US professor works to prevent drownings in Vietnam

VOV.VN - Bill Ramos, director of the Indiana University Aquatics Institute, has joined the staff of Swim for Life Vietnam, to teach drowning prevention to Vietnamese youth throughout the country.

Swim for Life Vietnam, a program under the international nongovernmental organization Golden West Humanitarian Foundation, teaches elementary school students water safety and swimming skills.

Every day 11 children drown in Vietnam, said a Swim for Life official, noting that the program has taught basic aquatic skill classes to more than 72,000 children in just the past two years.

Assistant Professor Ramos will support the Swim for Life Vietnam academic research branch by traveling to the country, evaluating the effectiveness of the program and offering suggestions for improvement.

His involvement will in turn help garner additional support for the organization from international groups like the World Health Organization, Vietnam National University and the Vietnam Ministry of Health.

Indiana University has a rich history of volunteering and academic exchanges with the Southeast Asian country of Vietnam. The University Coach for College program, established in 2015, has sent student athletes to teach academics and sports in disadvantaged schools throughout the country.

As another example, earlier this year, the University McKinney School of Law joined with the Vietnam National University in hosting a conference on intellectual property, said the official of Swim for Life.

Additionally, the University School of Public and Environmental Affairs and Vietnam Ministry of Education and Training co-sponsored a Vietnam Young Leader Awards program under which they presented grants and scholarships to select state employees and researchers to continue their post-graduate studies.

The School of Public and Environmental Affairs also houses an initiative aimed at conducting research and training in Vietnam developmental policy. Lastly, Indiana University had sent Professor Ernest Talarico, Jr. of the School of Medicine to lecture at several Vietnamese medical schools earlier this year.

The US has become an increasingly popular destination for Vietnamese students to continue their post-secondary education. There are now more than 21,000 Vietnamese students enrolled in US institutions of higher education, and they contribute more than US$919 million to the US economy.

Vietnam is currently the 6th largest country supplying international students of higher education to the US, said the official, adding that the participation of Indiana University in the Swim for Life and other programs is a direct outcome of the heightened US-Vietnam relations that have resulted.

Mời quý độc giả theo dõi VOV.VN trên

Related

US Professor to help Vietnam develop science, technology
US Professor to help Vietnam develop science, technology

John Savage, An Wang Professor of Computer Science from the US Brown University, has affirmed that he will make effort to support Vietnam to develop science and technology.

US Professor to help Vietnam develop science, technology

US Professor to help Vietnam develop science, technology

John Savage, An Wang Professor of Computer Science from the US Brown University, has affirmed that he will make effort to support Vietnam to develop science and technology.

Fewer than one-third of Vietnamese children can swim
Fewer than one-third of Vietnamese children can swim

Drowning is still one of the leading causes of mortality among children in Vietnam, despite efforts to deal with the problem. Concern is re-surfacing ahead of the coming summer months.

Fewer than one-third of Vietnamese children can swim

Fewer than one-third of Vietnamese children can swim

Drowning is still one of the leading causes of mortality among children in Vietnam, despite efforts to deal with the problem. Concern is re-surfacing ahead of the coming summer months.