Youth Program Expands to Vietnam

Gender Equality Movement in Schools (GEMS) to be adopted in Da Nang province
Wed, 01/11/2012

An International Center for Research on Women (ICRW) program in India that encourages gender equality among youth through the public school system now is being adopted in Vietnam.

Da Nang province in central Vietnam will roll out a culturally relevant adaptation of ICRW’s Gender Equity Movement in Schools (GEMS) program over the next three years. ICRW experts will help develop training materials and classroom curriculum for teachers to implement the program as well as design a process to evaluate its impact among students.

GEMS’s expansion to Vietnam builds on a growing body of ICRW research and programs that focus on encouraging more equity between girls and boys. Experts hope that evidence gathered from the India and Vietnam programs can inform future policy discussions around education systems’ role in promoting non-violence and gender equality, as well as spark increased investments in such efforts targeting young people.

“Public education systems greatly influence attitudes among young people but are under-utilized in promoting gender-equitable norms,” explained Ravi Verma, director of ICRW’s Asia Regional Office in New Delhi.  “GEMS aims to change this.”

ICRW launched GEMS in 2008 in 30 Mumbai schools. Through interactive activities, the program champions equal relationships between girls and boys, dissects norms that define men's and women's roles in society, and addresses different forms of violence and how to intervene. GEMS students, who are 12 to 14 years old, also learn how and why their bodies change during puberty as well as talk about what makes for healthy relationships. 

In 2011, GEMS began an expansion into 250 additional schools in the Mumbai area. Among the materials facilitators use in the school setting is the GEMS Diary, which Verma said is currently being translated into Vietnamese for its new audience.

Gillian Gaynair is ICRW’s senior writer and editor.

1 Comments

Well, I hope that the program

Well, I hope that the program does rather well and that there are more lessons on gender equality in the near future. There are a lot of things that these countries need to learn and I hope it works.

  •  

    Gender equality is important if you want to do the right thing but it is especially important for children to learn about but it seems strange that some countries are just now catching on.

Related News

Earlier this month – just before International Women’s Day – the U.S. Congress reauthorized the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA). This in itself was a triumph. However, there was another victory won...
More »

ICRW was one of 30 civil society organizations selected to address the 57th Commission on the Status of Women at UN headquarters in New York last week. ICRW’s Asia Regional Director Ravi Verma travelled from his home base in New Delhi to make the following presentation on the importance of working with young men and boys to eradicate violence against women and girls:

More »

Natko Geres and Vojislav Arsic have a lot in common. Both 28, the two young men share a taste for popular urban culture. Some of their earliest memories are also the same. They were both six-years-old when war erupted in the former Yugoslavia. On opposing sides of the frontline in those dark days – Natko in Croatia and Vojislav in Serbia – the two have come together in the post-conflict era to fight a new battle.

More »
The Indian state of Haryana, a short drive from the capital New Delhi, is known for its social conservatism, a declining female population due to sex selection, and more recently, for a number of...
More »