noun
- the practice of providing intensive education or training to a child at an early age to accelerate development or achievement
Usage: often used in educational contexts; can carry connotations of pressure or excessive expectations
verb
- to subject (a child) to intensive education or training at an early age; to cultivate or develop rapidly in a controlled environment
Usage: third-person singular present or gerund form of 'hothouse'
Examples
- The school's hothousing approach focuses on advanced mathematics and reading for kindergarteners.
- Some parents worry that hothousing their children may lead to burnout rather than success.
- The program is hothousing young musicians through daily practice and rigorous instruction.
- Critics argue that hothousing removes the joy of childhood learning.
- The academy specializes in hothousing gifted students in STEM subjects.
- Hothousing can produce impressive short-term results, but long-term effects remain debated.