Beijing NGO teaches young rural girls to protect themselves from sexual assault
Attempt to reduce attacks in schools, where many child sexual abuse cases have occurred

On a recent afternoon in a village in Hebei , a counsellor stood before about three dozen girls in a primary school classroom and asked: "Where on your bodies are your private parts?"
The girls, aged nine to 10, were silent at first, but then a few tentative hands shot up.
"The mouth," they replied. "Ears." "Head." "Temple."
The counsellor, Wang Ling, said such misconceptions were common among young girls in rural areas, where teachers had no experience in discussing sexual abuse with their pupils.
That is what has brought groups like Wang's, the Maple Women's Psychological Counselling Centre in Beijing, to schools such as the Xiaoyou village primary school in Zhao county, about 40 kilometres southeast of Shijiazhuang , the provincial capital.
In an experimental programme, counsellors are giving a series of lessons to pupils - and their teachers - on what constitutes inappropriate touching and how children should respond when it occurs.