It's not that the teachers are bad, but from now on, they have gone bad. Many teachers just give up to finish their work, and they don't have much sense of responsibility for their students. It is not excluded that there are excellent teachers, but that is only a few.
I remember when I was in primary school, teachers in every grade were very responsible. If we don't learn it once, we will teach them twice and three times. We will point a small whip at the blackboard in class and teach us word by word, and our homework will be carefully checked. What impressed me the most was the sixth grade, which was divided into fast class and slow class. Students with good grades are in the fast class. When we had a holiday in the first semester, the head teacher and English teacher allowed students who wanted to study to go to her home, and she made up lessons for us (free of charge).
At that time, there were more than 40 students in a class, and more than 20 went to her home to make up lessons. There are many low tables in the living room on the third floor, which are the ones that first-year students sat in the 1990s. Our sixth-grade students were too short to put their feet down, and they felt very uncomfortable at that time. They taught us some basic grammar and gave us a week's practice.
In the final sprint stage of the senior high school entrance examination, we also organized the students in the fast class to conduct evening self-study. Sometimes she will come to give lectures, mostly to let us review ourselves, and then ask her if we don't understand. Looking back now, I really think she is quite responsible, completely for our own good.
Unlike many teachers who set up classes after class now, each student has a fixed fee, and some students can't keep up with their learning progress without attending cram schools. After entering junior high school, I feel that teachers are not so responsible, especially in chemistry and biology classes. The two teachers just want to finish teaching the knowledge in the books by themselves, no matter whether we know or not (it should be noted that the junior high school I attended was not a junk school, and the management was quite strict).
After high school, I was admitted to the third-ranked school. Looking back now, I regret that my first choice was this school when I filled in my volunteers, because my grades were admitted to the second-ranked school, but my second choice was to fill in the second-ranked school. It is because when I was about to fill out my volunteer in the third grade, those people were making rumors about how bad the environment in the second school was. Sometimes the yellow water was dirty and the location was really remote, so the first volunteer was not there. Later.
Teachers in high schools are even more irresponsible. The students at the back of the classroom have been talking regardless. Praise for good grades and no criticism for poor grades have led to my impression of teachers getting worse and worse. Now that ten years have passed, I feel that my evaluation of my teacher has plummeted.
Teachers are not saints, but we are used to sanctifying this profession, but good teachers still exist. What I said above is just my personal opinion on this profession. Everyone has a different evaluation of a teacher when they meet him.