Innervision
Tuesday, March 13, 2012
Thursday, February 23, 2012
The Hindu, 23-02-2012
Include life-skill training in syllabus
Syllabus for school children should include life-skill
training programmes and sex education, a workshop on children's issues
has pointed out.
Sadgamaya, a one-day national
workshop for teachers and parents on ‘Early identification and
remediation of learning, behavioural and emotional problems', was
organised by the Thrissur Clinical Psychological Forum in association
with the Innervision/Sloka Counselling and Learning Center.
According
to the workshop, recent studies revealed the rise of serious disorders
in children like attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, learning
disorders, childhood depression and substance abuse leading to poor
academic performance. Both teachers and parents were not equipped to
identify such problems faced by children, the speakers pointed out.
Researches also indicated that Kerala ranked the last in gender
equality. Alarming increase in crime against children such as abduction
and sex abuse was also reported. From 549 reported cases of child abuse
in 2008, the number has hiked to 698 by the half of 2011.
Among
the sexually-abused children, 55 per cent was boys and 45 per cent was
girls, which was an eye opener to the fact that boys too were unsafe.
The
workshop identified spread of consumerist culture, waning family
values, deteriorating family bonds, extreme importance given to academic
and material success, and misuse of social networking sites as major
reasons of the increasing crimes against children.
The
workshop suggested that more training programmes must be conducted for
teachers, parents and children for overcoming the current situation.
Parent support groups and peer counselling groups should be established
to rediscover and affirm the actual human relationships.
P. C. Chacko, MP, inaugurated the workshop. A handbook,
Nammude Kunjungal
(Our children), on early identification and management of various
problems affecting the learning, behaviour and emotional status of
children, was released by Therambil Ramakrishnan, MLA. More than 1200
parents, teachers and people from the educational sector participated in
the workshop.
The classes and interactive sessions were held by more than 35 national and international mental health professionals.
Originally published in The Hindu Daily.
Tuesday, February 21, 2012
Monday, February 20, 2012
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