Nowadays, more and more children are suffering from myopia in primary and secondary schools, and parents are at a loss as to what to do. Some people insist on not wearing glasses because they heard that “you can’t take them off if you put them on”; some parents go to regular places to get glasses for their children in time, but often let them wear them when they read and write, and take them off when they walk. So, how to wear glasses is the right thing? First of all, you should go to a regular hospital and give your child a detailed dilated eye exam to distinguish between true and pseudomyopia. If it is pseudomyopia, the pupil dilatation is usually mild hyperopia, as long as it is not accompanied by large astigmatism, or the difference between the two eyes is large, corrected visual acuity can reach normal, usually can be ignored. But if you are really nearsighted, then parents should give your child the right myopic lenses. True myopia does not heal naturally because the eye becomes longer after true myopia and will not shorten on its own during growth and development. In addition, true myopia will not only affect learning if you don’t wear glasses because of blurred vision on the blackboard, but will also aggravate the development of myopia because of blurred vision at a distance. Myopia will only get deeper, but not because of wearing glasses. The development of myopia is related to the following factors: first, growth and development, the eyes are getting longer, and the body is getting taller; second, genetics, if both parents are highly myopic, the child is very likely to be myopic; third, too much time spent in close proximity to the eyes. From the above, we can see that growth and development and genetics are beyond our control, and all we can do is to control the amount of time our child spends in close proximity. The correct way to wear myopia glasses is to wear them for a long time, especially when looking at the blackboard or occasionally watching TV at home (be sure to look away, the farther the better). When reading below three hundred degrees can not wear, but sitting posture must be correct; more than three hundred degrees, especially highly myopic patients reading or writing homework must wear a full correction or slightly lower degree of the previous glasses, otherwise the child will lie very close to see the font on the book, can not maintain a correct sitting posture. Recent studies by ophthalmologists have shown that prolonged near-eye use can induce eye lengthening and lead to myopia, while prolonged long-distance blurring can also lead to myopia deepening. So, let your child wear nearsighted glasses, sit as far away as possible in the classroom, and let your child wear nearsighted glasses to see more at a distance. Playing more badminton, table tennis, and other sports with constant changes in distance and near vision to improve the regulation of the eye crystals have all been shown to be effective in controlling myopia development. Reading time should be controlled, such as three or five hours of reading and homework time, split up, with a break of 30 or 40 minutes and more distance viewing during the break.