The Kindergarten Life I Don't Want My Parents to Know About
The text from the web page is a continuation of the book “What Parents Don’t Know About Kindergarten Life.” In “What Teachers Don’t Want Parents to Know About Kindergarten Life,” the author, Ling Dan, further describes things that happen in kindergarten which teachers might prefer to keep from parents:
Reluctance to Attend: The heart-wrenching cries of “I don’t want to go to school!” are most frequent not in the first week of school, but in the third, with a high recurrence rate.
Fire Drills: Shortly after school starts, not only do the children in class N have to participate in fire drills, but even the babies in the nursery who can only crawl must take part.
Hardships: After paying thousands in tuition, children in kindergarten may end up doing laborious tasks, getting drenched in the rain, and on their birthdays, they might even witness the distressing scene of a piñata being torn apart.
Inquisitive Minds: Besides mastering the art of asking “Really?” and “Why?” with full expression, children also develop a verbal agility that surpasses even that of adult women in Hong Kong.
Reluctance to Attend: The heart-wrenching cries of “I don’t want to go to school!” are most frequent not in the first week of school, but in the third, with a high recurrence rate.
Fire Drills: Shortly after school starts, not only do the children in class N have to participate in fire drills, but even the babies in the nursery who can only crawl must take part.
Hardships: After paying thousands in tuition, children in kindergarten may end up doing laborious tasks, getting drenched in the rain, and on their birthdays, they might even witness the distressing scene of a piñata being torn apart.
Inquisitive Minds: Besides mastering the art of asking “Really?” and “Why?” with full expression, children also develop a verbal agility that surpasses even that of adult women in Hong Kong.