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How to cultivate children's habit of packing toys and books?
Toys and books can bring great happiness to children and accompany them through a happy childhood, so parents are willing to buy toys and books for their children. However, how to train children to pack toys and books? What should I do after playing with toys and reading books? Many parents have neglected this important topic with educational significance, and as a result, children have developed a bad habit of not cherishing things. Some parents think that children are still young, and littered toys and books should be cleaned up by adults. This understanding and practice is not good for children. Parents should seize the opportunity to cultivate their children's habit of packing toys and books, and never treat them as trifles.

To teach children to pack toys and books, we should first prepare several large cartons or wooden cases for them, or give them a drawer with a suitable height and convenient opening and closing. We can also make a space or corner on the bookshelf for adults to put toys and books, otherwise the requirements will not be met.

When children are two years old, they can learn to pack toys and books. At the beginning, adults should pack up their things, ask the children to help them pass them over, and tell them that dogs, dolls and cars are tired of playing with you, so it's time to go home and rest. Every day, children will know how to clean up after toys are finished. Gradually, children can be reminded by adults to put their toys in designated places, and adults can help them put them in order until they can put them away by themselves. At the age of five, children should be taught to put toys in order according to their categories, books in order according to their size, and learn to wash toys on time. When children study, they should do it entirely by themselves. Parents only need to check it in time and ask for it.

Habit is second nature. Through the consistent requirements of adults and children in daily practice, children can not only form the good habit of packing toys and books, but also pack other things they have used, such as paper and pens after painting, brooms and dustpans after sweeping the floor, and clothes taken off. After entering primary school, children can quickly learn to organize their own stationery and schoolbags under the guidance of adults. Adults can cultivate children's good habits of doing their own things and doing things in an orderly way from the little things in daily life, so that children can benefit for life.