Making friends and chatting online is very familiar to middle school students today. Foreigners meet to ask about the weather, and students meet to ask about QQ. Many students who chat have their own OICQ, which is fast in typing and can also talk in Kan Kan dialect. The content of the talk can be considered to be all-encompassing, knowing astronomy above and geography below; Others say everything about family life, study and middle school students. I not only gave my QQ a cute little head portrait, but also a nice name, such as "Hai", "Fengling", "Xiao Guai" and "Rukawa Kaede". Choosing a chat partner is also a science: boys like to find girls, and girls like to find boys; Older people like to find younger people, and younger people like to find older people. Chat with distant friends through the internet. It's really good, but we can't ignore it: we seldom see meaningful chat topics!
Playing games online is a hobby of many students. For example, the game of "killing four corrupt officials" not only makes everyone feel revenge, but also cultivates a sense of justice. But we can't ignore that some games not only waste time, but also poison our physical and mental health. A reporter saw in an Internet cafe that a primary school student was playing a CD-ROM game called Delta Special Forces. The content of the game was "The People's Air Force became an imaginary enemy and the China Air Force plane was shot down". When the reporter stopped to watch, he couldn't help burning with anger: a few minutes later, the boy shot down an "enemy plane"-a fighter plane with the logo of China Air Force impressively printed on it. Being in the excited state of the game for a long time can easily lead to impatience and affect normal work, study and rest. In the words of mental health experts, it is chronic suicide.
Many students are addicted to the internet, which we call "poisoning", which not only delays their studies, but also harms their physical and mental health. No wonder "parents are worried, teachers are worried and schools are worried".