English, asked by Shirin5124, 1 year ago

Importance of holidays in school student life

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Answered by 1ŘãjÃřŸãN
0
Psychology says a human developemrnt depends on nature and nuture.
nature refers to the genetics and nuture refers to environment
HOLIDAYS plays really really an important role let me try to explain few factual and practical things.

holidays are most important part of a student's life that gives a student break from the academic stress and make the student to learn new things if holidays are utilised in a proper way other than academics there are lot of things to learn in life there are lot of places to to go and learn new things from the environment

for example a student can go out visiting place lets be more simple and practical a student in holiday visits his/her grandparents or any relative place which is new he/she will be able to learn new life skill from there often he/she may get more environmental knowledge

in an different example we can take a student who take membership of some sport activity he / she can learn new things by learning

a student can also be a part of some camp or adventure activity which helps students to focus on things other then acadamics

MOREOVER HOLIDAYS places a role of enlightening student as academics only can't make so much impact in learning going out exploring things in real will make a true knowledageble student in real prospectives

for this one have to use the holdays in a proper way

697 Views ·
I work in Japan, where students basically don’t get any time off from school. There are weekends of course, but junior and senior high students are busy with “club activities,” a term for totally not but actually are mandatory sports teams practices, band rehearsals, and other meetings. They do have a short summer vacation, but since it is in the middle of the school year, they have piles of homework they need to do (in elementary and junior high, usually things like math drills and other busy work). About the only break students get is over the new year, but students can have a lot of busywork homework then too.

Here’s what happens. The students have “vacation,” but still come to school, either to do homework or for these totally not mandatory clubs. They come to school early and go home late at night so they never have any down time. Japanese students are always complaining about being tired and hungry, which suggests a systematic lack of sleep and problems with healthy eating. There is also “ninenbyou,” or “secondyearitis.” This mostly just means puberty, but it refers to second year students in both junior and senior high being completely burned out from the gauntlet they have to run in school, causing them to hate school, act out, be disruptive in class, and do poorly in school. Grade 8 and 11 are the hump days of education, and many students are completely burned out when they get to third year (grades 9 and 12).

As we can see from Japan, not giving students (or even adults) time off results in burnout, education and work problems, and god knows what else (this is a very deep rabbit hole).

Outside of breaks from education or work, holidays are important reminders of cultural events or history. In the past, there were week long festivals all the time when people could unwind, perform religious activities, and celebrate this or that event. If you look at holidays like Family Day or Canada Day in Canada or the 4th of July in the US, there are often massive get togethers with both friends and the public. Families get some time together away from everything else, and friends young and old can spend time celebrating past accomplishments and mourning past loses together. Removing these erodes your culture and damages work-life balance because it removes a lot of history and downtime from people’s lives.

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Holidays are just not meant to give a break in routine work. The national holidays like the Republic Day, Independence Day, Gandhi Jayanthi Day, Christmas Day, Holi Day, Good Friday etc are occasions for the people of India to reminisce the significance of historical facts and the sacrifices symbolizing each holiday. That is, we maintain unity in diversity, mutual tolerance, meaningful secularism and peaceful coexistence through the observance of such days on a national level.

State and other holidays also offer ample chances for all to make use of them in a fruitful manner by trying to know more about their purpose and importance. Additionally, always do something that benefits or interests you rather than idle away the time at hand.

Students, who are relatively younger, will have an opportunity to learn more about their importance, apart, perhaps, from their curricular activities.
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