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TRAINING
[knowledge for action]
PHILIPPINES
For Children not in School, Mobile Unit Comes to Them
In
the neighborhoods
of Paco and Juan Luna, in the Philippine capital, the Virlanie Foundation
began a brand-new
project in October: the Mobile Unit, a traveling school for children living
in the street, working in their immediate environment. Located in
Manila, this Filipino child protection NGO has been working for 15 years
to help children in the capital living in street locations. Desperate instability With
much experience and with a team of qualified and invested social workers,
the Virlanie Foundation continues to give these children a new sense of
hope and the possibility of a better future through the new Mobile Unit
project. The idea is simple: a panel van outfitted with equipment
worthy of a real classroom—blackboard, chalk, books, pencils, and
notebooks—circulates daily in the city’s poorest neighborhoods.
Using adapted and innovative pedagogic tools, two teachers with
state diplomas give bi-weekly lessons, in parks and public squares, to
more than one hundred children from ages 4 to 16.
Giving a smile to children living in the street The idea for Mobile Unit was born in this environment. The children are taught classic subjects like literacy, Tagalog [2], English, and math, but “alternative education” is also part of the curriculum. This includes lessons on health, security, children’s rights, moral values, and the dangers of sexual abuse. The program is completed by other educational activities such as physical education, artistic expression, and recreational excursions. These initiatives are also an opportunity to teach the essential facts of hygiene and nutrition. After class, the students wash their hands before eating a well-balanced meal, and to finish, they are all given toothbrushes.
Furthermore,
in addition to educational activities, a nurse is on hand to provide basic
healthcare. The children are vaccinated against Hepatitis B and
tuberculosis, and they all receive dental check-ups from a medical professional.
[1] Statistics from UNICEF and the International Labor Organization, 1999 [2] Official language spoken in the Philippines
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