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How to treat college students traveling during the epidemic?
A classmate bought a ticket for Thursday night and took a photo with Guang Zhouta at 2 pm the next day. He went to Yongqingfang in Guangzhou at three o'clock in the afternoon, to Liwan Lake Park at four o'clock in the afternoon, to Jiazheng Square at six o'clock in the morning, to Changsha at five o'clock in the morning, to the fresh market of Lotus Pond at six o'clock in the morning, to Orange Island at seven thirty in the morning, to Yuelu Mountain at eleven thirty in the evening, and to queue up for milk tea at nine thirty in the evening. Just when the netizen was still feeling, he was not careful. Then go back to school to catch the class at eight in the morning. This kind of tourism is nicknamed "special forces tourism" by netizens.

The advantage of college students' special forces tourism is that it not only conforms to what young tourists often say, "Youth is priceless, madness is now". The slogan can also reduce the impact of the epidemic on the local economy. Moreover, this kind of tourism can also enhance the participants' action planning ability and teamwork spirit. Otherwise, how can you go to school on time after visiting the famous scenic spots in the city in a very short time? The purpose of learning all kinds of knowledge is to change, and the purpose of change is to achieve. To achieve it, we need to experience it with concrete actions, not just stay in our minds. As the saying goes, it is better to read thousands of books than to take Wan Li Road. Let students check whether the knowledge they have learned has changed their cognition and improved their exploration ability in practice. I think this is also a learning process.

However, mountains and rivers, long journey, tourism is a lifelong process, appropriate travel has certain benefits, it can keep people psychologically balanced, and active travel can also improve their ability. However, some people are caught in the whirlpool of over-tourism, and desperately try to fill it, which always fails to meet the most essential needs, leading to retaliatory tourism.