AMMAN — The King Hussein Foundation's Institute for
Family Health on Wednesday concluded a program on the community inclusion of
disabled persons. The training was delivered under the USAID-funded "I
Count" project, according to the Jordan News Agency, Petra.
In a statement, the institute said the program targeted 75 young men and women
in addition to 25 employees of disabled-dedicated charities, focusing on
community inclusion through a STEAM (science, technology, engineering, arts,
and mathematics)-based program.
The institute provided the participants with a toolkit for applying STEAM
activities, in addition to converting the paval material — a training that
includes problem solving, lobbying, volunteering, raising awareness, learning,
and training — into Braille.
Read more National News
(window.globalAmlAds = window.globalAmlAds || []).push('admixer_async_509089081')
(window.globalAmlAds = window.globalAmlAds || []).push('admixer_async_552628228')
Read More
113 Rescue Operations and 1,052 Medical Cases Handled in the Past 24 Hours
Public Security Directorate: Several Drones Crash in Various Areas, One Causing Damage
Foreign Ministry Offers Condolences to Brazil over Rainstorm Victims
AMMAN — The
King Hussein Foundation's Institute for
Family Health on Wednesday concluded a program on the community inclusion of
disabled persons. The training was delivered under the
USAID-funded "I
Count" project, according to the Jordan News Agency, Petra.
In a statement, the institute said the program targeted 75 young men and women
in addition to 25 employees of disabled-dedicated charities, focusing on
community inclusion through a STEAM (science, technology, engineering, arts,
and mathematics)-based program.
The institute provided the participants with a toolkit for applying STEAM
activities, in addition to converting the paval material — a training that
includes problem solving, lobbying, volunteering, raising awareness, learning,
and training — into Braille.
Read more National News