The practice of wasting a grain of rice as a multiple-choice question is too grandiose, which gives me the feeling that it is a formalistic practice, so I think it is unreasonable. To stop waste on campus should be on the right track, mainly starting from children's ideological education and dining habits, rather than engaging in formalism. Topic background
In response to the call to save food, many schools have done their homework, or even gone too far. Some schools have performed too well and come up with a variety of ways to stop waste. For example, some schools ask students to recite dinner songs before punching in, while others ask children to save food in a more exaggerated way, such as making a multiple-choice question when wasting a grain of rice.
The Ministry of Education has issued an action plan for the education system to stop food and beverage waste and cultivate frugal habits. The Steering Committee of the Ministry of Education has explicitly requested that the unhealthy trend of formalism be firmly stopped to ensure that the work of stopping food and beverage waste on campus will not go astray. Stop campus waste on the right track
No matter how well the formalism face project is done, it can't be implemented. For example, there is no way to waste a grain of rice to make a multiple-choice question. Is there a special person to count the grains in each student's plate? Or if a child really has a bowl of rice left, who will give him these multiple-choice questions? Therefore, this is obviously an empty slogan that cannot be implemented, and it has no practical significance at all.
personally, I think the correct way should be to make substantial changes like many schools, for example, to get an understanding of children's eating habits, so that they can eat as much as they like, and pay by grams instead of portions. This method is worth promoting. Many times, the waste is not because children want to waste it, but because they really can't eat it. When people are full, it is also a waste to eat extra food and put it in their stomachs.
to sum up, to stop campus waste, we should start with students' dining habits, not engage in some formalism.