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Will you give your children early education?
I won't give my child an early education class, because what I teach in early education is not as important as that I accompany her, so how can I give her an early education class?

I remember watching a program in which a mother had no money at home, but insisted that her daughter, who had just turned one and a half years old, enroll in an early education class and borrow money to attend school. At that time, the teacher asked her what the child learned in the early education class. If she taught these things with her heart, would the child remember them and learn them? She replied that she should.

I feel that if I am allowed to teach the things taught by the early education class alone, I should be more patient and more willing to teach the children gently than the early education teacher. So since I can teach myself, why should I enroll my children in this class? Isn't that a waste of my own money and my children's time?

I have read a book that says that children before the age of three are most afraid of leaving familiar people and going to strange environments alone, which will make him feel insecure, make him afraid, make him afraid of this strange world, and may lead to children's insecurity from an early age.

In my opinion, it is. When a mother sends her child to a strange environment to meet new people by herself, it is said that she wants her child to learn to be independent. But does the child really have too much self-care ability when she is one to two years old? Can't you learn these self-care abilities at home?

I don't think it is necessary to send a child who can't speak clearly to an early education class, but it is certain that the child is afraid to leave his mother. And I prefer to grow up with him. Children grow up only once. If we are absent in childhood, he will be absent when we need him in the future.