On this day, we were playing in the playground, and suddenly received a notice from Principal Zhao Yulin: there is a solar eclipse, and students from all classes can go to the playground**. After receiving this notice, our kindergarten children also came to the playground together with the senior primary school students. Because I have read the fourth volume of my sister-in-law's five-year primary school Chinese textbook, there is a text called "Watching the Lunar Eclipse".
I didn't think there was a solar eclipse, but I also had a little understanding, and most of the children in the class didn't know what the eclipse was all about, just standing stupidly on the playground, looking at the sun.
But if you use your eyes directly**, the sun will stab your eyes. The principal asked the students to find colored pieces of glass, or white pieces of glass to apply ink to see. Glass suddenly became a scarce resource, not easy to find, I and some other children, lying on the playground, hands on the canopy, squinting eyes**. By this time the sun was losing a patch, and the sky was getting darker, and it felt cooler. Yan Juan, a girl from the kindergarten, ran over, she found a piece of glass, and she was with me**. This is the first time I have seen a solar eclipse, and it is a partial solar eclipse, so I was very impressed.