Education must start with dolls, so most countries attach great importance to preschool education. When it comes to preschool education, I have to mention Japan. When it comes to education in Japan, people who know it will definitely give a thumbs up and praise it. There are many differences between Japanese educational ideas and methods and China's, which are difficult to understand and accept at first, and even strange. But gradually, after a deep understanding, I realized his magic and sincerely admired Japan's preschool education model.
In Japan, the concept of preschool education is not how much knowledge you can learn, but the quality of children's manners, personality and other aspects. In daily life, we should pay attention to cultivating children's self-reliance and instinct, and attach importance to children's etiquette and various quality education.
In Japanese kindergartens, several details are well controlled.
The first is garbage sorting.
Japan is one of the countries with the best garbage sorting. Japan has a small territory and limited resources. As early as the 1960s, it began a protracted war with garbage. Today, starting from kindergarten, children of several years old will begin to learn and gradually master the classification and disposal methods of all kinds of garbage. Faced with the high cost of garbage disposal, Japanese families will also control consumption and reduce unnecessary consumption. Whether you buy food or supplies, you must think about where you will go after becoming "garbage" and then consume it. This will promote the formation of a conservation-oriented society in Japan to a certain extent.
The second is to pay attention to etiquette.
Whether children or adults, paying attention to etiquette is the most important thing. At the same time, this may also be a social habit in Japan, and people who meet leaders or have deep qualifications at work should bow and salute. Or service personnel, they think that customers are God, and they should try their best to meet customers' requirements. Bowing or squatting has become a daily routine. In addition to daily entertainment classes, children's education pays attention to etiquette training on weekdays, teaching children to smile in front of others and being helped to say thank you. Because of the importance of etiquette, the children in the garden are very polite and rarely fight and argue.
The third is to obey orders.
For example, Japanese schools have strict traffic rules for students. When the children are out of school, there is no teacher to lead them, but they can all queue up consciously and orderly. Sometimes, when the bus gives them priority, these children will bow politely to express their thanks. Moreover, in the streets of Japan, red lights are rarely run, and adults and children consciously obey the traffic order, which also sets a good example for children.
These things are small details for us, but the details determine success or failure. Education is not a mechanical copy, and no book can solve all educational problems. Regarding education, we should learn from good ways and means, take its essence and discard its dross, and accompany children to grow up together.