Cartoon composition of ten rules for reducing primary school students' burden
On August 22nd, the Ministry of Education promulgated the Ten Provisions on Reducing the Burden of Primary School Students, which stipulated that classes should be arranged in a balanced way, no written homework and homework should be left in primary schools, and there should be no unified examination for primary schools from grade one to grade three. After grade four, unified examinations for Chinese, mathematics and foreign languages can be conducted every semester. Seeing this, I really don't understand where the Ministry of Education formulated these regulations. The environment we are in now, children's material life is getting better and better, food, clothing, housing and transportation are unmatched by our generation, but the competitive pressure is also growing. As parents, we should practice prenatal and postnatal care when we are ready to have children, and do more scientific and comprehensive parenting in the process of raising children. From kindergarten, we should do our best to let children get the best education in kindergartens, primary schools and even classes with good conditions; However, it is also difficult for children to accept prenatal education and early education from an early age. Now the children have participated in dance, language performance, English, composition and other remedial classes. Every weekend and holiday, they go from one training class to another, but their favorite is painting, so they should be allowed to take short-term painting classes every summer vacation. I don't want her to be so tired, but the children around her should not only study hard, but also have skills to prepare for future integration into society. I've been struggling these days. My child will be in the fourth grade when school starts again, and will be in junior high school in three years. Friends around me sent their children to training classes such as Window of Vision and Wogan, which not only occupied weekends and holidays, but also went directly to training classes after school every day, and sometimes even had dinner on the way, just to get into a good junior high school, a good high school and a good university. Looking at these new regulations of the Ministry of Education, combined with the current situation, the regulations are simply a paradise for children, but are these regulations useful? I am really speechless and can only continue to struggle.