Careful attitude towards time. Free time and health. Reinforcing the material covered

The aphorisms published below about time will enable the reader to understand the essence of time and how to use it. After all, time is an important detail in our lives. There is no time as such in eternity. Essentially it is our perception. An hour of happiness seems like a minute, a minute of misfortune seems like an hour. Differences in the speed of time in childhood and old age.

And in a critical situation - in a state of passion, in general, such a slowdown occurs that everything around begins to move slowly. From this it follows that one can also learn to control its flow. However, be that as it may, everything in the manifested universe is subject to time, it changes constantly, every moment, just like us. The body ages, although everyone has it differently and for different lengths, again at the same time.

After all, the moment of perception immediately becomes the past, time, as it were, constantly flows and under its influence everything changes. And the future is approaching, coming, and few people are facing this future. People, for the most part, best case scenario turn their backs on future events. A person who is in the moment of complete perception can face life. Keeping up with the times, so to speak! After all, walking backwards is not comfortable both physiologically and internally. And the person will naturally turn around. Time is sacred and more deeply studied for all true schools leading to the evolution of awareness. Every perception of the past, present and future is the result of attunement. Any waste of time should be unthinkable; to do this means to miss the opportunity that arises to be in the universal, every second creation of the world, which just as it once began and continues to be created in this moment, which how can you measure? This is a broader topic.

These aphorisms, as well as sayings on other topics in our lives, contain deep meaning and wisdom. Explanation of the laws and patterns of life, in all its breadth. You will learn the essence of time and its patterns, for wise use...

♦ Truly great is the man who has managed to master his time!

Hesiod

♦ Time does not like to be wasted.

Henry Ford

♦ When a person has a lot of free time, he will achieve little.

Xunzi

♦ A person who decides to waste even one hour of his time has not yet matured enough to understand the full value of life.

Darwin Ch.

♦ A person cannot dispose of anything in to a greater extent than time.

Ludwig Andreas von Feuerbach

Average person He is preoccupied with how to kill time, but a talented person strives to use it.

Arthur Schopenhauer

♦ The wisest person is the one who is most annoyed by the loss of time.

Dante Alighieri

♦ Time is an honest man.

Beaumarchais P.

♦ Time is the wisest thing, for it reveals everything.

Thales

♦ Alas, time does not pass, we pass.

Pierre de Ronsard

♦ Wise management of time is the basis for activity.

Komensky Ya.

♦ The point is not to run fast, but to run out early.

Francois Rabelais

About the difference in the perception of time...

♦ The days are so long and the years are so short!

Alphonse Daudet

♦ ...The happy count time in minutes, while for the unhappy it lasts for months.

Cooper F.

♦ Time is such an uncertain thing. For some it seems very long. For others it’s the opposite.

Agatha Christie

♦ Time is the mother and nurse of all good things.

Shakespeare W.

♦ To choose time means to save time, and what is done untimely is done in vain.

Francis Bacon

♦ Moments always follow each other.

♦ Youth flies quickly: seize the passing time. The past day is always better than the present day.

Ovid

♦ Use the current tense so that in old age you don’t reproach yourself for wasting your youth.

Boccaccio Giovanni

♦ Time is the most precious of all resources.

Theophrastus

♦ Good use of time makes time even more precious.

Jean-Jacques Rousseau

♦ He who does not know the value of time is not born for glory.

Luc de Clapier Vauvenargues

♦ If time is the most precious thing, then wasting time is the biggest waste.

Benjamin Franklin

♦ There is time for everything: your time for conversation, your time for peace.

Homer

♦ In life, every minute is fraught with miracle and eternal youth.

Camus A.

♦ With every new minute a new life begins for us.

Jerome Klapka Jerome

♦ Time is the enemy of people who love a quiet life...

Maxim Gorky

Time goes by For different persons various.

Shakespeare W.

♦ Very few people know how to properly manage their wealth, even fewer who know how to manage their time, and of these two things, the last is the most important.

Chesterfield F.

♦ How scary it is to feel that the passage of time is taking away everything you owned.

Pascal Blaise

♦ The proximity of the beloved shortens time.

Johann Wolfgang Goethe

♦ Time heals lovesickness.

Ovid

♦ Time will always respect and support what is strong, but will turn into dust what is fragile.

Anatole France

♦ Time is the doctor of all inevitable evils.

Menander

♦ Time is endless movement, without a single moment of rest - and it cannot be conceived otherwise.

Tolstoy L. N.

♦ The duration of time is determined by our perception. The dimensions of space are determined by our consciousness. Therefore, if the spirit is calm, one day will be compared to a thousand centuries, and if one’s thoughts are broad, a tiny hut will contain the whole world.

Hong Zichen

♦ All savings ultimately come down to saving time.

Marks K.

♦ You cannot kill time without harming eternity!

Henry David Thoreau

♦ A millennium compared to eternity is a shorter period than the blink of an eye compared to the movement of the slowest celestial body, rotating in infinite space.

Dante Alighieri

♦ A thousand years are barely enough to create a state; one hour is enough for it to disintegrate into dust.

George Gordon Byron

♦ Those who are not in a hurry succeed everywhere.

Mikhail Bulgakov

♦ What is time? If no one asks me about it, I know what time is; if I wanted to explain to the questioner - no, I don’t know.

Aurelius Augustine

♦ Time is the best teacher, but, unfortunately, it kills its students.

Hector Berlioz

♦ Time even crumbles a stone.

Sergey Yesenin

♦ The loss of time is heaviest for those who know more.

Johann Wolfgang Goethe

♦ Everything that is hidden now will once be revealed by time.

Quintus Horace Flaccus

♦ Time moves slowly when you are following it... It feels being watched. But it takes advantage of our absent-mindedness. It is even possible that there are two times: the one we follow and the one that transforms us.

Camus A.

♦ Never be afraid of moments - this is how the voice of eternity sings.

Rabindranath Tagore

♦ Of all critics, the greatest, the most brilliant, the most infallible is time.

Belinsky V. G.

♦ He who is attacked by his time is not yet sufficiently ahead of it or behind him.

Nietzsche F.

♦ No matter how fast time flies, it moves extremely slowly for those who only observe its movement.

Samuel Johnson

♦ Everything comes in due time for those who know how to wait.

Balzac O.

♦ Time is a mirage, it contracts in moments of happiness and stretches in hours of suffering.

Aldington R.

♦ Keep track of every day, take into account every minute spent! Time is the only thing where stinginess is commendable.

Mann T.

♦ Whoever wins time wins everything in the end.

Moliere

♦ A rainbow that is visible for a quarter of an hour is no longer looked at.

Johann Wolfgang Goethe

♦ Every lost moment is a lost cause, a lost benefit.

Chesterfield F.

♦ The time is quite long for the one who uses it; whoever works and who thinks expands its limits.

Voltaire

♦ ... time is extensible. It depends on what kind of content you fill it with.

Samuel Marshak

♦ Eternity is the time when ideals exist.

Jean Paul

♦ All-consuming time.

Ovid

♦ There is nothing longer than time, since it is the measure of eternity; there is nothing shorter than it, since it is missing for all our endeavors... All people neglect it, everyone regrets its loss.

Voltaire

♦ Time is such a fleeting thing that it is impossible to keep up with it.

Ali Absheroni

♦ Time is like money: don't waste it and you'll have plenty of it.

Gaston Levis

Phrases arranged in rhyme...

♦ Just as waters flow quickly into the sea, so days and years flow into eternity.

Derzhavin G. R.

♦ Time is a horse, and you are a rider; run bravely in the wind.
Time is a sword; Become a tough stick to win the game.

Rudaki

♦ Patience and time give more than strength or passion.

Lafontaine

♦ Time, like the tide, never waits.

Walter Scott

♦ The two greatest tyrants on earth: chance and time.

Herder

♦ Time is running out, and we are silently growing old over the years, the days are running away, and it is impossible for us to hold them back.

Ovid

♦ Time is the truest ally of perseverance.

Johann Wolfgang Goethe

♦ The power of time is a law worthy of respect.

Publius

♦ Neither the river nor the fleeting time can stop.

Ovid

♦ If you want to have little time, do nothing.

Chekhov A.P.

♦ Time erases error and polishes truth.

Gaston Levis

♦ Most people work most of the time to live, and the little free time they have left is so disturbing to them that they try in every possible way to get rid of it.

Johann Wolfgang Goethe

And then came whole paragraphs describing the time...

♦ Take your time to live. There is a time for everything - and everything will be a joy for you. For many, life is too long because happiness is too short: they missed joy early, did not enjoy it enough, then they would like to return it, but they have gone far from it. They rush through life on postal trains, adding their own haste to the usual passage of time; one day they are ready to swallow something that they cannot digest in their entire life; they live their joys on credit, devour them for years to come, hurry and hurry - and squander everything. Even in knowledge you need to know the measure, not to gain knowledge that is not worth knowing. We have been given more days than blessed hours. Enjoy slowly, but act quickly. The deeds are completed - good; the joys are over - bad.

Second expression...

♦ A person who knows how to wait. He must have both great courage and considerable patience. Never rush or get excited. Learn to dominate yourself, then you will dominate others. You have to go to a favorable opportunity long ways time. While you hesitate wisely, future successes grow, secret plans mature. You will go further with the crutch of time than with the chained club of Hercules. God Himself punishes not with a club, but with a sword. It is wisely said: “Time and I are against any enemy.” Fortune itself rewards patience with its gifts.

Gracian y Morales

Similar...

Social exchange...

Class hour on the topic "The price of a minute"

Target: Expanding students' horizons of the importance of time in life;

Formation of assessment and self-esteem of time,

Developing a sense of time and respect for time.

Board design:

  • “Time is precious, time is plentiful and time is short”
  • “Time is more valuable than money”

Progress of the lesson

Riddles

It has no legs and no wings,
He flies fast, you won't catch him.

Answer: Time

* * *

What cannot be returned?

Answer: Time

* * *

Yesterday it was, today it is and tomorrow it will be.

Answer: Time

* * *

Without measuring, you won't know
But without knowing, you feel
And sometimes you kill.

Answer: Time

Leading (teacher). Today we will talk about time. We will learn what time is, why it is needed and how to use it correctly, and also talk about the history of the creation of watches, their types and operating principles.

  • Make up a proverb:
  • “Know the value of minutes, the count of seconds”
  • “If you miss a minute, you lose an hour”
  • “Time is more valuable than money”
  • “If you fall behind by an hour, you won’t catch up in a day”

Presentation

  • 1st student . Time is precious to man, and he determines time by the clock. At different times appearance hours was different. There are some expressions associated with the workings of clocks. For example, they say: “A lot of water has passed under the bridge since then,” and we understand that a lot of time has passed. And they say this because in ancient times there were water clocks. They were arranged in the form of two communicating vessels. Time was recognized by how much water flowed from one vessel to another.
  • An hourglass was built like a water clock, where sand was poured from the upper vessel into the lower one. In Rus', these watches were called flasks, as they were made of glass. They were widely used on ancient ships. The sailor on duty at this clock struck the bell every half hour and announced the number of bells - “struck the bells.” Today there are hourglasses designed for 1, 3, 5... minutes.
  • Later, mechanical watches appeared. They are different for us. Time is sometimes determined by the striking of the clock. This is where the expression “beaten hour” comes from. The word “broken” indicates that a whole hour has indeed passed, since the striking of the clock told us so.
  • 2nd student. On October 2, 1918, the main clock of our country began to speak - the Kremlin chimes. Every hour the chime of this clock sounds solemnly and majestically. People all over the world listen to him. And there is no person who does not know the melodic and exciting chimes located on the Spasskaya Tower of the Kremlin.
  • Listening to a recording of the chimes.
  • 3rd student . The work of the clock does not stop for a second, time flows continuously. Place your palms on your chest. You feel your heart beating and working. It works all our lives without stopping, it works and drives the blood so that each of us is ready to do something useful every minute. Let's sit silently for a minute. See how long a minute is! What do they do in our country in a minute?
  • 4th student.
  • It looks like an ordinary box
  • But he is a real wizard.
  • The whole Universe lives in it,
  • At least it's an ordinary thing.
  • He will tell you a hundred stories,
  • He will invite you to the circus for an hour,
  • He will show you films -
  • Each of you has. (TV.)
  • In one minute, factories produce 13 televisions.
  • 5th student.
  • Admire, look!
  • North Pole inside,
  • Snow and ice sparkle there,
  • Winter itself lives there.
  • Forever to us this winter
  • Brought from the store. (Fridge.)
  • The refrigerator is a human assistant. It saves food, saves medicine, and therefore saves time. Every minute, 11 new refrigerators are produced in the country.
  • 1st student.
  • So that I can take you
  • I don't need oats
  • Feed me gasoline
  • Give me some rubber for my hooves,
  • And, raising a whirlwind of dust,
  • Will run... (car)
  • Our factories produce different vehicles - trucks, cars, large, small. Almost four new cars roll off the production lines every minute.
  • 2nd student.
  • Do you want to sail the oceans?
  • Descend into the depths
  • Visit many countries
  • And rush to the moon,
  • Be a brave explorer
  • In the thickets of centuries -
  • All edges are open to you
  • On the pages of books.
  • The book is printed so quickly that you have to count by seconds. Every second, 45 copies of books are published in our country, and 7-8 of them are intended for you guys. How many books do you publish per minute?
  • Let's count: 7 x 60 = 420 (books just for you guys), and in total:
  • 45 x 60 = 2700 (books).
  • 2700 is a library!
  • 3rd student. Every minute, 1,560 pairs of shoes leave the assembly lines of our country. What a moment!
  • 4th student . What about hours? Happy alarm clocks, important ones wall clock, little tame ones and all the others? Factories make 77 pieces every minute. In 1 minute, industrial products worth 1.4 million rubles are produced. The loss of one minute of working time is equal to the loss of the results of a day's work of 200 thousand people.
  • And if suddenly all the plants and factories in the country stopped working for one minute, the state would lose 50 million rubles. That's how much a minute costs.
  • 5th student . What can we do in a minute?
  • There is a competition, such as reading (words per minute), solving examples (students write only answers), etc.

Guys, do you know what a minute is?

Student: this is 1/60 of an hour. What can you do in one minute? At first glance it seems nothing. But time is made up of these minutes. Let's take our class. There are 12 students in the class. If everyone takes one minute with their pranks, then there will be 28 minutes left to gain knowledge. Here's one minute for you.

Teacher: Guys, you need to develop a sense of time within yourself, learning to live clockwise. Is it worth working? Maybe you can live without a watch. Let's try to imagine. what would happen to each of us if all the clocks disappeared.

Student: We came to school. It's time for lessons to begin, but not even half the students are in the class. There is no teacher either, he just left the apartment.

Student: I returned home after school. Oh, how hungry I am, and my mother has only just started cooking.

Student: we came to the cinema, and half of the film was already shown.

Teacher: This is what a mess it would be if people didn’t look at their watches and gradually develop a sense of time. Or you can have a watch and not value time.

Student:

With a watch, friendship is good, work, rest.
Do your homework slowly, and don’t forget your books.

Teacher: So that in the evening, when you go to bed, when the due date comes, you can confidently say - it was a good day!

Lesson summary.

What is the topic of our lesson?

What proverbs do you remember?

What needs to be done to have a sense of time?

Preview:

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Slide captions:

CLASS HOUR “The Price of a Minute” Varakosova L.P. 4th grade

OBJECTIVES: 1. Broadening the horizons of students. 2. Fostering respect for time.

HISTORY OF THE CLOCK. What watches do you know?

WATER CLOCK

HOURGLASS

HOURGLASS

HOURGLASSES – SEA GLASSES

MECHANICAL WATCH

PRICE OF A MINUTE. It looks like an ordinary box, But it’s a real wizard, The whole Universe lives in it, Even though it’s an ordinary thing. He will tell you a hundred stories, he will invite you to the circus for an hour, he will show you movies - each of you has one.

TV. In one minute, factories produce 13 televisions.

SECOND RIDDLE Admire, look! The North Pole is inside, Snow and ice sparkle there, Winter itself lives there. Forever brought to us this winter from the store.

FRIDGE. Every minute, 11 new refrigerators are produced in the country.

THIRD RIDDLE For me to take you, I don’t need oats, Feed me gasoline, Give me rubber for my hooves, And, raising a whirlwind of dust, He will run...

AUTOMOBILE. Almost four new cars roll off the production lines every minute.

Do you want to sail across the oceans, Descend into the depths, Visit many countries And rush to the moon, Be a brave explorer In the thickets of centuries - All edges are open to you On the pages of books.

PRICE OF A MINUTE.

The book is printed so quickly that you have to count by seconds. Every second, 45 copies of books are published in our country, and 7–8 of them are intended for you guys. How many books do you publish per minute? Let's count: 7 × 60 = 420 (books just for you guys), and in total: 45 × 60 = 2700 (books). 2700 is a library!

PRICE OF A MINUTE. . Every minute, 1,560 pairs of shoes leave the assembly lines of our country. What a moment!

PRICE OF A MINUTE. The factories produce 77 pieces of funny alarm clocks, important wall clocks, small hand clocks and all others every minute.

PRICE OF A MINUTE. Solve the examples: 1) 2x4= 2) 3x15= 3) 21:3 = 4) (3+7)x1= 5) 5:1+8= 6) (7 - 6)x10= 7) 4x4 – 3x4= 8 ) 3x4 – 12= 9) 28:7x9=

The minute is flying by. The minute is short. But in a minute you can find a star, a beetle, a solution to a problem... And a rare mineral that no one has yet discovered. In a minute the Rockets take off from the Earth. But so that they could fly into deep space - Scientists devoted dozens of years to work, And since childhood, astronauts Dreamed of flight. Even if the minute is short, Let it rush very quickly! A big, bold dream It can fit in! N. Yurkova

TIPS: 1. Organize your day. 2. Go to bed early and get up early. 3. Do exercises in the morning. 4. Don’t study your lessons immediately when you come home from school, but after an hour or two. 5. After school, take a rest, but it’s better to be active and fresh air. 6. Do your homework during the day. 7. Don’t study late in the evening, as your brain is already tired. 8. Do your homework first, whatever is more difficult. 9. Attend a section or circle. 10. Help your parents with housework.


Days come to us like friends in disguise, bringing priceless gifts from an unknown hand; but if we do not use their offerings, they silently leave and never return. Each subsequent morning brings us more and more new gifts, but if we have not been able to use those that were brought yesterday and the third day, we become less and less able to use them, until, finally, the ability to appreciate them and use them disappears completely.

Time is the raw material from which we can make whatever we want.

The very hours you waste carelessly could, if put to good use, could ensure your success. What magnificent monuments would be created by young men in unfavorable conditions, in such wasted periods of time, which are completely unappreciated by many of us?!

Michael Faraday at first could engage in physical experiments only in the free hours he had left from his bookbinding craft. Humphry Davy gained fame by studying physics in his free moments in the attic of the apothecary shop where he worked. “There is no business or occupation,” says Uitenbach, “that would not enable a man to devote some time every day to the scientific pursuits of his youth.”

“The plea for lack of time to complete our education,” says Matthew Arnold, “will immediately prove unfounded as soon as we seriously begin to examine our allocation of time.” “As I have observed,” says Burke, “indolence fills a man’s time much more, and allows him less to be his master, than any other occupation.”

What kind of person is so busy that he does not have one hour every day to supplement his education? Meanwhile, what miracles would be performed in “one hour every day”!

One hour daily taken away from an empty pastime and used usefully, it would give a person even with mediocre abilities the opportunity to completely master any branch of science and would make an ignorant person educated after a few years. In one hour you can read twenty pages carefully, which will amount to over seven thousand pages or seventeen large volumes per year. "One hour a day":

    in twelve years will more than equal the time devoted to study during a four-year course at the university;

    can make all the difference between mere existence and a useful, happy life;

    can and did make an unknown person famous, useful, a benefactor of humanity.

Now imagine the great opportunity that lies in the two, four, or even six hours a day wasted uselessly by young people of both sexes in the restless pursuit of amusement and amusement!

Many great men have built their fame by taking advantage of periods of time that most people waste completely aimlessly:

    Harriet Beecher Stowe wrote my famous book"Uncle Tom's Cabin" in between numerous chores;

    Longfellow translated "Hell" in bursts of ten minutes a day while his coffee was brewing, and continued to work like this for several years until the end of the work;

    Hugo Miller, working diligently as a mason, he found time to read scientific books and write down the information he discovered on the stone blocks with which he had to deal;

    Berne wrote many of his the best poems while working on a farm;

    Lincoln studied law in his free hours, when he was engaged in land surveying, and passed the initial stages without any help while guarding a warehouse;

    John Stuart Mill wrote a significant part of his most famous works while serving as a clerk for the East India Company;

    Charles Frost a famous shoemaker from Vermont, decided to devote one hour a day to scientific studies and as a result became one of the most outstanding mathematicians in the United States, acquiring, in addition, an enviable reputation in other fields of knowledge.

Great people have always been very economical in terms of time:

    Cicero said: “The time that others devote to spectacles and entertainment, or even mental and bodily peace, I devote to the study of philosophy”;

    days Alexander Humboldt they were so busy with various things that he studied science at night or early in the morning, when others were still sleeping;

    Gladstone He constantly carried a book in his pocket so that some unforeseen free moment would not be wasted in vain.

What a reproach this life is for so many young people of both sexes who waste whole months and even years in vain!

Time is money. Of course, we shouldn’t be too stingy with it, but we shouldn’t waste hours, just as we shouldn’t throw away money. It has been well said that lost wealth can be regained by activity and frugality, lost knowledge by study, lost health by abstinent life and reading; but lost time is gone forever. With the loss of an hour - no matter how bad it is in itself - the worst thing is not the loss of time itself, but the waste of vitality and character in a careless life. As a result of laziness, the nerves seem to “rust”.

Every day there is a small life, and our whole life is just a repeated day.

A person must always remember that the permanent abode of his soul is the upper world. It is known that souls were created at the beginning of the creation of the world (Rashi says this in his commentary to the treatise Yevamot, 53, on the words: “Body ...”; this is written in the Midrash) and their home is at the Throne of Divine Glory. There is the permanent residence of all the souls of Israel, but they come here only to live a little in the world of Action, acquiring the merit of studying the Torah and doing good deeds, and then ascending again to G‑d.

Imagine: a certain man went to a distant country to a huge fair to sell or buy expensive goods that he own country can't get it. And at that very moment, when the deal is almost concluded, someone comes up to him and says: “Look what newspapers I have!

Read them - you will get such pleasure! This man will drive him away and shout to him: “Go away! While you're distracting me, I'm losing money every second! Don’t you know that I traveled many hundreds of miles, reached a foreign country, and all just to be at this grandiose fair and earn money from it to feed my family for the whole year! And you’re asking me to waste my time on these stupid newspapers!”

What this parable is about is obvious. The permanent place of residence of the soul is in high world, it is there that her eternal home is, according to the word of Scripture: “The stranger (...) is a temporary resident, like all my fathers.” And only so that the soul is not forced to eat the unearned “bread of shame”, they cast it here, to earth, to short time(so in this world she is in the position of a stranger in a foreign land), so that she acquires the merit of studying the Torah and doing good deeds. And when she finds herself here on earth, the evil inclination constantly tempts her to spend time reading all sorts of newspapers and similar pastimes. And you need to drive away the evil inclination and say to it: “Don’t you know that I came down here, having covered many hundreds of thousands of miles from my place of residence, just for a little while and only then to acquire a product that should provide me with eternal bliss? And you distract me with all sorts of nonsense! How will I answer the One who sent me if I return home empty-handed?”

This will help to understand what the Scripture said about Moses, our teacher, may he rest in peace: And he called the name of one (his son) Gershom, for he said: “I was a stranger in a strange land”; and Eliezer gave the name to the other, for (he said): “ God of the father mine - to help me." After all, the verse itself is incomprehensible: Moshe should have named his first son Eliezer in memory of the miracle! And besides, why remind us that “I was an alien...”? And our words make the verse simply delightful: Moses, our teacher, came to Yitro, but he had not yet accepted Judaism, and his deeds did not become righteous (we know this, since in the future the Scripture will quote the words of Yitro: “Now I have learned, that G‑d is greater than all idols,” which means that before Moshe, our teacher, may peace be upon him, explained this to him, he did not know this!). It turns out that Moshe, our teacher, was afraid that he would learn to do the same as Yitro, so he named his son Gershom, saying: “For I was a stranger...” He wanted to always have a reminder before his eyes that he in this world only in the position of a stranger in a foreign country, who will then have to return to his roots, to the abode of the eternal: after all, it is there that the place of “his permanent residence, like all his fathers,” is located. (The Scripture says: “I am a stranger on earth, a temporary resident, like all my fathers.”) Moshe, our teacher, knew that this reminder would help him be very attentive to all his affairs.