Can children not go to kindergarten?
Can't say right. Every coin has its two sides. Advantages: 1 Help to develop children's potential. 2. Help children to determine their own interest direction in groping, help highlight their personality and make their thinking more open. Disadvantages: 1 Your children only attend early education and interest classes. In terms of time, it is shorter than kindergarten, and the constraints are shorter, which is incomparable with the discipline of kindergarten. 3. Kindergarten curriculum is comprehensive, with teaching materials. Of course, I don't value that textbook, but I think it is helping children complete a systematic study habit. As a mother, you know, the younger the child, the easier it is to form a habit. We have a child here who goes to kindergarten at the age of five and cries every day. The teacher said that the younger the child, the faster he can adapt. When he is old, he has developed his own thinking habits, and it is very difficult to correct them. 4. Every stage in the kindergarten will hold a cultural performance, and every child will dance on the stage, unlike before, when only some excellent ones were selected to perform. This gives children a great opportunity to exercise. There are also sports meetings and parent-child activities. In the kindergarten where our children attend, the teacher will take them to pick strawberries, visit the fire brigade, visit the university, see lotus flowers, perform for the elderly and so on. (They go out for activities without their parents), which not only increases their knowledge, but also strengthens safety and discipline. Having said that, I believe you already know my point of view, and I hope children can integrate into the small society of kindergarten. Of course, if you can't settle down and often change kindergartens, you might as well not go. Choosing a good kindergarten is also the key. It depends not only on how many words he teaches children and how many books they can read, but also on whether he encourages or stifles children's thinking.