I saw on-line courses for children in different countries today. Australian schools offer robotic laboratories for children. Fencing training is offered in the Brazilian classroom. The Norwegian has Rocket Summer Camp. The Thai Summer Camp is a volunteer for caring elephants, growing food, carrying sugar cane, taking a walk with the elephant giving shower. Egypt's summer vacation recruits volunteers to write articles for Wikipedia in Arabic. Japan built special buildings to allow children to climb and exercise coordination. The Netherlands creates more green environments on campus, positively affecting children's mental memory. Denmark builds schools without walls, allowing children to learn in groups. The United States allows children to break the brain's secrets while playing MIT games. The UK has created an open book publishing. Finland has established a simulation city where children can learn to interpret different roles, such as owners, bank staff, doctors, post office staff and more. Spain tries to give children the idea of starting a business. The rural primary school in Uganda provides agriculture-related entrepreneurship education for poor families. There is a mermaid swimming school in the Philippines that teaches girls to swim and raise corals to protect the marine environment. The summer school in Romania trains children to do animation training directors. In addition to teaching children cooking, Singapore』s summer camps also let them know where food comes from and develop good eating habits. Tunisia's kindergarten teaches children to learn from music lessons, open up creativity, and improve their ability to distinguish emotions and express emotions. Germany has created a five-min study method to enable young children to learn effectively. There is no such thing as a special room in a children's hospital in the United States. It is also to relax the five senses, reduce the psychological pain caused by illness, and increase the mental capacity. The United States advocates personalized learning of big data, bringing about earth-shaking changes in human knowledge. Seven universities in China have created big data courses. Intelligent teaching in the United States, creating one-on-one communication and counseling. Canadian neuropsychologists develop video games for brain gymnastics to help children focus their attention, overcome impulsive behavior, and cure ADHD. American teachers find that brain science knowledge is very helpful for teaching practice. Sometimes children only need more oxygen to take a deep breath, which can improve the learning effect. Neuropsychologists at the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom found that neurological knowledge can make teaching practice more effective. The United States found that children's growth environment made them smarter, and high-income families heard more than 30 million words at the age of three than poor families. South Africa provides educational toys and related training for childcare in poor areas. A young kindergarten teacher in Thailand encourages children to create multimedia art. Until the eighth grade in Denmark, there are no standardized tests in schools, and teachers encourage students to develop individually. It is unfair for Uruguay to find standardized scores on scores. French educators believe that there should be different evaluation systems for assessing student performance. Romania provides training in life skills literacy skills for thousands of homeless children living in sewers. Mexico has a high school dropout rate. There is a bamboo school in Bali, Indonesia, which reflects green environmental protection. There is a boy boarding school in India that allows children to learn survival skills as early as possible. There is an elite technical school in the Alps at 1,200 meters above sea level. In addition to basic sciences, they also study space science. They aim to cultivate world leaders. The Steve Jobs School in the Netherlands only has iPads without books and learns at their own pace. The Grenoble Business School in France is a model for serious game applications worldwide. There is a primary school in Zambia, where children spend 20 minutes a day playing games to help children recognize letters and sounds and learn to read and spell. The State of Bhutan attaches importance to national happiness, and education attaches importance to the overall development of students. Germany educates children ability to be happy that is better than the exam. Australia teaches children positive psychology. Africa offers more mobile reading for children. Kenya offers children a cheap tablet education platform that includes video animated music games. Bangladesh's innovative interactive voice response system allows children to learn English at any time and anywhere. Norway built the school on board, floating more than 20 ports on four continents, and learning the knowledge of various disciplines. Swedish open-ended teaching makes children happy to learn anytime, anywhere. There is a life university in India, there is no fixed class schedule, only workshops and hands-on practice. The United States has a flipping teaching model that gives students the initiative to learn. Belgium also uses electronic textbooks to replace blackboards and books with iPads. 80% of the UK's emerging public schools are completed through real business projects. In Peru, children who are far away from rural areas go to school for two weeks to go home for two weeks. They are studying culture and starting agricultural projects at home. Ireland runs a youth entrepreneurship class where primary school students know about investing in profitable operations. Afghan India specializes in running schools for girls. Hungary specializes in helping young girls gain professional skills degrees and career opportunities in the computer field. Kenya has established low-cost chain-scale schools to benefit poor children. Egypt has allowed street children to return to formal education. German Mahler Chamber Music studio has opened a music event to let the hearing-impaired children of different countries feel the vibration of the cello or draw their own music experience with colored markers. Ethiopia organizes the horse team to allow children from remote and poor rural areas to go to school. France organizes workshops in public areas, open to community children, and brings informal learning to the Gypsy people through the art of game play. Kenya has a residential school for nomadic children. The Summer Mountain School in England is the freest in the world. Living conventions and autonomous learning replace the rules of traditional education and do not arrange any courses. A new high school teacher in Australia has to pass the student approval first. The University of Portugal scores teachers and invites students to participate. A primary school in Spain advocates slow education and respects the learning rhythm of every student. Japan once introduced slow education in public schools, but it was terminated because of strong opposition from students and teachers and parents. China has a modern private school that wears Han dynasty dress to practice calligraphy and narration. Canada allows children to meditate for 3 minutes before class to reduce stress.