• Country: India
  • Date: 2018-05-21

First of all i thank your sponsors and your team for helping us through such competition and online marketing. Yes I am glad that if you recognise me as a winner .I feel happy as i am doing these job so that i can help poor people who cannot afford their lifestyle. Due this lack in education given to poor children. I wanna help those children by giving them this car. I am happy if i take ride with those children who can afford them to sit at once. I want make childrens happy and 2nd option that would i choose is i use thst csr for helping people or emergency case. I do not want to have a fun with them. At last i will be grateful to our sponsors of car from japan.
I know i am doing it for society welfare but i am happy to continue it i would not be recognised as winner i would not feel bad but my children who are living in such poor locality which cannot afford basic necessity would again stop their education and continue in labouring,which i did not want. You must do something for society😄
Where we live, and especially where our kids grow up, matters. The evidence is indisputable that living in severely distressed, high-poverty neighborhoods seriously undermines children’s well-being and long-term life chances. And recent research finds that the damage stretches across generations. For example, children whose parents grew up in high-poverty neighborhoods score dramatically worse on reading and problem-solving tests than those whose parents grew up in non-poor neighborhoods, other things being equal
State and local governments should encourage landlords in low-poverty neighborhoods to participate in the federal voucher program and help voucher families find housing in these neighborhoods that meets their needsOn their own, reforms to the Housing Choice Voucher program won’t entirely solve the complex challenges of neighborhood poverty and distress. But federal subsidies shouldn’t be paying for poor kids to grow up in neighborhood environments that undermine their chances for a healthy and successful future.
There is a good deal of research that shows how the cycle of poverty is linked to the criminal justice system, which does little to re-educate its felons. Especially in a country like the U.S. the downward spiral of prisoners fuels their poverty and is a system that must change. This toxic feedback loop is especially difficult for people of color, who are already usually disenfranchised by poverty and the structure of society.😥
Other than money you can donate food, clothing, toiletry items, old furniture, toys and books to local shelters and programs. These donations help people in straitened circumstances.
There is a variety of books for prisoners programs in various cities. See if your city or town has one. If not, maybe try to start one. Making sure that prisoners are getting the education they need (and often, have been denied) will help them to become productive members of society rather than stuck in the criminal justice system for the rest of their life.🙏🙏
There are many different groups that you can work with: children, the elderly, the mentally ill, the homeless, women. You'll need to decide which group you want to focus on.
You can do things like teaching a course in resume development, computer skills. You could start up a local community garden and teach courses on how to grow sustainable food. A large number of people who are poor cannot afford to buy much produce, so teaching them a sustainable and cheap way to grow their own food, could help alleviate some of that vitamin deficiency.
You can work in shelters, soup kitchens, community centers, at after-school programs, and employment centers.😄
Gather like-minded individuals and pick something to do with poverty to work to alleviate. Start up a group to help educate community members on poverty, or create an after-school program for low-income kids.
Use your group to have a benefit concert. Put flyers around your town or city and try to get the local paper to cover it. Have the proceeds to towards helping people in your community.
Start a petition in your community to help low-income students have more nutritious food, or to make your school system adopt a better sex-education programAssessing childhood traumas “gives us insight about what was, and then what we do is build on her strengths,” Batts-Thomas said. “We know these things happen to you, we’re sorry about them, we can’t change it, but we can change it for Sa-Maji. We can turn some stuff around for her.”
As Baltimore seeks to improve the health and well-being of residents like Brown and her daughter, the burgeoning field of research into ACEs could be key to formulating solutions. A landmark study begun in the 1990s by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention showed the long-term damage of ACEs, which can shape someone’s future for ­decades.
Growing up in economic hardship, witnessing violence at home or on the street, living through a parental divorce or separation — these and other traumas can lead to emotional and cognitive impairment, risky behavior, obesity, substance abuse, mental illness and an early death2014 study by the University of Maryland School of Medicine, the Maryland Coalition of Families and the Baltimore City Health Department (BCHD) found that 60 percent of Baltimore women in a survey experienced four or more ACEs as children. The health department reported recently that 30 percent of children in the city have at least two ACEs.
The more ACEs people have, the more likely they will suffer from health and behavioral problems, according to numerous studies. If left untreated, toxic stress from repeated and frequent exposure to extreme behaviors and environments increases the risk of developing diseases as an adult, including asthma, heart disease, depression, stroke and diabetes. The presence of ACEs also has been linked to teenage pregnancy and fetal death. Brown, who was a teenage mom, experienced a miscarriage in the past year.at i would say pls help such children

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