Mainland mums help teach moral education at Hong Kong kindergarten
Tuen Mun kindergarten with children from across border encourages parental involvement
In a Tuen Mun kindergarten, nestled in a public housing estate, almost half of the 220 children live across the border and spend three hours travelling to and from school.
Despite the long hours, 19 mothers take that journey with their children for a lesson of their own: how to read a storybook aloud to a class.
They want to do their bit teaching moral education at the Yan Chai Hospital Yim Tsui Yuk Shan Kindergarten.
The idea initially was to help children get in touch with their emotions - joy, anger, sadness and fear. "We want to teach the children how to use words rather than actions to express themselves," principal Hilda Pang Mei-ling said.
But understanding that parents were their children's role models, Pang decided to educate them as well by training the mothers to read storybooks to the children, teaching them to dramatise the various characters and to make props.
The 19 mothers who volunteered went through five workshops held by the Hans Andersen Club, a non-profit organisation that trains storytellers. When the mothers were ready for their debut, the sat in on the class of four-year-olds.