Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - Pupils celebrate their motherland's birthday by cutting paper. Is paper-cutting art also included in the classroom?

Pupils celebrate their motherland's birthday by cutting paper. Is paper-cutting art also included in the classroom?

Primary school students' paper-cutting celebrates their motherland's birthday. Whether paper-cutting art is included in the classroom, I think it is natural that paper-cutting has been passed down as a traditional art in China.

136 students in a primary school in Tongliang, Chongqing, cut out a paper-cut work with the size of 120 square meters in half a month and displayed it on National Day, giving the motherland a beautiful gift. This paper-cut was put on the ground, and it was very beautiful and spectacular through aerial photography, showing the hard work and efforts of the students.

Primary schools have included paper-cutting in the curriculum since 20 10, and students like paper-cutting classes very much. Students' love for paper-cutting can be seen from the works. Interest is the best teacher. On the one hand, the paper-cutting course can help students relax, enhance their feelings, strengthen their sense of team, and exercise their concentration, perseverance and patience. On the other hand, paper-cutting skills can be passed down from generation to generation.

I think the practice of incorporating paper-cutting into the curriculum can be promoted throughout the country, and the charm of paper-cutting is far more than what we see. Paper-cutting can be said to be ever-changing, endless, from a simple flower to a blessing, a dragon, to a complex panorama, all of which can be expressed by paper-cutting. It can be said that everything in the world can be cut out by paper-cutting. If you want to cut out amazing works, you still need skill and foundation.

In fact, many paper-cutting skills have been lost, for one thing, because no one learned them, and for another, because no one taught them. If people with paper-cutting skills are willing to come out and teach students paper-cutting, then this skill will never be lost.

Many traditional crafts in China are on the verge of extinction, such as changing face, Peking Opera and embroidery. If there is systematic teaching, can these crafts be passed on? When it comes to the practice of paper-cutting, in fact, we can all carry forward our traditional crafts.