Meaningful activities
Chen Yu-chen, who was assistant team leader for the 2025 winter break service team in Cambodia, mentions that in class the students asked questions enthusiastically. Their feedback gave her greater encouragement to put into practice what she has learned in school and extend the heartfelt emotional connections made through FLYoung’s work into the future.
FLYoung also has been conducting a wound care project, with participants demonstrating techniques for properly disinfecting and dressing wounds. Natalie Lin, who has been to Cambodia as a volunteer four times and is currently a graduate student in the Institute of Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences at National Taiwan University, states that while in Taiwan it is taken for granted that schools will have an infirmary or nurse’s office, in Cambodia it’s a different story. There, when a child has a cut or graze everyone assumes they will be OK, but in fact their wounds frequently become infected.
Sean Lin, a fourth-year student in the TMU School of Dentistry, shares the following thought: When he is 80 and thinks back to what he did over his summer and winter vacations at university, he will remember that when he taught an emotional management class to seed teachers in Cambodia, he was able to apply the “nervous system” theory that he learned in his third year at TMU. “I’ll be glad to have done something meaningful and memorable while I was still young.”

The students’ enthusiastic participation during classes gives the volunteer teachers a strong sense of accomplishment.