Current location - Education and Training Encyclopedia - Educational institution - How to evaluate the low level of cultural education of athletes?
How to evaluate the low level of cultural education of athletes?
When discussing the current situation of football in China, there is always a voice that one of the reasons why the national football team is not playing well is that the players' cultural level is too low. So as an athlete, how much influence will his cultural education have on his sports career? Although cultural literacy is not directly reflected in the field of sports, for a person, his cultural and educational level will often subtly affect his reading, understanding, adaptation, learning, emotional control and other abilities, which are equally important for him to engage in this sport.

China's active professional players are mostly from Dalian Dongbei Road Primary School and Xu Genbao's Genbao Football Base in Chongming Island. I have received closed football training since I was a child, and I will learn some basic cultural courses, but it is very limited. It can be said that they have nothing but football. This kind of closed training in a difficult environment, lacking systematic compulsory education, is easy to make people violent, which is also the reason why malicious fouls often occur in the Super League. Many players are not unintentional when they foul, but hold the idea of abolishing each other. Knowledge is power. It is precisely because he didn't receive systematic cultural education when he was young, coupled with the self-expansion of making money in professional leagues, that players like Qin Sheng don't respect their opponents on the court and can't control their emotions. Their IQ is zero when they are angry.

Compared with the traditional training base of China football, the campus football advocated by Japan and South Korea is very successful. Normal campus classes, spare time training football, through the national football conference, and then signed a professional club. Yuto Yongyou, a Japanese international who plays for Inter Milan, and Gaku Shibasaki, a future midfielder of the Japanese national team, are both from campus football.

Cultural quality may not directly help you solve any problems. Good math can't make you calculate the flight trajectory of football, and good physics can't make you play elevator ball, but it can make you have the inside information and tolerance, so that athletes can better cope with complex situations. Knowledge allows you to learn humility, better control your emotions, and learn to respect your opponents. Knowledge is power. And this kind of strength is very important when athletes perform skills and tactics.