Joke Collection Website - Talk about mood - How should parents educate their children who throw pencils every day in the first grade?

How should parents educate their children who throw pencils every day in the first grade?

What should children do if they lose pencils every day? This problem should be classified as "sense of responsibility or responsibility" first. I can't keep my things well and I can't keep them every day. It can show that children lack a sense of responsibility. Parents buy more for him every day, for fear that he will be useless in class and delay his study. In this way, children have "hope". There will be no sense of urgency. Gradually, there will be a bad habit of "indifferent". As you get older, you will form "bad behavior". It is even harder to change.

It is normal for a child to lose a pencil. It is normal that he knew how to play in the first grade. If children start school, they know that they should listen carefully in class and don't throw things around. Then I think this is not a child, this is an adult. The child lost his pencil? Why? Because it's fun, yes, it's just in line with children's nature. It's normal for her to use pencils as toys and throw them away when she's finished. Parents should be considerate of their children's nature.

Teach children to learn to accept. Finish your homework every night and let the children pack their own bags. At first, your parents can help you, and then you can let it go slowly.

Teach children to cherish stationery. Now everyone's economic conditions are good, and pencils are not expensive. You can buy them if you lose them. Children also have indifferent psychology. I remember when I was a child, my mother always taught me to cherish stationery, because it was not easy for my parents to make money, pencils were still in use, and draft paper was just the opposite of discarded exercise books. The subject can tell children that money is hard to come by, and it is a pity to always throw away pencils.

Let go moderately and let the children bear the consequences themselves. A boy in my daughter's class used to lose stationery every day. At the parent-teacher meeting, the teacher asked parents not to buy things for such children as soon as they lost them, making them useless. Let the teacher criticize him several times. He learned his lesson and will be more vigilant next time.

Establish a reward mechanism. Don't children like throwing pencils? Let her lose it, but if she can bring the pencil back every day, she will get a reward: for example, she can get a candy and so on. Encouraging children with reward mechanism is more effective than punishing and preaching.