In colleges and universities, boys compete for wool-making classes, while boys study knitting. What do girls study?

Girls can learn anything they want! Handicrafts such as wool are not exclusive to girls, but boys can also learn them. Moreover, the original intention of the school to offer this kind of manual course is only to let boys exercise their hands-on ability. Girls can start to learn Taekwondo and Wushu, why can't boys learn wool? This stereotype must be broken.

1. It is not uncommon for boys to knit. The school only allows boys to learn and improve their hands-on ability. In Xi 'an Normal University, there is a special course to teach students to make wool crafts. It is reported that this course has been held for about four years, and many students come to register every time. Even several students who have been reported for several years have no chance to come to class, so they can only come to class when there is no class. There are more than 70 students in this class at present. Although most of the students are girls, many boys have signed up.

For China people, knitting sweaters and trousers is something that mothers do. Dad will not only help, but it was a long time ago. I remember that a video of a foreign man knitting a sweater on an airplane was exposed, which was as fast as a housewife in China. This shows that men are not incapable of knitting, but just don't want to learn. Now schools can study systematically, and it is not surprising that interested boys register.

2. Besides boys knitting sweaters, what other stereotypes have appeared in life? Netizen: That's simply too much! Stereotype is actually people's fixed views and ideas about something, and they regard this view as a fixed description of it. The most direct stereotype is that people all over the world think that Northeasters are the most generous, Shanghainese are the most snobbish and Beijingers are the most generous. The other is that for ethnic minorities, Mongolians live in yurts and graze sheep and cattle on the prairie all day. Some people think that Xinjiang people can skewer and even break their necks. These are stereotypes in daily life.

For ordinary people, the stereotype in life is that housework is a woman's business, and it is good for men to make money outside. These stereotypes are actually wrong, but they cannot be reversed by words alone. This phenomenon can only be changed by daily dribs and drabs. Whether in action or in language, we need to practice the theory of moistening things silently, which may change this view.

Finally, don't forget that boys who knit their girlfriends' necks appear in the news every year, which means that boys have already started knitting wool, and the school just moved it to the table.