He's only 11. Still, BJ Bae
blended in with the thousands of people of Korean heritage who swarmed
an Orange County college fair this weekend. He stopped to sign up for a
concentration test so "I can know what job might be good for me."
Angela Kim, 10, headed straight for the Stanford University table, then UC Berkeley, then Columbia University. "We have lots of choices," she said confidently.
The
mothers of both children tagged along, stuffing handbooks into their
bags, promising to review them together when they get home.
"I'm just stunned by how early the parents are preparing their kids," said Jay Tsai, a recruiter for Yale University,
as he surveyed the crowd at the 2012 College Fair in Irvine. The event,
sponsored by the Korea Daily newspaper, drew more than 4,000 people —
even in 100-degree heat.
Koreans and other Asians placing a
premium on academic achievement and college preparation is not new. But
to Tsai, the intense interest and the young age of some of those at the
event seemed to signal something that is new.
"This tells me it's getting more competitive than ever before," he said.
Ed Johnson, a veteran admissions officer for the U.S. Military Academy at West Point,
called it an "amazing gathering." He was eyeing students with top-notch
SAT scores and "a motivation to serve," he said. "And, in fact, Korean
families have so much motivation. They raise the standard."
Around
him, participants were crossing off checklists, consulting a map of the
event included in the Korean paper's 100-page guide and trying to
figure out where to go. They fanned across the campus of Bethel Korean
Church to chapel rooms, lecture halls and the gym, learning the
nitty-gritty of financial planning and what's required by Ivy League
schools as opposed to University of California campuses.
Private
tutors and consultants tried to lure them with their services, including
how to get college application essays exactly right.
"We give
that extra push. Sometimes, kids have the grades already, but they're
confused when they sit down to express their feelings," said Gina Kim,
operations analyst for Flex College Prep, which has offices in Arcadia,
Irvine and L.A.'s Koreatown. Buyers snapped up $10 copies of a guide
written by her firm's chief executive: "Getting In: Insider Tips on
College Admissions for Immigrant Families."
"A lot of Korean
families want the brand-name school," Kim said. "We actually try to
listen to the student's opinion. We want the student to thrive."
Anna
Seok, who manages Admission Masters Educational Consulting Group,
offers prep packages from $450 to $4,500. Among them: GPA management.
Students and instructors can talk weekly and chart progress.
Students can join clubs devoted to subjects ranging from speech and debate to robotics and NASA — the kinds of extracurricular activities appealing to recruiters.
"We
help Korean families find out what type of learner their child is,"
Seok said, "and from there we work with them to succeed."
Among
those working the crowd was an overseas television crew taping a
one-hour special on the fair, now in its seventh year. It's one of four
such events in the nation.
"This is very important for Korean
American society," said Jeongkie Kim, director of EBS America, an
education channel. "While many people can be here, many more people
can't be here, and parents from Korea aim to send their children to
college in the U.S. That is the big goal."
In the cafeteria, Sukha
Kim and his son, Ryan, ate $2 ramen sold by the Irvine Korean Parents
Assn. "I want my son to have a broad knowledge of everything," said Kim,
of Los Angeles. Ryan, a freshman at John Marshall High School near
Griffith Park, said he does mental exercises between classes to refresh
his memory. He also reads the New York Times, looking for words his
doesn't fully understand. "I write it down on index cards to study," he
said.
Outside, David Hong, a junior at Tesoro High in Mission Viejo, waited to meet celebrity guest Victor Kim, winner of "America's Best Dance Crew"
on MTV. "It's hard to meet our parents' expectations," he said, "but I
try my best." He has a 4.0 grade-point average and is tutored in
biology, Spanish and pre-calculus. For college, he's leaning toward a
chemistry major — or something in sports. "Not as a player," he said,
"but analysis or commentary. My dad might like that better."
BJ
Bae, the 11-year-old from Plaza Vista School in Irvine, said he handles
homework on his own because his mother, Mina Yoon, is busy with her
3-year-old. "We came here to understand how college works," she said.
Michael
Chen, visiting from Seoul, heard about it and made time to attend. His
mission: Comparing music programs at Yale and Stanford. His daughter
began playing the cello at age 5.
"Wherever she desires to go to school," he said, "we want to get her there."
anh.do@latimes.com