Social TV
Health And Welfare

Topsy Empowers Children to Guard Against Sexual Abuse

Child abuse is a national crisis.

In research compiled by the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU), a research programme supported by the World Childhood and Oak Foundations, South Africa scored only 56.1 % for our effectiveness in dealing with child sexual abuse and exploitation.1

With this in mind, the Topsy Foundation (Topsy)* sent 20 practitioners from 10 Early Childhood Development (ECD) centres on a Protective Behaviour (PB) training course. Topsy works with ECD centres through initiatives that support children to unlock their full potential.

Topsy believes it is crucial to develop ECD facilitators who build children’s mental capacity, rather than being “babysitters”. Since the Protective Behaviours course, these ECD practitioners are now equipped with skills to empower children between two and six years old with personal-safety knowledge.

The Protective Behaviours Education training course, facilitated by Hayley Walker, chairperson of Protective Behaviours Southern Africa, takes a proactive, life-skills approach by teaching children to identify unsafe situations and to protect themselves from potential harm.

Dr. Ewa Skowronska, Executive Director at The Topsy Foundation, said, “ECD Practitioners and Topsy staff enjoyed the training so much. Hayley taught us not only the theory but a practical approach to protecting our children. We were surprised by how simple and effective the programme was and we can’t wait to implement it with every child in the communities we partner with.”

The Protective Behaviours course safe guards’ children’s right to feel safe all the time. Practitioners are taught to recognise a child’s unique concept of safety, teaching them to trust their intuitive feelings and developing strategies for self-protection.

This can heighten their ability to take protective action, trusting their skills, and seeking the support of others when needed. When practitioners gain these skills, they also learn to identify signs and symptoms of sexual abuse.

Practitioners empowered in this way become more likely to advocate for therapeutic programmes, and to lobby for improved laws, policies and practices.2

Teachers can encourage conversation with children and reiterate the message that there is nothing too awful or too small to discuss with them. They teach children to reinforce the themes of Protective Behaviours by:

  • Reviewing personal networks to ensure they are reliable;
  • Persisting with necessary action to feel safe again;
  • Protectively interrupting in unsafe or potentially unsafe situations;
  • Observing the language of safety with others.

“Our children are valuable and ECD is vital for them to be happy, healthy and capable,” concluded Skowronska. “The better prepared the practitioners and children are, the more successful we can be as a nation.”

References:

1.https://outoftheshadows.eiu.com/

2.http://www.ci.uct.ac.za/ci/projects/current/child-abuse-tracking-study

Related posts

New hope for Huntingtons disease

Mapule Mathe

World Hearing Day event brings hearing healthcare to Atteridgeville community

Mpofu Sthandile

Bata South Africa supports East Coast Radio’s Keep a Child Warm campaign

Mpofu Sthandile

New research shows SA employees care more than ever about CSI

Mpofu Sthandile

Coca-Cola beverages uplifts a local community

Mpofu Sthandile

The ARC Group makes a total of US$32 million climate insurance payouts to assist people affected by drought in Zimbabwe

Mpofu Sthandile

Leave a Comment

Translate »