In our class, we have a “Doraemon” – she is our homeroom teacher, Ms. Wu. She has a “golden brain” that seems to know everything; it’s just as magical as Doraemon’s pocket full of gadgets.
Ms. Wu is usually very kind, but when she gets angry, she can be quite strict. If the whole class listens carefully during her lessons, her face is covered with a smile, the pace of the lecture speeds up, and she moves more briskly. Sometimes she even rewards us with points that we can exchange for small gifts. However, if she catches someone talking during the lesson, she suddenly raises her voice and warns, “Pay attention!” If the students don’t hear or start chatting again, she makes them stand at the back of the classroom, frowns, and continues with the lesson. After class, she calls them to her office to make them stand as a punishment and copy the text we learned that day.
During morning reading time, she always asks the Chinese language representative, “Who didn’t bring their homework? Who didn’t do it?” Then she investigates the reasons one by one. Those who didn’t bring their homework have to call their parents, and those who didn’t do it get a slap on the hand as a penalty. They are required to submit the homework in the afternoon or the next day, and they lose one to five points from their total score. At that moment, her gaze is fierce, like that of a angry wild animal; if her eyes could kill, there probably wouldn’t be a single person left in the class!
Why is she called “Doraemon”? Because Ms. Wu seems to be capable of anything. No matter what question we ask, she can answer it effortlessly.
This is my comic teacher, Ms. Wu – she’s both smart and impressive, just like the real Doraemon; nothing seems to be too difficult for her!
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