The launching ceremony of the Youth Crisis Care Committee for the futu…
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2022.02.10 19:42
The launching ceremony of the "Youth Crisis Care Committee," co-chairing Professor Kang Kyung sook of Wonkwang University's College of Education and Professor Kim Young-hwan of Pusan National University, was held in the first seminar room of the National Assembly Hall on the 8th.
The Youth Crisis Care Committee, run by 66 members, was organized to help students suffering from emotional and psychological pain, multicultural youth, North Korean defectors, end-of-care youth, and youths at risk of being alienated or in crisis in our society, including dyslexia.
According to the COVID-19 quarantine guidelines, only 18 members attended the launching ceremony, including Kang Deuk gu, the head of the National Sympathy Center, and Yoon Young deok, a member of the Education Committee who was usually interested in this field.
Among the recipients of the letter of appointment, Seong dae geun, CEO of The Korea Institute For Education & Evaluation Advancement, participated, and policy proposals for each division were drawn.
Policy proposals were made in various fields such as multicultural youth, children and adolescents in emotional psychological crisis in schools, children from facilities and consignment families, children from North Korean defectors, and out-of-school youth. In addition, amid the accelerating social disconnection of the underprivileged, an integrated platform with a preventive nature that can promote youth mental health with the village community was proposed in a digitized world.
In addition, there were opinions to establish a holistic care system in which the whole nation participates in order to restore community, heal, share, and establish a culture of communication in the long run.
Kang Deuk koo of the Democratic Party of Korea proposed to operate the Youth Crisis Care Committee as a permanent special committee, and Chairman Kang Kyung sook expressed his ambition, saying, "I need help through committee activities, but I want to contribute to opening a warmer future for youths in crisis."
The Youth Crisis Care Committee, run by 66 members, was organized to help students suffering from emotional and psychological pain, multicultural youth, North Korean defectors, end-of-care youth, and youths at risk of being alienated or in crisis in our society, including dyslexia.
According to the COVID-19 quarantine guidelines, only 18 members attended the launching ceremony, including Kang Deuk gu, the head of the National Sympathy Center, and Yoon Young deok, a member of the Education Committee who was usually interested in this field.
Among the recipients of the letter of appointment, Seong dae geun, CEO of The Korea Institute For Education & Evaluation Advancement, participated, and policy proposals for each division were drawn.
Policy proposals were made in various fields such as multicultural youth, children and adolescents in emotional psychological crisis in schools, children from facilities and consignment families, children from North Korean defectors, and out-of-school youth. In addition, amid the accelerating social disconnection of the underprivileged, an integrated platform with a preventive nature that can promote youth mental health with the village community was proposed in a digitized world.
In addition, there were opinions to establish a holistic care system in which the whole nation participates in order to restore community, heal, share, and establish a culture of communication in the long run.
Kang Deuk koo of the Democratic Party of Korea proposed to operate the Youth Crisis Care Committee as a permanent special committee, and Chairman Kang Kyung sook expressed his ambition, saying, "I need help through committee activities, but I want to contribute to opening a warmer future for youths in crisis."
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