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Which cartoon is good for children's education?
Mrs. Fox and Mr. Badger is a French cartoon, very cute, and there is an English version, which can be found by iQiyi.

The protagonist and his friends are all kinds of small animals living in the forest, so their behavior and daily life also contain a lot of common sense of the animal kingdom. For example, badgers and foxes are animals living in caves, squirrels like to hoard pine cones, and wild boars will take mud baths to drive away fleas. ...

Ingeniously integrate knowledge points into story situations.

Parents of animals will take turns to give lessons to small animals in the forest and teach them different survival skills: wild boar mother teaches everyone to wash mud baths to remove fleas; Grandma fox takes everyone to clean up animal feces; Badger's father taught us to listen to the sounds around us with our ears. ...

Anthropomorphic animals also keep their original habits. For example, dogs will chase foxes, squirrels will chew wood with their teeth and help Lulu make a small bench ... There are still many knowledge points hidden in the story like this. Common sense in adults' eyes will give birth to strange "why" in children's eyes, such as: why do dogs chase grandpa fox? Do all animals have fleas? Anyone here? Why can squirrel's teeth chew wood, but mine can't?

Foxes are common, but badgers are an unknown animal in China. In order to answer the children's "100 thousand whys", I made up some natural sciences, and it is from these that I know that badger is still a protected animal.