Ru Yan: Weak.
Young eagle: new students forge ahead
Ice Shan: Enthusiastic and tenacious.
Compared with China teenagers, they are young but pure, beautiful, warm and tenacious.
Introduction to China Teenagers: It is a poem by the poet Li Shaobai. This poem eulogizes the motherland with passion from the perspective of China teenagers in the new era, expressing the strong feelings of China teenagers who love and serve the motherland, and expressing their strong determination and pride as teenagers in China. This poem was selected into the first volume of the sixth grade Chinese textbook of People's Education Publishing House as the eighth reading text of Unit 2 "The Motherland is in My Heart".
Poet information: Li Shaobai, pen name. Born in Ningxiang, Hunan, 1942, party member, CPC. 1960 graduated from Hunan First Normal University. He once worked as a primary school teacher in Liu Zheng Street, Changsha, and began to publish his works on 1978. 65438-0984 Join the Chinese Writers Association.
He has published a collection of children's poems, A Doll with a Beard, Little Tadpoles Can Sing, Poems Recited by Young Pioneers, Pale Moon, An Album Never Finished, and a collection of fairy tales, The Adventures of a Big Tail, Stories of Many Silly Bears, etc. He also wrote many lyrics, and his children's song "I Sing a Song for the Party" won the second prize of the Second National Children's Literature Creation Award; Come on, let's play football and win the prize in 1988 World Children's Music Festival. There is also a poem "China Teenager", which is included in the eighth lesson of the first volume of the sixth grade primary school Chinese published by People's Education Publishing House. He has won more than 30 awards, including the National Excellent Children's Book Award, the Chen Bo Hammer Children's Literature Award, the Bingxin Book Award, the Gold Award of the Stars Award of the Ministry of Culture, and the National Five-One Project Award of the Propaganda Department of the CPC.