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Should children continue to attend interest classes that they don't like? Why?
If it is my child, I won't let him continue to participate.

I think interest classes should really exist for interest and happiness. But now interest classes are more about making children more like what parents want. Girls' parents will be forced to learn dance, and they will have to undergo very bitter practice since childhood. Many parents will also let their children learn a classical musical instrument, thinking that this can cultivate their sentiments. Even consider the future, so that children can enter the university through these.

This process of persecution will be very painful for children. Because children are naturally unable to sit still since childhood, it is difficult to devote themselves wholeheartedly to things they don't like. I will let my children choose what they like in the future. As long as he is active and healthy, I will fully support him.

Of course, many children succeed under the pressure of their parents. It was under the pressure of his parents that Lang Lang became a talented person. He is a famous international pianist and enjoys a high reputation at home and abroad. Also won a number of music awards at home and abroad.

His self-report, that is to say, he was forced to learn piano by his father since he was a child, and he often wanted to avoid learning. But because of his father's strictness, he can only grit his teeth and insist. I am very grateful to his father for his discipline at that time.

But not every child is Lang Lang. In Dog Thirteen, the girl was completely killed by her father. Girls don't like learning English, but because of the constant pressure from teachers and the insistence of their fathers, girls can only give up their interest in science and technology and go to English classes. From then on, the girl hated English very much. I'm disappointed in my father, too, and I'm more afraid of my father.

Children live the life their parents want under the pressure of their parents. This is the tragedy of family education.