Off-campus training can effectively make up for the lack of classroom teaching, fully explore children's specialties and hobbies, and is also conducive to the healthy growth of children.
However, there are many chaos, hidden dangers and problems in the fiery off-campus training.
First of all, off-campus training undoubtedly increases the burden on children and parents. Originally, children were very tired when they were studying at school, and they also had homework after class. If they are trained after class, not only will parents' economic expenses increase, but students will also be more tired.
Secondly, the effect of off-campus training is worrying. Everyone knows that this industry makes money, and everyone wants to come in and share the cake, but the teaching quality is not guaranteed. Many parents give their children extra-curricular training, and they just find someone to take care of their children between work and school. They don't consider their training needs, and institutions don't make targeted analysis of their children. They just swallow dates and even follow suit.
If children like singing, parents have to make up calligraphy, or if children are not good at English, they have to make up math. This kind of money is spent, but it has no effect at all.
Moreover, there are still great security risks in the mixed extracurricular training courses. First, the rapid launch of training courses can easily lead to incomplete qualifications, some even incomplete licenses, insufficient fire protection, and food safety cannot be guaranteed. Second, there are hidden dangers in the quality of employees in training courses. Teachers' qualification is one aspect, and teachers' morality is also a very important part. News about children being abused and violated in training classes also happens from time to time, which is undoubtedly that parents have deceived their children.
Some training courses unilaterally pursue the effect of making up lessons and arrange teaching beyond the planned age, which is counterproductive. Although the advance of cultural classes may have some effects in the short term, in the long run, it is easy to cause children to be tired of learning and complacent; Some training, such as dancing, is harmful to children's growth and health in order to pursue the effect and let them exercise overload.
Therefore, the off-campus training market is hot but chaotic. Relevant departments should strengthen pre-approval and supervision and inspection, and promptly ban non-compliant schools. Parents should also keep their eyes open when they report training classes to their children. They should not only check the qualifications of school-running institutions, but also carry out them in a targeted manner, so as not to weaken the educational role in the family.