Help Natal Early Learning Resource Unit (NELRU) by donating blankets for the winter months ahead for children and pre-school situations

category
Childcare
sub-category
Toiletries
How can you help?
Help Natal Early Learning Resource Unit (NELRU) by donating blankets for the winter months ahead for children and pre-school situations
Here's a little more info about this opportunity...
Community support is an essential ingredient for the success of all training programmes in the informal educational field. NELRU considers that the success of training is interlocked with the personal relationships it has with the different communities which it serves, and visits frequently. It allows our staff to work closely with community Pre-Schools in their own environment, thereby identifying and addressing various problems in the field. In this way our programmes are continually adapted to suit the particular circumstances of each educare facility with which we work. Each year NELRU also responds to requests from communities throughout KZN to assist in setting up their Pre-Schools. This involves: visits to the Pre-Schools, advising and guiding teachers on how to plan the layout of the Pre-School, purchasing of toys and equipment, endeavouring to identify suitable donors who might be able to sponsor the purchase of these, Providing in-service training according to specific needs and abilities of the teachers.
Helpful tips
Stay safe
- 1. Don’t pass any personal information to people you haven’t met offline before.
- 2. When meeting one of your contacts offline for the first time, always be sure to arrange to meet in a public place.
- 3. Make sure that you are not left alone with someone that you have never met before.
- 4. Know where you’re going. If you’re headed off the beaten track or into an unfamiliar part of town, be sure you have directions and a GPS or map book.
- 5. If you feel unsafe, consult the person in charge and let him or her know.
- 6. Avoid wearing expensive jewellery: it could get damaged, lost or stolen.
- 7. Ask, ask, ask! If you’re worried about something or concerned about your safety in a certain situation, ask the person in charge.