He told them that nature is a mother, but she is a stern one. You must respect her, or she will take you back. The High School Guardians
By the time the students reached the 10th and 11th grades, the lessons turned to the heavy stuff: First Aid and Civil Defense. Smirnov’s hands, rough from years of work, showed them how to tie a tourniquet and how to breathe for someone who had stopped.
Every morning, Smirnov walked into his classroom with a weathered textbook under his arm. To the students in grades 5 through 11, that book—the "OBZh" (Life Safety) manual—was their survival bible. The Fifth Grade Spark programm po obzh 5 11 klassy smirnova
By the end of the term, his 5th graders weren't just students; they were the safest pedestrians in the province. The Middle School Trials
📍 The Smirnov OBZh program isn't just a curriculum; it’s a map for navigating a dangerous world with a calm heart. He told them that nature is a mother, but she is a stern one
One winter, a heavy blizzard trapped a bus full of students on the outskirts of town. While others panicked, the 11th graders—Smirnov’s elite—remembered Chapter 9. They: Kept the exhaust pipe clear. Stayed awake in shifts.
Once upon a time in a small Russian town, there was a teacher named Mr. Smirnov. He didn’t teach math or history; he taught the most important lesson of all: how to stay alive. Smirnov’s hands, rough from years of work, showed
It started with the 5th graders. They were young and full of energy. Smirnov didn't just read from the book; he turned the classroom into a miniature city. He taught them the "alphabet of the road." Red means stop.