It is also a movie that reflects education. It is really exciting to watch "Harvard Road". A little girl born in such an environment, her parents are drug addicts, and even their two children's living expenses are robbed of the mother who bought drugs Without the care of her mother, she doesn't take bath often, and her body smells bad. Her classmates hate her. She is such a person who doesn't go to school usually, but her exam results are very good. Under the encouragement of the teacher, in order to change her destiny, she chooses to study , met a kind person, or met a good system, that is, you can study as long as you want. Here, even the children of migrant workers have to provide proof materials of this kind and pay for school. The little girl can enter Harvard through her own efforts and because of such a good system. In the same movie "Cherish", a black girl, obese, vicious mother, inferior father, later contracted AIDS, but such a girl can still have the opportunity to go to school. Look at our movies "One Can't Miss", "Kid King", "Phoenix Piano", etc. You can see the school environment, those teachers do not have basic textbooks, pen and paper stationery, not only bring firewood , The real thing about bringing your own desk, and the extravagant talk about teaching and educating people. I am China, which can help foreign countries with more than 20 billion yuan each year, but we cannot allow our children to have a bright classroom, neat desks and chairs, a flat playground, and teachers who have graduated from a professional class, free lunch, and school uniforms. , school bus, young people are strong, then China is strong; knowledge changes fate; a century of people builds people. . . We all understand the truth, but we have too many major events like God 9, the Olympic Games, World Expo, demolition, stability maintenance, etc. to be caught, and we can’t take care of it. Those who have the conditions can only give birth to their children abroad, or send them out for training. , and let them fend for themselves with the rest.
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Homeless to Harvard: The Liz Murray Story reviews