Distributed to 24 Schools, 8,931 Students

Photo by Jungbu Police Station

Photo by Jungbu Police Station

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[Asia Economy Reporter Donghoon Jeong] The Seoul Jungbu Police Station announced on the 21st that it will produce a 'Children's Safety Notebook' for lower-grade elementary school students and 'School Violence Prevention Educational Videos' for upper-grade elementary, middle, and high school students, distributing them to 8,981 students across 24 elementary, middle, and high schools to prevent school violence.


The Children's Safety Notebook is educational material created for lower-grade elementary students. It includes educational content such as ▲types of school violence and how to respond ▲promotion of child safety guardians and guardian houses ▲methods to prevent disappearance and abduction ▲how to report school violence ▲promotion of the 'School Police Officer' KakaoTalk channel, all presented with illustrations and easy-to-understand examples in the daily notebooks used by elementary students, making it easy for younger children to comprehend.


The School Police Officers from the Women and Youth Division of the Jungbu Police Station plan to visit nine elementary schools in their jurisdiction to deliver the notebooks to 1,902 lower-grade elementary students and conduct school violence prevention education using the notebooks in the broadcasting rooms.


The school violence prevention educational videos are segmented by target audience?upper-grade elementary students, middle and high school students?and by types such as sexual violence and cyber violence, producing a total of eight videos. The educational videos cover ▲concepts of school violence ▲real cases ▲punishments ▲reporting methods. These videos will be posted on the online platforms of 24 elementary, middle, and high schools within the Jungbu Police Station’s jurisdiction to conduct school violence prevention education.



Ryu Mijin, Chief of the Seoul Jungbu Police Station, stated, "Instilling awareness of school violence in children helps prevent school violence during adolescence. Educational activities for prevention are more important than punishment after crimes occur." She added, "As recent 'school violence Me Too' cases involving athletes and celebrities are being reexamined, school violence is not limited to the present but can have serious future impacts. We will continue to conduct education so that children and adolescents can recognize this and strive to prevent school violence."


This content was produced with the assistance of AI translation services.

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