Cherish every grain. The grain is closest to me, and it's really not easy to come. If there is a problem of food shortage, many a mickle makes a mickle. Where can delicious rice come from? The white rice is cooked. Where does the white rice come from? Where did the golden millet come from?
Farmers' uncles plant a grain of rice and a drop of sweat, so we should cherish the grain; Food is the treasure among treasures, and human life is indispensable. You have one and I have one. Many a mickle makes a mickle and becomes a national treasure. China is a big country with little arable land, and1400 million people need to have enough to eat. We must remember to save food.
Many people are familiar with these nursery rhymes. When children are eating delicious rice in a bowl, have they ever thought about where this tempting food comes from? When weeding at noon, sweat dripped down the soil. Who knows that every meal is hard? The farmer's uncle braved the cold and heat to work hard in the fields, so that we could eat this kind of food for food.
Please cherish every grain and form a good habit of saving since childhood-we have all been educated and recited such nursery rhymes since childhood.
It is remarkable to incorporate the nursery rhymes of saving food into the theme education of enrollment. Children's songs about saving grain are short and easy to remember, catchy and have profound educational significance. If children know that food is hard to come by, and let them know through nursery rhymes that every grain is hard and food is hard to come by, then the good habit of cherishing and saving food will certainly be cultivated.