Two of my students are Chinese - a mom and a daughter. The girl turned 6 in December, and is playing comfortably at a grade 2 level. I have a lot of beginners who progress slowly because their parents have them in 20 different activities, but this girl does dance and figure skating, and is doing really well

she enjoys her lessons, as does her mom. The mom mostly wanted to learn so that she could make sure her daughter was practicing fine at home, but really enjoys the lessons.
I have a bunch of 7-9 year olds who have the attention span of a fly, and half of them sit on their ass all day playing video games. She is doing 30-60 minute lessons a week (depending if the mom decides to take the other 30 minutes or let her daughter to an hour), and is focused the entire time.
This girl is doing really well in school, has a good group of friends according to her mom, and is doing some other activities. She never seems exhausted in the lesson, and is genuinely a pleasant kid. The mom actually says that she does not want her daughter progressing too quickly; I am letting her play a lot of stuff that she enjoys (Disney, Hannah Montana ugh, etc) and am using the RCM books to expose her to classical music.
Definitely one of my favorite students to teach! There are two girls in her class at school who I also teach who are spoiled brats, never practice, and their parents are pretty rude. I just think that her parents care enough to spend 15 minutes a day with her on stuff she is having trouble with, and are encouraging her to do lots of different things, all the while not overwhelming her.
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I did fill in for a teacher once 2 years ago and taught two Asian girls back to back. Both mothers flat out said they did not want a male teacher before the lesson, before I even set foot in the building. We told them that I had to fill in because the teacher is too busy to do makeups, so they agreed. The first girl was shy, but was very good (she was 7 I think). The problem was that the mother, who had no musical background, was asking me to explain to the mother what the symbols meant, why the V7 was a V7, why there's phrasing, etc, etc. Her eyes glazed over the minute I said "chord". There is only so much explanation you can give on stuff like that to someone with zero musical background, without spending 20 minutes giving the basics. I didn't want to take up the lesson defining this stuff to the mom while the girl sat there, so I gave very basic explanations - the mom obviously thought that was inadequate. I can't give a doctoral thesis on phrasing and chords in 30 seconds

The next girl was 3 or 4, and the mom had her for hour lessons. Need I say more? She was not focused, could barely read, let alone say the first seven letters of the alphabet, but the mother was asking why I wasn't teaching her daughter theory to go with the music.
Those two mothers were flat out b*tches; they each put me on the spot for the entire 2 hours I was teaching, were already angry because I was a guy, and had me answering ridiculous questions equivalent to me asking an engineer what all the math symbols mean... by the end of that day I slapped my palm into my face and let out a huge sigh of relief.
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That being said, I've seen two pretty big extremes in my experience teaching Asian students. Each was completely different from one another, and I am very lucky that the one that is my permanent student is a very nice kid with caring parents. I don't have the patience to teach when every 3 seconds the parents' interrupting with complete nonsense. I can say that I had a predetermined mindset based on the two students, but the girl that I got this year completely changed it
