Give the children an opportunity to make garden. Let them grow what they will. It matters less that they grow good plants than that they try for themselves.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Create a garden; bring children to farms for field trips. I think it's important that parents and teachers get together to do one or two things they can accomplish well - a teaching garden, connecting with farms nearby, weave food into the curriculum.
If children have an interest in nature, they will understand. I want them to become people who appreciate the consequences the next generation will suffer if we destroy our natural surroundings. So without a doubt, they need to learn that nature is vital to us by experiencing it. I want them to like nature and to climb mountains and so on.
Listen to the desires of your children. Encourage them and then give them the autonomy to make their own decision.
You want your kids to grow with the right culture and values, and the toughest part would be finding out how to instill those values in your kids.
I don't know too many kids who ask to weed the garden.
If we had paid no more attention to our plants than we have to our children, we would now be living in a jungle of weed.
If you want your children to improve, let them overhear the nice things you say about them to others.
First, kids should be involved in the production of their own food. They have to get their hands in the dirt, they have to grow things. They also have to become sensually stimulated, and the way to begin is with a bakery.
I wish we could launch a ground-breaking competition that motivates kids to invent new ideas in sustainable living.
The first duty to children is to make them happy. If you have not made them so, you have wronged them. No other good they may get can make up for that.