Sukhomlinsky was a well-known Soviet pedagogue who had a lot to say about how to raise and educate children.
He wanted the children not to lie, he said:
We teach our children that you should say what you think about a person, an action, a phenomenon, or an event, and that you should not try to guess what others want you to say at any time. This kind of attempt will make you a hypocrite, a sycophant, and eventually a despicable person.
At the end of the day, think about what you have done for the happiness and happiness of others, what have you done for your own progress. If you don't do anything, that is, you spent the day in vain, then you have to redouble your efforts to make up for today's losses.
I don't know what a good secondary school means, but I am sure that it will be able to give people infinite beautiful reverie and a past worth recalling.
I don't know what a good teacher is, but I would like to have a teacher like Jean Jacques, who is erudite, loves and hates, is strict but not harsh, kind but not intimate, he often keeps silent, and when he speaks, his words are like bullets that shoot out, he hits the bull's-eye with force and accuracy, he accompanies me to grow up in nature with full love, helps me to form a simple character, acquires practical wisdom, and moves forward bravely in the stormy seas of life without flinching.