June 1st — International Children's Day. We are accustomed to thinking about protection from war, hunger, and violence. But there is another threat: poor education. Children who are not taught to learn will suffer all their lives. Education is the most powerful shield. It protects from poverty, manipulation, and fear. But our educational system often does not provide this shield. Let's explore how education protects children and what we can do on June 1st.
An educated child can distinguish facts from fiction. This is protection from propaganda and fraud. The child knows their rights and is not afraid to say "no" to violence. They can find information about illness and help. They can learn, which means they can master a new profession if the old one becomes outdated. They will have a higher income in adult life, reducing the risk of poverty. The higher the mother's level of education, the lower the child mortality rate.
Education also reduces the risk of early marriage and teenage pregnancy.
School often teaches rote learning rather than thinking. The Unified State Examination is training for tests. Children are afraid of mistakes (a mistake = a failing grade, not experience). Overload: 8 lessons, homework until night. No right to rest. Burnout already in 8th grade. Inequality: schools in cities and villages — as different as heaven and earth. Tutors for the rich, state support for the poor. Bureaucracy: teachers spend time on reports, not on children.
In 2026, problems with AI were added: children write essays through neural networks, not learning to think.
Inclusive education is protection. A child with autism, cerebral palsy, Down syndrome has the right to learn in a regular class. But in Russia, inclusion is lagging: there are no tutors, no ramps, no trained teachers. Parents are forced to either send their child to a correctional school (often poor) or hire private teachers.
Protecting children with special needs is not only a law but also the kindness of peers. School should teach children to accept others. In 2026, a pilot project "Kind Schools" was launched in several regions, where tolerance lessons are mandatory.
Instead of a new iPhone, give your child a book. Not an encyclopedia, but an interesting, engaging one. Show that reading is joy, not punishment. Help with homework without shouting. Explain that mistakes are normal. Enroll your child in free online courses (on platforms "Sputnik," "Yandex.Learning"). Talk to the teacher if your child is overloaded. Write a letter to the principal asking to reduce the amount of homework. Set a schedule: gadgets only after lessons.
It is important: do not compare your child with others. "Look, Petya is an excellent student, and you..." This is not protection but humiliation.
Eliminate unnecessary bureaucracy. Increase the number of psychologists (currently 1 for every 1000 students). Introduce lessons on critical thinking. Train teachers to work with neural networks (not to ban but to teach how to use them for good). Organize hobby clubs (free of charge). Conduct days without homework (once a month). Create a "safe room" — a place where a child can come and simply rest, cry.
In 2026, such programs already exist in some schools (Moscow, Kazan, Novosibirsk).
Digital literacy is part of education. Children should be able to search for information on the internet, verify sources, and not fall for fraud (phishing, fake contests). They should be able to set privacy settings on social networks. Understand what a "digital footprint" is. Know that you cannot post your photos, address, schedule.
On June 1st, many schools hold lessons on digital literacy. Visit them with your child.
Parents complain: school suppresses creativity. Children are not taught to ask questions, only to answer. Grades kill motivation. Children learn for a grade, not for knowledge. School does not prepare for life — there are no lessons on financial literacy, psychology, self-defense. Teachers are overloaded, unable to pay attention to each child.
In 2026, parent unions have been created to demand changes. For example, the initiative "Homework Without Stress" has gathered 100,000 signatures.
International Children's Day is a reminder: education should protect, not harm. It should give wings, not weights. Let June 1st become a day when you tell your child, "I will help you learn. Not for grades, but for life." And start tomorrow. Don't wait for Monday.
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