The earliest preschool education institution in France is the weaving school. 1770, French Protestant priest Oberlin founded the "Weaving School" to take care of and educate preschool children aged 4-7. An early childhood education institution that aims to cultivate children's discipline, make them understand religious teachings and improve their language ability, cultivate their hardworking quality, and enable them to master labor technology. It is open twice a week and offers courses such as knitting, sewing, reading, calligraphy, singing, reciting, arithmetic, natural history and the Bible.
1, set up a knitting school.
The school has two tutors, one is a handicraft tutor, the other is a cultural game tutor, and some older girls are also selected as "teaching assistants". Teaching contents include: standard French, religious hymns, proverbs and fairy tales, plant collection and observation, painting, geography, children's games, etc. 1/30.
The weaving school in Oberlin actually puts education in a more important position than protection.