Asian-style cram schools hit it big in the US

20180507_Kumon school

Kumon students complete worksheets at their own speed, regardless of their grade level.

KEN MORIYASU, Nikkei Asian Review chief desk editor

NEW YORK When IBM client executive Rachel Calhoun negotiates multimillion-dollar contracts with clients, she needs to crunch numbers swiftly in her head because face-to-face meetings rarely allow time to whip out a calculator.

"I have never been fearful of math, and am able to do fairly complex problems in my head," she said. The 32-year-old manager attributes this ability to her years attending Kumon, a Japan-based school for supplementary education that has grown to dominate the U.S. market.

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