Approximately 75% of children with epilepsy are able to attend school normally. Children with co-occurring mental retardation or frequent uncontrolled seizures that affect others in class should not attend school or kindergarten. It is unreasonable for some local educational institutions to turn away children with epilepsy without asking questions whenever they hear of it. Parents should also be proactive and give their children the opportunity to be educated. Epilepsy does not mean mental retardation and is not incurable. The impressionist painter Van Gogh and the great Russian writer Tusreyevsky (author of “White Nights”) were both epileptic, and many scenes in “White Nights” are the author’s hallucinations depicting his seizures. This shows that epilepsy itself does not prevent them from achieving greatness, but rather it is unfair to deny these children the right to education by not allowing them to attend school or daycare. These people should not be discriminated against. Some schools and kindergartens are afraid that seizures will cause accidents. In fact, seizures are not that scary, as long as the teacher has a little common sense in first aid. Most seizures or fever convulsions are the body’s own protective function emergency play and automatically stop, generally as long as the patient’s body position flat, loosen the collar, keep the airway open, air circulation, the child’s head to the side can be, if 15 minutes still can not stop themselves, should be sent to the nearest hospital for rescue. Field treatment is very simple, teachers and other general public are easy and should master. In developed countries or regions, the average state civil servant, and the general public know the techniques of on-the-spot first aid treatment. If seizures are not well controlled, they should be treated before going to school. Those with real intellectual impairment should be sent to special schools or schools for the mentally retarded or paired.