The Women's Federation of Tongliang, a district in Southwest China's Chongqing Municipality, recently organized a public lecture to further promote the implementation of the family education promotion law, raise the awareness and capacity building of parents in fulfilling guardianship, and help the public foster harmonious and equal parent-child ties.
Themed "Performing Parental Obligations Lawfully and Striving to Be Smart Parents," the lecture underscored parents' perception over their guardianship and featured law popularization and parent-child interactive activities in a bid to help parents better fulfill their responsibilities and duties and enhance minors' self-protection awareness as well as their sense of participation in family affairs.
The thematic gathering opened with a lively ice-breaking quiz, in which attending children enthusiastically responded to questions associated with the law on the protection of minors.
Later, the lecture gave an in-depth interpretation of key specifications on parental obligations in the family education promotion law, made analyses of the absence of inadequate guardianship and relevant consequences on the basis of typical cases. During a special session, kids were encouraged to express their feelings to their parents so that parents could reflect their education approaches.
In a "mini-court" for family affairs, several children and their parents simulated common scenes of domestic conflicts and worked out feasible solutions under professional guidance, incorporating legal knowledge into daily life.
Moreover, the gathering featured a session in which parents were invited to hold exchanges over useful and effective approaches for the fulfillment of parental obligations and the improvement of parent-child relations.
The in-depth integration between law education and parent-child relationship in the lecture reinforced parents' perception of their guardianship, bolstered their lawful childbearing competence and deepened the understanding and mutual trust between parents and minors.
(Source: China Women's News/Translated by Women of China)
Editor: Lei Yang