-
selectivity and its corollary, so-called “ethnic capital” (Zhou and Lee, 2017: 11).
The latter seems to refer most clearly to supplemental educational services that are
available and used by many Asian Americans, and the cultural “success frames and
achievement mind-sets” which characterize many Asian Americans. By referring to
the high value placed on academic achievement as community-level “ethnic capi-
tal,” Lee and Zhou are ignoring the primary role of Asian American families and
childrearing practices in instilling high educational aspirations in second-
generation Asian American youth in the first place (Sakamoto and Kim, 2018).
The direct causal processes reflecting greater Asian parental investments (both
social and economic) in their own children to enhance their educational outcomes
are instead asserted to be characteristics of a vague, broader “community” (with-
out any clear geographic definition) that is supposedly somehow infused with
“ethnic capital” due to hyper-selectivity.
Contrary to Zhou and Lee’s (2017: 11) discussion, supplemental educational
services are not primarily “ethnic capital” given the fact that they are widely avail-
able in various forms to all racial and ethnic groups (e.g. from free video clips on
YouTube to private one-to-one tutoring). Asian American youth are more likely
than other groups to take commercial SAT test preparation courses that are not
specifically oriented to any particular ethnicity (Byun and Park, 2012). As noted by
Sakamoto (2017), Lee and Zhou’s (2015: 74–75) emphasis on supplemental edu-
cational services in their study of Los Angeles county (see also Zhou and Lee,
2017: 9) “overlooks the fact that second-generation Chinese and Vietnamese have
high levels of educational achievement in smaller cities (such as College Station,
Texas) where Chinese and Vietnamese supplementary schooling services do not
exist” (p. 2012).
Sakamoto and Wang 13
Lee and Zhou (2015: 49) assert that the high educational attainment of second-
generation Asian Americans “is not happenstance . . . it is a product of the historic
changes in U.S. immigration law in 1965 to give preference to applicants with high
levels of education and skills.” That immigration law is said to give rise to hyper-
selectivity which supposedly underlies the “ethnic capital” that leads to the high
educational attainment of second-generation Asian Americans (Zhou and Lee,
2017: 8). “The change in U.S. immigration law has resulted in the hyper-
selectivity of Chinese immigration” (Lee and Zhou, 2015: 49).
However, as shown in the demographic and educational statistics in Hirschman
and Wong’s (1986) article, “The Extraordinary Educational Attainment of Asian-
Americans,” second-generation Asian Americans had high levels of educational
attainment well before 1965. Overall Asian American educational attainment
exceeded that of whites in 1959 (Iceland, 2019). In the case of adult second-
generation Chinese Americans and adult second-generation Japanese Americans,
their educational attainment exceeded that of whites as early as 1940 (Hirschman
and Wong, 1986; Petersen, 1966; Sakamoto et al., 1998), long before the selectivity
of more highly educated Asian immigrants in recent years.5 As stated by Sakamoto
(2017: 2012), “Indeed, throughout various times of the 20th century, second-
generation Chinese, Japanese, and Vietnamese seem to have achieved higher
levels of educational attainment than the local populations in such diverse places
as Brazil, Canada, France, Germany, Peru, and the Netherlands.” While Asian
immigration to the contemporary United States is probably somewhat more class
selective than in the early part of the 20th century, we disagree with Lee and
Zhou’s highly contrived argument that cultural factors do not play any significant
role in the educational attainment of second-generation Asian Americans.
Zhou and Lee (2017: 12–13) discuss “stereotype promise” but do not present
any hard evidence that such a stereotype can sustain the years of hard work and
persistent study that typically underlie high levels of Asian American academic
achievement (Hsin and Xie, 2014). Being used in an almost tautological manner,
“stereotype” is not clearly defined as a term in the sociology of socioeconomic
attainment. Before World War II, common portrayals of “Japanese American men
as gardeners and Chinese American men as laundry workers” (Sakamoto et al.,
2009) simply reflected the actual modal occupational distributions of those groups
at that time. Those stereotypes no longer exist today because, in fact, Chinese and
Japanese American are no longer employed in those jobs in any appreciable num-
bers. Second-generation Asian Americans were very high achieving in education
before World War II (Hirschman and Wong, 1986; Sakamoto et al., 1998; Model,
2020) despite negative stereotypes about these groups being widespread during that
era (Wu, 2003). As discussed by Zhou and Lee (2017: 8), the so-called “model
minority stereotype” did not arise until the 1960s. Finally, Zhou and Lee (2017)
and Lee and Zhou (2015) do not explain why “ethnic capital” and “stereotype
promise” do not affect second-generation Cambodians, Hmong, and Laotians who
have lower levels of educational attainment (Model, 2020; Sakamoto and Woo,
14 Chinese Journal of Sociology 7(1)
2007) and who tend to have phenotypes that are very similar to those of
Vietnamese (who are also of Southeast Asian origin).
Portraying second-generation Asian Americans as being
without a cultural heritage
Mainstream white Americans often understand the United States as being based
on individuals with inalienable civil rights and freely negotiated contractual agree-
ments. Americans value “equal opportunity” for individuals to compete and
achieve their desires, whatever they may be. “Life, liberty, and the pursuit of
happiness” seem to well represent some of the core values for much of contempo-
rary American society, which glorifies freedom that promotes individualism
(Bellah et al., 2007; De Tocqueville, 2003).
Asian immigrants were socialized in Asia, however, which often have more
collectivist cultural traditions. In collectivist cultures in Asia, glorifying individual
freedoms is less salient relative to performing expected duties for family and society
(Buchtel et al., 2018; Nisbett, 2004). Collectivist family values encourage children
to enhance the status of their family rather than prioritize their own individual
happiness (Tao and Hong, 2014). Asians emphasize the extrinsic benefits more
than whites, for whom individual fulfilment plays a larger role (Jimenez and
Horowitz, 2013). Asian Americans are thus more likely to enter STEM fields of
study which provide more lucrative career rewards (Xie and Goyette, 2003).
Asian parents invest more financially in their children’s education (Lee and
Zhou, 2015; Sun, 1998), but the high level of Asian American educational attain-
ment is also partly a cultural phenomenon, as is carefully analyzed by Liu and Xie
(2016). Collectivist Asian values and norms about childrearing, family, and edu-
cational attainment reflect the Asian context of limited educational opportunity
and a stratified labor market. In the United States, with its greater educational
opportunity, however, Asian values and norms result in Asian American educa-
tional attainment exceeding whites.
Relabeling values and norms prioritizing educational attainment in Asian
American families (Hsin and Xie, 2014; Kim et al., 2019; Liu and Xie, 2016;
Sakamoto and Kim, 2018; Sun, 1998) as “achievement mind-sets” (Lee and
Zhou, 2015: 6) and the “success frame” (Zhou and Lee, 2017: 9) does not trans-
form them into “structural variables” or “ethnic capital” nor does it negate their
fundamentally cultural character, despite Lee and Zhou’s (2015: 20) claim to
“debunk the popularly held myths about cultural traits.” Zhou and Lee’s (2017)
extensive discussion of the “success frame” is inherently cultural in showing the
strong commitment and various behaviors that Asian American parents have in
regard to promoting their children’s educational attainment. Referring to that
commitment and those behaviors as “ethnic capital” does not neutralize the fact
that those characteristics refer to parents” activities in regard to only their own
children, and not to other children in the “community”.6
Sakamoto and Wang 15
Asian cultural characteristics associated with many Asian American families
tend to increase the educational attainment of Asian American children even
among many from low-income and working-class backgrounds (Hsin and Xie,
2014; Lee and Zhou, 2015; Liu and Xie, 2016; Model, 2020; Sakamoto et al.,
2009). Every study that has investigated parent-offspring matched data over the
past several decades finds that socioeconomic control variables (i.e. parental edu-
cation and household income) do not explain away the higher educational attain-
ment of Asian Americans (Hauser, 2020; Liu and Xie, 2016; Model, 2020;
Sakamoto et al., 2009). Class effects on educational attainment are thus smaller
for Asian Americans (Hauser, 2020), and “this is especially evident at lower levels
of SES [socioeconomic status]” (Liu and Xie, 2016: 210). Lee and Zhou’s (2015)
characterization of Asian American educational attainment as being intrinsically
“class-specific” is exaggerated. On the contrary, ethnic cultural factors that largely
cut across class characteristics are critical variables for most second-generation
Asian American groups (Model, 2020).
A detailed analysis of educational achievement in China finds that socioeco-
nomic control variables do not have such strong effects as in the United States (Liu
and Xie, 2015). In China, “family income is significantly associated with children’s
achievement, but family assets and direct measures of monetary resources are
found to have little effect . . . non-monetary resources, particularly parenting, are
of great importance to children’s achievement . . . and parenting practices do not
vary greatly by family economic resources” (Liu and Xie, 2015: 59). Contrary to
being “middle-class-specific,” SES has little net effect on educational achievement
among Chinese just as it does among Chinese Americans.
Zhou and Lee’s (2017) emphasis that Asian American educational achievement
is inherently a “middle-class-specific” phenomenon oddly contradicts their own
repeated statements about even “poor and working-class” Asian Americans
having higher-than-expected educational attainment (e.g. Lee and Zhou, 2015:
30) so that “the child of [Asian American] restaurant employees or factory workers
knows how to gain admission into the country’s top universities” (Lee and Zhou,
2017: 12). Or, as Tran et al. stated (2019: 5), “Hyper-selectivity helps to boost
opportunities and outcomes in ways that defy the status attainment model and
explain why the daughter of Chinese immigrants whose parents have only an ele-
mentary school education, work in ethnic restaurants, and live among working-
class co-ethnics is able to soar past her parents and graduate from Harvard.” Lee
and Zhou (2015: 6) do not explain why purportedly “class-specific cultural insti-
tutions, frames, and mind-sets” so readily and heavily influence lower-income
Asian Americans as compared to other groups such as lower-income African
Americans, lower-income Hispanics, and lower-income whites who have ample
opportunity (being demographically larger subpopulations) to interact with and
observe their own wealthier co-ethnics.
Remembering their more constrained upbringings compared to those of their
white peers, however, second-generation Asian Americans probably become (as
parents) more mainstream American in their own childrearing practices, especially
16 Chinese Journal of Sociology 7(1)
when they inter-marry with other racial groups. Cultural influences are probably
weaker in the educational attainment of third-and-higher generation Asian
Americans (Sakamoto et al., 2009). Accordingly, the intergenerational income
mobility patterns of third generation Asian Americans more closely resemble
those of mainstream whites (Chetty et al., 2020). This pattern underscores the
cultural aspect of second-generation Asian American educational attainment
because by the third generation, substantial cultural assimilation into mainstream
American society has occurred (despite the supposedly continuing existence of
hyper-selectivity, “ethnic capital,” and “stereotype promise”).
The higher educational attainment of second-generation Asian Americans does
not prove that the United States is a perfect meritocracy or that no discrimination
exists against Asian Americans or other groups. But it does indicate that educa-
tional aspirations do matter and that significant socioeconomic opportunity cer-
tainly does exist both in the American educational system and the labor market at
least for Asian Americans.7 Lee and Zhou (2015: 3) associate socioeconomic
opportunity with being politically conservative when it is explained in terms of
“culturally essential arguments” which are claimed to promote “a neoconservative
policy paradigm” (Lee and Zhou, 2015: 12; see also Zhou and Lee, 2017: 8).
Perhaps hyper-selectivity may seem less “neoconservative,” but a puzzling intel-
lectual tension is inherent in claiming that the extraordinarily high upward socio-
economic mobility of lower-income Asian Americans (Chetty et al., 2020) is
nonetheless still a “middle-class-specific” phenomenon (Sakamoto, 2017).
Conclusion: The “hyper-selectivity” of exactly what?
Zhou and Lee (2017) and their colleagues have published several articles arguing
for hyper-selectivity (Lee and Zhou, 2015; Tran et al., 2018; Tran et al., 2019), but
these publications are repetitive. They do not extend or elaborate the details of
their theory but rather only reiterate its basic rhetoric. Hyper-selectivity as indi-
cated by the difference in the percentages of different groups who have bachelor’s
degrees does not clarify what that measure is analytically representing at the family
and individual levels. Parents with more education may simply have greater edu-
cational aspirations for their children. Perhaps those parents have higher levels of
cognitive skill. Such parents might more highly value the long-term benefits of
education for their children (Hofstede and Minkov, 2010). Simply reiterating a
simplistic statistical measure does not adequately explain what hyper-selectivity
analytically represents.
In conclusion, Zhou and Lee’s (2017) and Lee and Zhou’s (2015) description of
hyper-selectivity suggests that most Asian immigrants are extraordinary education-
al elites who must be extremely wealthy or class-privileged in the first place. The
high level of educational attainment among second-generation Asian Americans is
described as being primarily “middle-class-specific” reproduction rather than gen-
uine upward socioeconomic mobility. The cultural characteristics of Asian
American families are thereby obfuscated because Asian American educational
Sakamoto and Wang 17
attainment is asserted to mechanically derive from “middle-class-specific” hyper-
selectivity that is supposedly embedded in “ethnic capital”.
In the foregoing, the limitations and ambiguities of Zhou and Lee’s (2017) and
Lee and Zhou’s (2015) measure of hyper-selectivity have been critically analyzed.
While we agree that Asian immigrants are often selective in some ways and prob-
ably more so in the contemporary period, Zhou and Lee’s (2017) hyper-selectivity
is poorly conceptualized and simplistically measured. It ignores other relevant
findings from prior research, especially in regard to Asian American family pro-
cesses that relate to cultural factors. Rather than being essentially a class phenom-
enon, Asian cultural factors have important effects for most second-generation
Asian Americans. Contrary to Zhou and Lee’s (2017) discussion, “ethnic capital”
is largely a spurious aggregate characteristic deriving from Asian American family
processes while “stereotype promise” is mostly speculative or even tautological.
Overemphasizing hyper-selectivity inadequately acknowledges the cultural heritage
of Asian Americans and dismisses the agency of Asian American families.
Implicitly portraying second-generation Asian Americans as being just the same
as elite, rich white Americans ultimately obscures more than it explains in regard to
educational attainment in the United States (Kim et al., 2019).
Acknowledgement
The research assistance of Li Hsu is gratefully acknowledged. All opinions stated herein are
the sole responsibility of the authors.
Declaration of Conflicting Interests
The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, author-
ship and/or publication of this article.
Funding
The author(s) received no financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication
of this article.
ORCID iD
Arthur Sakamoto https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9206-1289
Notes
1. As stated by Lee on her webpage, Asian American Achievement Paradox received many
book awards from the American Sociological Association. See https://sociology.colum
bia.edu/content/jennifer-lee
2. Unfortunately, India and other South Asian countries are not included in Hauser’s
(2020) data. In regard to South Asian Americans, Sakamoto and Kim (2018: 5) state
that “the key issue is not Confucianism per se but the extent to which parents are moti-
vated and successful in making increased social and economic investments in their chil-
dren . . . This investment process is typically enhanced when families have a greater sense
18 Chinese Journal of Sociology 7(1)
of collectivism which fosters concern about family “status,” the children are more heavily
influenced by parental expectations due to Asian childrearing practices, and education is
emphasized as an end in itself or as a means towards upward mobility.”
3. There are also cases of Asian students from East Asian countries who are transferred to
live and study abroad in the United States, Canada, New Zealand or Australia because
their parents come to believe that the East Asian educational system is too competitive
and strict for their children.
4. Reflecting American individualistic cultural trends, the “gender-less” childrearing of
“theybies” seems to be becoming a more accepted practice in the United States because
“parents should let children be their gender nonconforming selves” (Morris, 2018).
5. Similar results are evident for Japanese Brazilians (Maia et al., 2015).
6. Ironically, Lee and Zhou (2015: 11–12) summarily dismiss Petersen’s (1966) description
of Japanese American educational attainment as “tantamount to endorsing a neoconser-
vative policy paradigm” when in fact the discussion of cultural factors in Lee and Zhou
(2015) and Petersen (1966) includes many substantively similar views.
7. Chetty et al.’s (2020: 730) finding regarding Asian American intergenerational mobility—
that 26% of Asians born to parents in the lowest income quintile obtain individual
incomes in the highest income quintile—has received very little attention despite being
the highest rate of upward income mobility ever recorded in the world.
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