In a high school theater in Arcadia, Calif., Amber Zhang and the rest of the teenage cast of a production of Molière's comedic play The Miser gather in a tight circle.

"Everyone say, 'Hey, hey, hey!' " bellows Xochitl-Julisa Bermejo, an instructor at Arroyo Pacific Academy. "Helloooo!"

Zhang, cast as a spunky ingénue, throws her body — and pipes — into the exercise.

"In China, if we have class, for sure we sit down on a chair," says Zhang, 17, who grew up in Guangzhou. She's an only child whose parents, both doctors, sent her to the U.S. for high school. Back home, there was "not a lot of time to have fun like this."

Zhang belongs to a growing population of Chinese teens leaving the test-driven, high-pressure world of schools back home for the U.S. — more than 23,000 at last count, according to the Institute of International Education. Their goal is to better their children's chances of getting into an American college; a degree earned in the U.S. carries a lot of weight.

At the same time, these students — often called "parachute kids" — enjoy the looser contours of an American education, one that students like Zhang say lets them be more creative and independent.

Robert Nguyen is director of admissions at Arroyo Pacific Academy in Arcadia, Calif. More than 70 percent of the students at the high school are from China.

Robert Nguyen is director of admissions at Arroyo Pacific Academy in Arcadia, Calif. More than 70 percent of the students at the high school are from China.

Maya Sugarman/KPCC

It's a trend that immigrants from Hong Kong, Taiwan and Korea popularized in the 1980s. The numbers of students from China have grown fast because of the sheer size of its population and the rise of a wealthy class buoyed by years of economic growth.

So many high schoolers have come that they've helped to tilt the overall age of Chinese immigrants in the U.S. downward, according to the Census Bureau. Among the age groups of Chinese immigrants seeing the biggest growth was the 15 to 19 crowd.

Many live with host families and attend private schools like Arroyo Pacific. U.S. immigration law gives them little choice: International students can attend public schools for only one year and must reimburse the school district.

California is a top destination for these students, and the Los Angeles suburbs in the San Gabriel Valley, home to one of the world's largest Chinese diasporas, are particularly popular. That's where Arroyo Pacific is located. During lunch, the sound of Mandarin fills the hallways, with accents originating from all over China — Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou. In a matter of six years, Chinese students have transformed Arroyo Pacific's student body. Where there were just a handful of Chinese students before, the school is now more than 70 percent Chinese, said Robert Nguyen, the school's director of admissions. He said many students are learning about the school by word-of-mouth.

"Being a small school with small class sizes, we can pretty much tailor our program to suit the students pretty well," Nguyen says.

Jesse Chou is a senior at Arroyo Pacific Academy in Arcadia.  Chou says in China, he would stay at school until 10 at night prepping for the national college-entrance exam.

Jesse Chou is a senior at Arroyo Pacific Academy in Arcadia. Chou says in China, he would stay at school until 10 at night prepping for the national college-entrance exam.

Maya Sugarman/KPCC

Students here work hard, going to teachers after school, or hopping into an Uber to study at the nearby Starbucks with friends. But they say the workload is considerably more manageable than in China, where high schoolers are expected to prepare for China's national college-entrance exam gaokao, which means "high test." It's given just once a year and takes nine hours to complete. Senior Jesse Chou said when he was in China, he used to stay at school until 10 p.m. doing test prep. Failure was not an option.

"That means your life is done. Most people think that," Chou says. Now, he has free time to go skateboarding.

It's understandable that Chinese students feel so much pressure, said Yong Zhao, a professor at the University of Oregon who wrote Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Dragon?: Why China Has the Best (and Worst) Education System in the World. He said where students go to school decides what jobs they get, and the pressure to do well can therefore be fierce. He says Chinese employers have been known to say that "those who are not graduates of top elite universities need not to apply."

Coming to the U.S. does get Chinese students out of gaokao, but they're still expected to aim for the best universities in the U.S. At Platinum Academy, a tutoring center in Temple City, Calif., students' drawings of university logos line the walls.

"You've got Harvard, you've got Princeton and Yale — the big three," says David Ho, who founded the center.

Tutoring lessons are just one of the many expenses that go into educating a Chinese teen in the U.S. Factor in homestays and private school tuition, and the bill soars above $45,000 a year.

But money's not a barrier for many families. What can be tough is separation from parents. Arianna Sun, a student at Platinum Academy whose parents own a spa and resort in China, dreads each time she has to say goodbye to her family.

Seventeen-year-old Amber Zhang learns to play drums from freshman Ashley Li at Arroyo Pacific Academy in Arcadia.

Seventeen-year-old Amber Zhang learns to play drums from freshman Ashley Li at Arroyo Pacific Academy in Arcadia.

Maya Sugarman/KPCC

"I will feel very terrible for about two weeks, or more than two weeks," Sun says.

Sociologists say loneliness can be a problem for "parachute kids," with some retreating from classmates and teachers. Others lash out. In a notorious case last year, a group of Chinese teens, some of them enrolled at a private school in Rowland Heights, attacked another Chinese teen. Three of the assailants pleaded no contest to charges of kidnapping and assault and are serving prison time.

"If kids are going abroad too young without their parents, they could be at risk of not having the proper supervision," says UCLA sociologist Min Zhou.

Amber Zhang said none of her classmates would ever act out violently. But she said some do ignore homework, preferring to play and spend their parents' money on luxury brands.

But Zhang is the granddaughter of farmers and steelworkers, and her doctor parents don't let her forget that.

"My parents were born poor and they work hard," Zhang says. "So since I grow up, they always tell me, 'You need to try hard.'"

That doesn't mean she's bound to follow in her parents' footsteps. She said she dreams of going to UCLA's film school and making movies.

Copyright 2016 NPR. To see more, visit NPR.

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