Sunday 21 August 2016

parental lov

Parental Love – Tales of Love and Struggle
The love of parents towards their children is always unconditional and transcends all boundaries. And a parent's love for their child; no matter a test score, a life changing decision, an argument, or a strong belief, the amount of love that remains between this bond is seen as unchanging. Before we explore into the depths of this concept, I would like to put before you two stories. They are tales of both, love and hardships.

The Bright Side
In the month of June, we rescued three boys who were used by their parents to sell few small scale handicrafts and bangles in the capital city. Hailing from Mumbai, the family had no idea that Trivandrum is a 100% child labour & beggary free district.
For the past one and a half months, the children have been under our care and protection. But it has definitely not been easy for their parents. The latter have been knocking every door and running from pillar to post requesting the release of their children.  Even after our assurance that the children would be produced before CWC and transferred to their hometown; both the father and mother were relentless in asking for their children. According to them, without the boys, they had absolutely no reason to live.
We even received a phone call from a representative of a prominent nationalist political party in Mumbai enquiring about the details of the children and asking for their swift restoration. Last week, the formal procedures for the transfer were complete. All three of them, are now reunited safe and sound with their parents. 

The Dark Side
Two days back, CHILDLINE got a call from a desperate mother pleading help for her child Bobby (given name). We visited the home, conducted a home study and asked both the child and her mother to come down to our office the very day.  As per the mother’s statement, Bobby (9th Std) has developed a chronic severe addiction to both smoking and substance abuse. He’s irregular at school and loves to hang around all day with his friends. She’s a single mother as her husband abandoned the family, when the boy was five. Working at a pharmacy, she earns enough to take care of the family. The child’s addiction and related mood swings have been the center point of several disputes between the mother and child. Fed up with the arguments, she called up CHILDLINE informing the issue.
Upon further probing, we came to a sad conclusion. The mother did love her child, but was not ready to take up the responsibility. The boy has been deprived of his mother’s love and affection from a tender age. This has scarred the boy’s mind quite deeply. This also led to some mental health issues as well. And there began Bobby’s gradual fall into drugs. Being a single mother definitely has its fair share of fights and struggles to be won.
But the mother insisted us to take in the boy, provide him scholarship and get him away from drugs. But when we suggested an option of letting him stay home and go on with the process, she was hell bent against it. The mother believed that the boy was too hard to handle. She definitely loved and cared for her child, but the pressure was a bit too much.

Children in single-parent families
The effects of a single-parent home on a child’s behaviour can be far-reaching and impact several areas of life, including academic achievement and social behaviours.
·         Emotional effects of growing up in a single parent household may include feelings of abandonment, sadness, loneliness and difficulty socializing and connecting with others. 
·         Most single-parent households are run by mothers, and the absence of a father -- coupled with lower household income -- can increase the risk of children performing poorly in school. 
·         It is often difficult to contains growing male children especially y for a single mother.
Although Single parenting can have positive effects on children as well, but depends purely on other factors such as personality types and parenting techniques.

1000 days to get it right for every child
The early years are critical for optimal child development and the realisation of the child’s full potential as a loving, socially engaged, well-educated and trained adult, contributing to national social and economic life at their full potential.

Children in their first years of life are the most vulnerable to the long term damaging consequences of deprivation from love, affection and proper nutrition. Deprivation impacts upon child development through the inability to access needed goods and services (including healthcare); through disruption and stress of family life; and through social alienation.

Significance of Breastfeeding in bonding between mother and baby: - Breastfeeding promotes bonding between mother and baby. It stimulates the release of the hormone oxytocin in the mother's body. "It is now well established that oxytocin, as well which help in uterine contractions and milk ejection, promotes the development of maternal behaviour and also bonding between mother and offspring.

Recommendations
We believe that a positive, social and economically sustainable future for our country is only possible if:-
·         Children are placed at the centre of government policy and planning Child poverty is eradicated
·         Child maltreatment is reduced
·         Every child is given a good start in their early years
·         The status of children as well as the child-rearing roles of families, educational institutions, care homes, etc are increased.
Access to affordable early childhood education is a critical form of public investment leading to positive returns from good child outcomes. For vulnerable children this will be more effective when combined with support and education that enables parents to be involved and also up skill themselves.

According to Robert Firestone Ph.D. (The Human Experience) Parental love includes genuine expressions of warmth—a smile or friendly look that conveys empathy and good humour; physical affection; respectful, considerate treatment; tenderness; a willingness to be a real person with the child as opposed to acting the role of “mother” or “father"; and a sensitive attunement and responsiveness to the child.

To conclude, children whose parents have, for the most part, resolved their issues of trauma and loss from the past have a better chance. Regaining the feeling for themselves seemed to be the key element that enabled them to enjoy closer, more sensitively attuned interactions with their children and altered their child-rearing practices in a more loving, positive direction. Parenting is about being the best mother or father; one can be to his/her kids. Sometimes it's simple. Other times, it might not be what we anticipated or imagined. But not willing to take that risk is never an excuse.




     

Sunday 7 August 2016

dbtech

DB TECH - Skilling India is the Way Forward

Education was once limited to reading and memorising certain books and then giving exams. These tests the memorising power rather than skills. But now, it is slowly and gradually acquiring a new meaning. The responsibility of overall development of a naive kid to a responsible citizen lies in the education system. For the creamy layer, education may be for a social status while for the middle class it is a way to acquire a job and sustain a living. Hence, vocational training is important in our education system.

Although the field of education has made progress in the past ten years, this less regulated area of the education sector – vocational training— seems to have lost its importance. This has led to the widening gap between the supply and demand for skilled manpower across various industries. This shortage of skills has translated directly into unemployment among an increasing number of graduates who pass out every year and are forced to be re-trained in order to become marketable.

Vocational training is used to prepare for a certain trade or craft. Decades ago, it used to refer solely to fields such as welding and automotive service, but today it can range from hand trades to retail to tourism management. Vocational training is education only in the type of trade a person wants to pursue, forgoing traditional academics.

Don Bosco Tech – Skilling India Foundation
Don Bosco Tech is the network of over 300 Don Bosco skill training centres which provides employment-linked and market-driven short duration vocational courses to the economically and socially marginalized youth across India.

Set up in 2008 by the Salesians of Don Bosco, DB Tech addresses the issues of unemployment, unemployability and lack of skilled manpower with a market-based approach that is sensitive to the socio-economic needs of marginalized youth in the age group 18-35 years.

With funding from the Ministry of Rural Development, Government of India, under the Swarnajayanthi Gram Swarozgar Yojana (SGSY), DB Tech aims at empowering youth from below poverty line through the Bosco Academy for Skills and Employment (BASE) project. Under this project, over   46000 underprivileged youth from 24 states have been trained in market-driven course and placed in entry level opportunities in various sectors.

The Swarnajayanthi Gram Swarozgar Yojana (SGSY) of the Ministry of Rural Development, Govt of India, functions with the sole objective of providing employment linked, market-oriented training to youngsters from below poverty line sections of the country.

Don Bosco Veedu - Manacaud
On 22/02/2013, then Health and Family Welfare Minister, Shri V. S. Sivakumar inaugurated Don Bosco Veedu Skill Training Centre, the institute that offers free employment training and placement in Hospitality Management and Business Process Outsourcing to the unemployed youth, in collaboration with Accenture, one of leading global management consulting, technology services and outsourcing companies in the world.

The centre at Manacaud, managed by Don Bosco Society, offers three-month full time courses in Hospitality Management and Marketing, for 30 students in each batch, with placement offers from Taj Group of Hotels, Hilton Group and so on. The course is for students who have the minimum educational criteria of SSLC/10th Std pass. The age limit for admission is 18 - 35.

It is an extension of Don Bosco Nivas, shelter home at Thampanoor where the children on the street are rehabilitated with CHILDLINE and Missing Child programmes in collaboration with the Social Justice  Department.

Hailing from a backward fisherman community of Anchuthengu (Kollam), Pallavi (given name) did not have many options. Either do a computer class after +2 or get married. But she was determined to fight for her freedom. She found out about the BPO course at DB Tech Manacaud from a church announcement as part of our mobilisation in association with Trivandrum Social Service Society.

Last year Pallavi joined our centre. She brought in a few of her friends as well and soon the centre became sort of a second home for them. They enjoyed each and every activity presented to them and participated wholeheartedly. They were very concerned regarding their academics too. 

After completion of the course Pallavi was placed with Green Thoughts, a reputed BPO firm located in Trivandrum. Pallavi and her friends visit the centre once in a while and still cherish their wonderful time with us. They feel blessed to find out such an institution that has shaped their lives to new heights. Pallavi is just one among our hundred success stories.

Vision 20-22
Trivandrum has many youth who have dropped out of school and do not have a career due to lack of education or at times proper certificates. Trivandrum Don Bosco Veedu Society in collaboration with DB Tech Society and private companies have been providing short term free skill training programmes and have placed many youth into good jobs.

In association with other socially responsible institutions and individuals, Don Bosco Veedu has supported many children and youth to attain good education. Scholarships are given to students showing good academic record, belonging to financially backward families. They are granted after proper identification of the children. Many children have received support in the past several years, both monetary help and educational materials supply. Individual progress of the sponsored children is tracked and many have secured good jobs and have become financially and socially independent.

 Vocational training is a pillar of our education system but it needs to be revived. It is a great alternative to study what the market demands. It promotes education and can give a break from high dropout rate of students after high school.

Don Bosco Tech with a team of 800+ employees is presently working in 29 states with a target to impart skill based training to 2 million youngsters by 2022.