Workshop discusses child health, behaviour


More than 500 parents, children, teachers discussed on child health, behaviors and intelligence at a workshop in Binh Dinh Province on May 23.

Representatives of Generali Vietnam hand over gift sets to children in Binh Dinh Province. — Photo by the company

More than 500 parents, children, and teachers discussed child health, behaviour and intelligence at a workshop in Binh Dinh Province on May 23.

The event, Sinh Con, Sinh Cha (Born Children, Born Parents), was jointly organised by Generali Vietnam in collaboration with the National Fund for Vietnamese Children (NFVC) and Binh Dinh Department of Labour, Invalids and Social Affairs.

The workshop facilitated discussion on three practical and useful parenting topics: making meals enjoyable and nutritious for the children; managing parenting anger to avoid hurting children; and making plans to spend quality time with children.

Participants also focused on the programme's three main content pillars of intelligence, behaviours and health of children aged 0-6 years.

At the event, Generali Vietnam's representatives handed 250 gift sets to all participating children, 250 programme booklets to their parents and caregivers, and 30 special in-cash and in-kind gift set to 30 local families in extreme hardship.

To date, Sinh Con, Sinh Cha programme has reached out to more than 4,200 parents, children, kindergarten teachers and staff via local workshops organised across Viet Nam and has garnered millions of views, interactions and positive comments via its sitcom series published on Generali Vietnam's official YouTube channel as well as wide-ranging parenting content on its Facebook fan page and the Sinh Con, Sinh Cha parenting community group.

"Sinh Con, Sinh Cha" is part of "The Human Safety Net", a Generali Group's global movement initiated in 2017.

The Human Safety Net's families programme supports parents in the first six years of their children's lives to lay the strongest possible foundations for their future, contributing to early childhood development in disadvantaged communities worldwide. — VNS

  • Share: