First Lady Will Visit China With Two Daughters And Mother While Focusing On Education

It will be all about education and people-to-people connections when first lady Michelle Obama heads for China with her mother and daughters in tow on Wednesday, according to Reuters.

The first lady is expected to steer clear of more contentious U.S.-China issues such as human rights, trade and counterfeiting during her weeklong visit, Reuters reported.

The first lady is scheduled to address American and Chinese students at Peking University on Saturday about the importance of study abroad and other cultural exchanges as well as the stakes the two countries have in one another's success, according to Reuters.

Tina Tchen, the first lady's chief of staff, said that stressing the shared importance of education to young people in the U.S. and China was important not just for students but "vital for the competitiveness of our U.S. global economy," according to Reuters.

The trip also will allow the first lady to make up for the fact that she opted to stay in Washington rather than meet with her Chinese counterpart in California last year, according to Reuters. She'll spend Friday with Peng Liyuan, the wife of President Xi Jinping, who will take Mrs. Obama on a school visit.

Ben Rhodes, the White House deputy national security adviser, added that even without directly addressing difficult matters, the first lady's visit brings with it "the power of her own story and the power of American values, which I think is completely interwoven with our commitment to human rights," Reuters reported.

Where the Obama administration has differences with China, Rhodes added, the U.S. addresses those in direct contacts with the Chinese government, according to Reuters.

"We don't think the first lady should make this a focus at all of her trip," Rhodes said in a conference call previewing the first lady's trip, Reuters reported.

On March 25, Mrs. Obama, a graduate of Princeton and Harvard Law School, will visit a high school in the southwestern city of Chengdu to share her own story about overcoming obstacles to obtaining a college education, including teachers who told her she was setting her sights too high, according to Reuters.

Along the way, Mrs. Obama and the two generations of women accompanying her: daughters Malia and Sasha and mother Marian Robinson, will all visit historical sites including the Great Wall, the famed Terra Cotta Warriors in the central city of Xian and the Chengdu Panda Base, home to about 50 pandas, Reuters reported.

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