Keywords: sixth grade of African humble primary school
This article applies to: the sixth grade of primary school.
Composition source:
This essay is about the sixth grade of primary school. The topic is: "Beautiful campuses and simple classrooms in Africa (Figure 16)". Everyone is welcome to contribute.
How time flies! In a blink of an eye, I have spent four years in this campus (No.17 Middle School of Puyang Oilfield). I grew up as an ignorant child and now I have become a teenager. In these four years, my teacher and I have established deep feelings between teachers and students, friendship with classmates, and also have a strong feeling for this school that raised me. For this reason, my father and I took a beautiful campus photo as a permanent memorial. Dad told me: "Actually, there are many beautiful things around you, but you can't easily find and cherish them") and posted them on my blog today to share with you.
Let me introduce our beautiful campus! The first thing I saw when I entered the gate was a row of evergreen trees. Opposite the trees is a tall yellow teaching building, which is the middle school department of our school. It looks so clean and tidy.
Walking along the east side of this teaching building, there is a comprehensive teaching building, followed by a row of tall poplars, which is much higher than the comprehensive building. Dense branches and leaves protrude from the wall, and the breeze seems to be waving to us. The comprehensive building is inlaid with eight glittering characters of "being virtuous and striving for self-improvement". This year 1 October1day, I went to Tsinghua University for sightseeing, and a stone tablet on the campus of Tsinghua was engraved with the words "Strive for self-improvement, be virtuous and carry things". The tour guide uncle said that these eight words are the school motto of Tsinghua. I told the tour guide uncle that our school also has it, and I am really proud that our school has such a school motto. )
In front of the building is a wide playground and dense Woods, where students can play badminton after class. Thick snow often accumulates here in winter, and students have snowball fights here. I like this forest path best. In summer, dense leaves block the hot sun, and this path looks so cool. We often play there during recess.
To the north of the playground is the teaching building of our primary school, with Mao Zedong's inscription: "Study hard and make progress every day" in eight glittering Chinese characters. Not far from the primary school building is the flag-raising platform of our school. Every Monday morning, our school will sing the national anthem, hold a flag-raising ceremony and watch the national flag slowly rise and fly in the air, which marks the beginning of a new week.
This is our school. I love our school, and I love our teachers and classmates more. In this picturesque campus, there are such good conditions, such a good education and such a good teacher. Is there any reason why you can't "study hard and make progress every day"
This reminds me of the photo my father sent me in Sudan (see my blog post "What I saw in Sudan, look, this is their classroom"). Their classroom is made of thatch and branches. There are no desks, chairs and blackboards in the classroom ... students are sitting on the hot beach, holding books and studying hard. There are many poor children there. They have no chance to go to school. They have no education, no food, no clothes and work. With this in mind, we should study hard and master more knowledge to serve our motherland. Let our country become stronger and stronger and help those poor and backward countries. Let them also study in our picturesque campus.
Figure 1) No.17 Middle School of Puyang Oilfield.
Figure 2) Elegant and quiet learning environment.
Figure 3) A corner of the campus,
Figure 4) Break.
Figure 5) Colorful campus life (1).
Figure 6) Colorful campus life (2).
Figure 7) Have a rest after class. After class, the students came to the picturesque grove (to have a rest here).
Figure 8) The national flag fluttering in the wind and the wide playground.
Figure 9) When the bell rang, the students hurried back to the classroom.
Figure 10) After school, the students left the scientists happily, ending the intense study of the day.
Attached are 6 pictures of schools in some African countries;
Attached figure 1) Look! They study so hard in such a simple classroom.
Figure 2) Look! They wear white school uniforms (also their traditional national costumes) and sit neatly on the beach to study hard.
Figure 3) This is a girls' school in the class, and she is also studying under the straw shed (listening to her father's statement that "he measured the ground temperature there, and the height was over 60 degrees Celsius). Maybe it's better under the hut!
Figure 4) Look! This is the scene where they stand up and say hello to the teacher.
Attached Figure 5) Class is over! They are still so happy in such a simple classroom. Figure 6) Their teacher's office is still so simple.