Saturday, September 29, 2012

SOS Children’s Village-Sri Lanka

-By Development Network-


SOS Children's Village is situated in Kesbewa near Piliyandala town. The capital of Sri Lanka, Colombo is 20 kilometres north of the Village and Piliyandala town is four kilometres away.

The foundation stone for the Village was laid on April 1, 1981 and in November that year when the construction of the Village was completed partially, the first children brought home. The Village was formally dedicated to children of Sri Lanka on January 20, 1982 by founder father of SOS Children's Villages Hermann Gmeiner in presence of Ministers of Government of Sri Lanka, Ashoka Karunarathne and Dharmasena Attygalle. Ambassadors of Germany and Austria also graced the function. It was the first Children's Village in Sri Lanka. The Village was built on the land donated by the government.


SOS Children's Villages of Sri Lanka is a non-governmental social development organisation that has been active in the field of children's rights and committed to children's needs and concerns since 1981.

The childcare concept of SOS Children's Villages is alive in 132 countries and territories including Sri Lanka where our focus is on children without parental care and children of families in difficult circumstances. SOS Children's Villages of Sri Lanka is part of the umbrella organisation SOS Children's Villages International.

SOS Children's Villages focuses on family-based, long-term care of children who can no longer grow up with their biological families. At our SOS Children's Villages and SOS Youth Facilities they experience reliable relationships and love once again, meaning that they can recover from what they have experienced, which has often been traumatic. They grow up in a stable family environment, and are supported individually until they become independent young adults.

We are extending our work with families through family strengthening programmes by working with and for disadvantaged families to prevent crises that can in the worst case scenario lead to children being placed in out-of-home care. SOS Children's Villages offers various forms of support to strengthen and stabilise families as much as possible so that they can once again manage their lives independently and care for their children. Our family strengthening programmes are an important way of building on the families' and communities' resources, their ability to self-organise themselves and their responsibility for the well-being of the children.

Equal rights to education and training for children are another important area of our work. Pre-school care for children, schooling and vocational training are the key to the future. To ensure that children enjoy these basic rights, SOS Children's Villages has kindergartens, day-care centres, schools and vocational training centres.

SOS Children's Villages is concerned about all children, particularly those who have no parental care and those whose families have to live in difficult conditions. The basis and aim of our work is to respect, promote and stand up for children's rights. We want to use our socio-political work to make decision makers and the public aware of the problems that children face and to call for measures that will promote the well-being of children across the world. In parallel to our lobbying activities, we encourage children to actively take part in the decision-making processes that affect their lives and, if possible, to actually represent themselves.

Contact:


Mr. Laksiri Hettige

Village Director

SOS Children's Village – Pilyandala

Kesbewa, Pilyandala,

Sri Lanka

Tel : +94-011-2-703891, +94-011-2-702712

email: pilyandala@soscvsrilanka.or

Your sponsorship enables a child to grow up in an SOS family, receive the best possible education and become a responsible adult. Your support provides physical, material and more importantly emotional well-being of a child.

Sponsor a child to provide children with a happy childhood!

Through a child sponsorship, you will receive a season's greeting along with a photo of the child you sponsor and also the information of day to day life of the child every year.

Donate online with your credit card via our payment gateway or to the account below

Bank: Hatton National Bank, Piliyandala Branch

Account No: 038-01-000302-1

Contact person: Ms. Earline Barthelot

National Office

P.O. Box 5, Piliyandala, Sri Lanka

Tel: + 94-777 223 246, +94-11-270 2712

email: fund@soscvsrilanka.org

For the Leaflet with Application Form for sponsoring a child:  http://soscvsrilanka.org/images/donor-leaflet.jpg


-For More Articles and Information:  http://www.developmentnetwork.co.nr/



Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Employment Seeking-Administrator of Development Network



Dear  Human Resource Managers of Research and  Development Organizations,


 Currently I am seeking a career as junior consultant for Rural Development /Poverty Alleviation related projects.


My CV: http://www.scribd.com/doc/106626776/Kanakalingam-Sasikumar-CV


If there is an employment opportunity for me , kindly let me know know via my email address: saksi76@yahoo.com


Thank You.


With Regards,


K.Sasikumar

Administrator,

Development Network (http://www.developmentnetwork.co.nr/)

Friday, September 21, 2012

Use Meetings for Employee Development

-By Development Network-

Meetings are often considered the bane of employees' existence. Among the most common complaints: being forced to attend a meeting that has little or no value.

Through a more optimistic lens, however, meetings that are properly planned and executed can actually offer development opportunities for some employees. Here are some tips to use meetings as a development tool.

1. Assign a different staff employee to put together the agenda for each staff meeting.
This will require the person to gather information on reports to be made and issues to be discussed. It will also require the assigned employee to discuss priorities with the manager and allot time to each agenda item.

Development potential:
It gives that employee a broader perspective of the work of others; it helps further develop business acumen; and it adds meeting management competencies.

2. Assign a staff member to bring in and lead a learning activity.
This might be in the form of discussing a recent problem, circulating an article of interest (and the leading a discussion of it), suggesting a change in how the group does its work, or bringing in information on a competitor's product or service.

Development potential: Leading a discussion; listening skills; presentation skills; learning other perspectives and receiving feedback.

3. Rotate responsibility for facilitating each staff meeting among staff members.

Development potential:
Listening skills; meeting management skills; facilitation skills and conflict management skills.

4. Brainstorm the solution to a problem, challenge or opportunity.
Managers can opt to announce the topic during the meeting or inform employees of the topic ahead of time so they can think about alternatives before the brainstorming session.

Development potential:
Brainstorming skills; listening skills; influencing skills; developing synergy among staff members; critical and creative thinking skills.

5. Invite a guest speaker.
This could be a customer or a supplier who can address how the two groups can work together more easily and effectively.

Development potential:
Listening skills; critical and creative thinking skills; and problem analysis skills.

6. Notice who dominates discussions and who participates little, if at all.
This can help introverts to participate more and extroverts to limit their input. Not only will this result in more equal participation, but it will also model meeting management and facilitation skills for employees.

Development potential:
Meeting management skills; facilitation skills and leadership skills.

7. Be open to new ideas.
When a staff member suggests a change in how the group handles a procedure or process, and it's something that won't work or varies from what's in place, don't just reject it out of hand, but ask probing questions to help the employee develop the idea. It may be that a discussion of the idea may spark others to suggest improvements that will work.

Development potential:
Facilitation skills; critical and creative thinking skills; and conflict management skills.

8. Be creative.
Instead of following the usual agenda, take employees on a field trip to spark their thinking and creativity. This must be followed up, however, with discussions of what everyone saw and how to use new and different ideas and methods to improve the company's operations.

Development potential:
Creative and critical thinking skills.

9. Help employees see the larger context of their work.
Too often, employees are so focused on their own tasks that they lose sight of the larger context. By demonstrating how their work contributes to larger organizational goals, employees develop a more nuanced understanding of the business.

Development potential:
Business acumen and taking pride in one's work.

[About the Author: Daniel R. Tobin is a consultant, author, and speaker on corporate learning strategies and author of seven books, including Learn Your Way to Success].

-For More Articles and Information:  http://www.developmentnetwork.co.nr/