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Villanova University Rescues Iraqi Chaldean Family with Education Opportunity

Maryland, USA  - Habib Habib.  Sounds like a musical, but the story of the Neumann College freshman with the duplicative name reads more like a documentary.

Habib came to the United States in 2005 as part of a youth exchange and scholarship program, living in San Diego with his aunt while attending school.  Typically, students return home after one academic year, but in Habib's case, home meant Iraq, where his Catholic family had been living in fear of extremists since the U.S.-led invasion in 2003.

That fear intensified when word began to spread in Baghdad that Habib was not, as his family claimed, studying in neighboring Jordan but rather in the U.S.  "When word got out, I was forced to stay in the U.S.," said Habib, who was granted asylum in 2006. "It was too dangerous to go home. I would be dead."

Filed in: Career & Education, Chaldean Education & Career Center By CE&CC
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CALC Extends Opportunity for Community Director

Michigan, USA - The Chaldean-American Ladies of Charity (CALC) is looking for a new Director. 

Responsibilities include program development and implementation, effecting and carrying out programs for fundraising, special events, major gifts and assist in grant writing.  Good writing and computer skills needed.  This position requires close coordination and communication with CALC’s Executive Board and is the liaison between the Board and other community organizations.  To view the entire posting visit our website www.calconline.org

Filed in: Career & Education, CALC By Neda Ayar
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Chaldean Education Career Centers of Support in Oakland County Michigan

Michgian, USA - Tough economic times in Michigan have made it difficult on many Chaldean families.  Without a doubt, a large majority of Chaldeans have their own business or employ other Chaldeans.  The combination of cultural flexibility and understanding, language, and the hard-work ethic desired has brought Chaldean employees and employers together. 

Recognizing the need, the Chaldean Education & Career Center (CE&CC) has partnered with Oakland County Workforce Development Corps to provide Chaldeans a convenient, one-stop access to job training programs and services for employers and job seekers.

We have convenient centers located in highly populated Chaldean residential areas to serve your needs. 

Filed in: Career & Education, Business & Finance, Chaldean Education & Career Center By CE&CC
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3,500 Educators Attest to Fadi Shaya's Remarkable Achievement Through Hard-Work

California, USA - Chaldean delivery driver, Salim Audesh beams with pride as nearly 3,500 California educators give his son, Fadi Shaya a standing ovation. 

The Shaya Christian home outside of Baghdad was blown up when he was 6.  When most children would be learning their multiplication tables in school, Fadi was learning to fire a rifle to deter Muslims who had beaten him unconscious several times.  When not helping his father defend the family, Fadi would be making deliveries by mule in Iraq.  Consistent and repeated threats against Christians in Iraq, the Shaya family decided to leave everything behind and flee Iraq.  

Smuggled into Greece, Fadi Shaya spent the next few years later selling tissues and lottery tickets on the streets of Greece.  Eventually the family makes it to the shores of America and Shaya’s family focus coupled with American opportunity turns to extraordinary achievement. 

Filed in: Career & Education, Chaldean Education & Career Center By CE&CC
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Community College For Many Chaldeans Remain an Excellent Option

California, USA - California community college system expects to receive 1.7 percent increase proposed by Gov. Schwarzenegger, said Chris Yatooma. Yatooma director of fiscal planning for the California Community Colleges Chancellor's Office in Sacramento. 

Community colleges get about two-thirds of their money from the state budget, and the rest from property taxes and student fees. State lawmakers have yet to pass a new budget this summer, but the The 1.7 percent increase - about $95 million - would pay for roughly 19,000 new students statewide. However, the state's 110 community colleges are expecting about 32,000 new students during the 2008-09 school year.

"I'm praying to God that the radiology technician job is available," said Lawrence Petu.  Petu started an accelerated program at West Hills College last August to become a technician - someone who helps with medical technology after being licensed by the state.

Filed in: Career & Education, Chaldean Education & Career Center By CE&CC
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CASA helps College Students Seize A Special 4-Year Degree Pathway Partnership Opportunity

Michigan, USA - With the help a leading Chaldean educator at Wayne State University, efforts have been made to help qualified Chaldean students receive admission, garner scholarships, and transfer to Wayne State University from Oakland Community College.  Preferring to remain anonymous the Chaldean professor and lead administrator has been aggressively pursuing new options and pathways to help high school and community college students overcome barriers. 

Chaldean American Student Association (CASA) is pleased to inform Chaldean college bound students that Wayne State University and Oakland Community College (OCC) have signed an agreement making it easier for students in business, computer science and engineering at OCC to complete a bachelor's degree at Wayne State.   Chaldean students wishing to transfer to WSU will find it convenient to attend their upper-division courses on the main campus of WSU or at Wayne State's Oakland Center in Farmington Hills.

Filed in: Career & Education, Chaldean Education & Career Center, Chaldean American Student Association By CASA
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Chaldean Students Gather in Adoration

Michigan, USA - A handful of Chaldean-American Wayne State University (WSU) students were recently able to do something that not a handful of Catholic churches could do: attain approval of 24-hour Adoration sessions, something many churches overall, have not yet had.

Rasha Kashat, 20, a pre-medical student at WSU, is one of the students that made efforts to allow one 24-hour Adoration session to be held at St. Thomas Chaldean Catholic Church per week.

Kashat said that "Adoration" is a meaningful gathering of individuals at the church to encourage religious practices, as well as have a great time while committing to such practices.

Filed in: Career & Education, Religion & Spirituality, Chaldean Churches By Paul Isso
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Research Proves that Being Multilingual is Better

Chaldeans who are bilingual or Multilingual have an advantage over the rest of us, and not just in terms of communication skills. The multilingual brain develops more densely, giving it an advantage in various abilities and skills, according to new research.

According to the 2002 U.S. Census, more than 7.5 million children between the ages of 5 and 17 (about 14 %) speak a language other than English at home and the number of bilingual speakers is expected to increase in the coming years.

Most children have the capacity and facility to learn two or more languages. Research suggests there are advantages to being bilingual, such as, linguistic and metalinguistic abilities and cognitive flexibility, such as, concept formation, divergent thinking and general reasoning and verbal abilities.

Researchers from the Department of Imaging Neuroscience and experts from the Fondazione Santa Lucia in Rome researched brain densities of bilingual people. They recruited 25 people who speak one language, 25 who learned a second European language before age 5, and 33 who became bilingual between ages 10 and 15. 

All the participants spoke English as their primary language. Those who had learned a second language later in life had practiced it regularly for at least five years.

Filed in: Living & Lifestyle, Career & Education, Community & Culture, Science & Technology By Huda Metti
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Quick and Creative Tips for Chaldean Parents Wishing to Raise Readers

A Chaldean home filled with reading material is a good way to help our kids become enthusiastic (and proficient) readers. English is not the primary language spoken in most Chaldean households.  This challenge makes it a bit more difficult for Chaldean children to do well in reading and language arts.  To give your Chaldean child an additional boost you might consider these wonderful suggestions. 

First ask your kids about their interests. If they're too young to have a preference, visit your local library and ask a librarian to offer suggestions about age-appropriate books.

Here are some other wonderful tips shared by Chaldean parents Basima Kizzy, Joan Bazzi, Freddy Razooky, and Sabri Zora:

University of Phoenix Partners with Chaldeans to Fill Need

Michigan, USA - Developing on their growing relationship the Chaldean Education and CareerCenter and the University of Phoenix, Chaldeans are offered two local career fair opportunities in Southfield, Michigan. 

Corporate developer and diversity expert Stephanie English from University of Phoenix has been working with the Chaldean Education and Career Center to develop college education and career solutions for the Chaldean community.  The University is offering Chaldeans easy registration processes, one-on-one counseling, and now hosts two career fairs exposing job opportunities in the telecommunications and information technology industry for interested Chaldeans.     

“The Chaldean community has unique needs that the University of Phoenix perfectly fits.  We offer accredited college education and corporate training directly to hard-working Chaldeans.  Our university understands that many Chaldeans have a family to care for and may be unable or unwilling to travel to distant campuses or sit in a class for three to four hour stretches in the middle of the day.  Many Chaldeans are required to work long hours to provide for their family.  Our online courses are broadcasted directly to the homes or businesses of Chaldeans with ease and simplicity,” says English.

Filed in: Career & Education, Chaldean Education & Career Center By Sam Yousif
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Syndicate  

Successful Conclusion to Student Workshop, 'System Engineering and Technology for Space Missions'
<img src="http://www.esa.int/images/group,9.jpg" align="right" /> The first ESA training workshop to offer students a broad introduction to space engineering was held at the European Space Technology and Research Centre (ESTEC) in the Netherlands, 25-29 August.

ESMO - Call for Proposals for New Student Teams
<img src="http://www.esa.int/images/esmo5_small.1,0.jpg" align="right" /> The ESA Education Office is currently looking for student teams to fill the following vacancies in Phase B1 (Preliminary Design) of the European Student Moon Orbiter (ESMO) project, which is expected to last until February 2009.

Successful Conclusion to 2008 Alpbach Summer School
<img src="http://www.esa.int/images/sample_return_sm.jpg" align="right" /> This year’s Summer School in Alpbach results in 4 innovative projects presented by 58 students.

Explore Space with Disney/Pixar’s WALL-E (and Friends)
<img src="http://www.esa.int/images/poster_walle_S.jpg" align="right" /> To mark the European launch of WALL-E, Disney/Pixar's exciting smash hit movie, ESA is today launching a new web site which highlights the multitude of educational resources and fun activities that are available on the Agency's Internet pages.

ESA Radar Remote Sensing Course 2008 in Prague
<img src="http://www.esa.int/images/MexicoCity.jpg" align="right" /> The Czech Space Office in cooperation with the European Space Agency and the Charles University in Prague is organizing a five-days intensive microwave remote sensing course.

'Take your classroom into space' winners announced
<img src="http://www.esa.int/images/boy_S,0.jpg" align="right" /> The winners of the 'Take your classroom into space' Call for Education Ideas have been selected. The two best experiment ideas will be performed in space by ESA astronaut Frank De Winne during his spaceflight in 2009. Pupils throughout Europe will be able to compare results obtained in their classroom to those obtained in space.

Fly Your Thesis! - An Astronaut Experience
<img src="http://www.esa.int/images/airbus_S.jpg" align="right" /> Calling all European students! ESA’s Education Office is offering the flights of a lifetime with the launch of a new programme called “Fly Your Thesis! – An Astronaut Experience”.

ESA Announces Vega CubeSat Selection
<img src="http://www.esa.int/images/IMG_01-2.jpg" align="right" /> After a thorough and exhaustive review of 22 proposals that were received from universities all over Europe, ESA officials have finally selected 9 CubeSats (plus two back-ups) that will be flown during the debut of Europe’s new Vega launch vehicle in late 2008 or early 2009.

Take part in the Space Station Design Workshop 2008!
<img src="http://www.esa.int/images/ssdw_medium,0.jpg" align="right" /> In July 2008, ESA will host the Space Station Design Workshop (SSDW) in collaboration with the Institute of Space Systems (Institut für Raumfahrtsysteme, IRS) of the Universitaet Stuttgart.

Take your classroom into space
<img src="http://www.esa.int/images/boy_S,0.jpg" align="right" /> With Europe's Columbus laboratory safely attached to the International Space Station, this is a good time to come up with new ideas for experiments that can be carried out onboard the station to demonstrate the effects of weightlessness to young students.

Polish children and students meet astronauts
<img src="http://www.esa.int/images/DSC_0049_S.jpg" align="right" /> As part of worldwide activities to celebrate the 50 years of space exploration, Polish children and students had the chance to meet European and American astronauts in Warsaw last week, to hear at first hand about living and working in space.

ESA pays tribute to 50 years of space
<img src="http://www.esa.int/images/50years_small.jpg" align="right" /> Fifty years ago today, on the night of 4 October, the first 'beep-beep' from Sputnik fell from the heavens and marked the beginning of a new era for the human race. <a href="/SPECIALS/Space_Year_2007/index.html" style="color:blue">Visit our Space Jubilee site</a>

The 2007 STRAPLEX Student Workshop
<img src="http://www.esa.int/images/northern_flight1_small,0.jpg" align="right" /> In September 2007, a series of flights involving helium balloons will take to the air over Portugal. On board the STRAtospheric PLatform EXperiment (STRAPLEX) balloons will be several experiments provided by students from various ESA member states.

Discover Issue 5 of Science in School
<img src="http://www.esa.int/images/cover5_small,0.jpg" align="right" /> If you are a science teacher or a scientist interested in education, then you shouldn’t miss out on Science in School, the free publication which highlights the best in teaching and cutting-edge research. Issue 5 is now available, free of charge, on the web <a href="http://www.scienceinschool.org/">here</a> and in print.

Awards Announced at Science on Stage 2
<img src="http://www.esa.int/images/DSC_3587_small,0.jpg" align="right" /> The EIROforum Science on Stage 2 (SOS2) Festival, one of the most important events in the education calendar, reached its climax on 6 April with the presentation of the European Science Teaching Awards.

From argonauts to astronauts
<img src="http://www.esa.int/images/Greece_new.jpg" align="right" /> Astronauts and the mythical Argonauts who sailed with Jason in search of the golden fleece have some things in common - a spirit of adventure and the desire to explore the unknown. This made it an apt title for the ESA Space Camp that took place in July in Patras, Greece.

Palin switched colleges 6 times in 6 years
Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin seems to have switched colleges at least six times in six years, including two stints at the University of Idaho before graduating from there in 1987.

No verdict Thursday from jury in Rep. Sue Schmitz fraud trial
DECATUR, Ala. - A federal jury for a second day was unable to reach a verdict in state Rep. Sue Schmitz's trial on charges that she arranged a bogus job for herself at a community college program.

State student aid board disbands loan agency
The California Student Aid Commission voted Thursday to oust the board of directors of EdFund, a troubled state agency that guarantees student loans.

State falling way behind No Child Left Behind
California schools, required by the federal No Child Left Behind Act to lift more students over a higher academic hurdle this year, instead stumbled and slipped back, as nearly 1,400 fewer schools met test-score targets.

12 comeback campuses in county taken off watch list
Years of low state test scores had landed them on a federal watch list that some say brands schools as failing. Not many schools get off the list. These did.

School groups challenge Calif. algebra mandate
Groups representing school administrators and local education boards are challenging California's requirement that all eighth-graders be tested in algebra. The California School Boards Association and the Association of California School Administrators filed the lawsuit Thursday.

Only 48% of California high schools meet federal standards, even with easier measure
Hundreds of California high schools met this year's federal academic targets released Thursday only because the state uses easier standards for high schools than for elementary and middle schools, a Times analysis has found.

UD school year starts with rash of robberies
Six University of Delaware students already have learned one unpleasant lesson this school year: How easy it is to become a crime victim.

Florida Legislature to re-examine property tax relief again
Florida's property tax wars now return to the state Legislature, a place where gridlock and battling interest groups make it difficult to achieve the deep relief that politicians promise.

Kathy Cox tests smarts on '5th Grader'
Georgia will learn Friday night whether state schools Superintendent Kathy Cox is smarter than a fifth-grader.

Outcry prompts BOE to save teen programs
Students, teachers and parents persuaded the Board of Education last night to drop a plan to shift nearly $1 million from teen support programs into a formula that distributes money to public schools based on enrollment.

Palin switched colleges multiple times in 6 years
SPOKANE, Wash. &mdash; Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin seems to have switched colleges multiple times in six years, including two stints at the University of Idaho before graduating from there in 1987.

Candidates float education ideas
Democrat Jill Long Thompson unveiled a handful of education initiatives Wednesday while Republican Gov. Mitch Daniels introduced five campaign commercials, three of which focus on his own education proposals.

State to foot bill for students' SAT prep test
The state will pay the cost of the preliminary SAT exam for 10th- and 11th-graders this year in hopes the preparation will boost the recent flat scores on the main test.

Education group sets top 20 goal
The Prichard Committee for Academic Excellence launched an initiative Thursday to propel Kentucky into the top 20 states in the nation in education by 2020.

UK trustees back chairwoman
One year after she became the first woman to lead the University of Kentucky's governing board, Mira Ball was nominated yesterday by a trustee committee for a second year as chairwoman of the board of trustees.

Ky. urged to build on academic successes
LEXINGTON, Ky. -- Education advocates called yesterday for Kentucky to build on its improved academic performance at a rally in a school gymnasium reverberating with a University of Kentucky pep band as hundreds of pom-pom waving schoolchildren chanted "Top 20 by '20."

ACT scores show Ky. juniors aren't ready for college
Kentucky's first year of mandatory ACT testing for juniors attending public schools shows they need to improve if they plan to attend college.

Palin well traveled during her college years
SPOKANE, Wash. -- Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin seems to have switched colleges at least five times in six years, including two stints at the University of Idaho before graduating from there in 1987.

O'Malley trumpets education investment
Gov. Martin O'Malley toured the newly opened College Gardens Elementary School in Rockville to tout his aggressive program of building new schools around the state.

A reluctant political player
The start of the school year this month came with a chorus of dire economic news &mdash; billion-dollar deficits, shortfalls in revenue, predictions of tapping reserve funds.

Leggett to reveal slots position
With a faltering economy bearing down on government budgets like Hurricane Ike off the East Coast, the Montgomery County Executive is expected to announce his position on slots in the state as a way of bolstering state revenues.

N.J. urged to boost prenatal care
TRENTON, N.J. -- Warning that pregnant women most at risk of losing their babies aren't getting enough care, a New Jersey task force yesterday called for better education and improved access to health insurance, among other recommendations.

National debate on lowering drinking age comes to N.J.
The debate over lowering the drinking age has come to New Jersey, with several state agencies coming together to support keeping it at 21, while some college presidents think the law should be reconsidered.

One classroom or two? Twins' parents can pick
Just in time for the new school year, Gov. Jon Corzine has signed a bill into law that gives the parents of twins or other multiple-birth children power over whether their kids learn together or apart.

N.J. program completes 15 schools
New Jersey's $12.5 billion school construction program will reach a landmark in its recovery from years of waste and mismanagement next week when 15 new school buildings and additions are scheduled to open in time for the start of classes.

Hearing moved in Keansburg payout case
KEANSBURG, N.J. -- The court venue for the state Department of Education's case against former Superintendent Barbara A. Trzeszkowski and the Keansburg Board of Education has been moved to state Superior Court in Monmouth County from Superior Court in Mercer County, court officials said.

Legislature to determine whether Getchell Library lives or falls
If the upcoming Legislature doesn't approve the $10.5 million needed to remodel the University of Nevada, Reno's old Getchell Library, the building could fall to the wrecking ball, President Milton Glick said Thursday during a campus meeting.

Freshman dropouts declining; mentors, field trips key
A program that targets black freshmen boys at high schools with the highest dropout rates is showing promising results in its first year.

Fewer state schools meet standards
Fewer Oregon schools met academic standards last year in accordance with Oregon's No Child Left Behind Plan, final state education data released Thursday show.

Cheerleading accidents may fly under the radar
Texas could be leading the country in catastrophic cheerleading accidents and nobody would know it.

Report: VCU made 37 exceptions for Monroe degree
Virginia Commonwealth University today said it found 37 instances of exceptions made to university policy in granting an undergraduate degree last year to Richmond Police Chief Rodney Monroe.

VCU to face agency about chief's degree
Former Richmond Police Chief Rodney Monroe plugs his bachelor's degree from Virginia Commonwealth University on his new employer's Web site, even as questions remain about whether he should have received the degree at all.

Chinese teachers on job in W.Va.
Chinese guest teachers are instructing students at Winfield Middle School and Winfield and South Charleston high schools this year.

Bush, McCain view state issues similarly
<p style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt;" class="MsoNormal">Democrats charge that a John McCain presidency would mean &ldquo;four more years&rdquo; of President Bush&rsquo;s policies. A close look at both men&rsquo;s records shows, on issues important to states, the Republicans are not far apart.</p>

What would an Obama win mean for states?
DENVER &mdash; If elected president, Democrat Barack Obama promises closer ties with states and an infusion of federal dollars that could lessen points of tension between Washington, D.C.,&nbsp;and statehouses on issues from health care to energy.

Why presidential elections matter to states
Democrats and Republicans will gather in Colorado and Minnesota to nominate their candidates for president amid uncertainty in the states on the economy and other issues.

2008 state elections: What's at stake?
<div style="margin: 0in 0in 0pt;"><table width="195" cellspacing="1" cellpadding="1" border="0" align="right" summary=""><tbody><tr><td><a href="http://www.stateline.org/live/details/story?contentId=334492"><img width="187" height="126" border="0" align="right" alt="" src="http://www.stateline.org/live/digitalAssets/14687_GuideStrip.gif" /></a></td></tr></tbody></table>(Updated 4:20 p.m. EDT, Aug. 20, 2008)&nbsp;<br /><br />The historic battle for the White House may be grabbing most of the headlines, but plenty of state races and major ballot measures also could be nail-biters this November &mdash; and the results could have national implications.&nbsp;<em>Stateline.org</em> today is launching a new 2008 interactive guide to help voters keep track of the 11 gubernatorial, 11 attorneys general and seven secretary of state races and some 130 statewide ballot measures. </div>

2008 state-by-state summary
<table cellspacing="1" cellpadding="1" border="0" align="right" width="200" summary=""><tbody><tr><td><a href="javascript:void(0);/*1216330967994*/"><img height="65" border="0" align="right" width="200" alt="" src="http://www.stateline.org/live/digitalAssets/14438_leg-wrap_small_.gif" /></a></td></tr></tbody></table>(Updated 11:15 a.m. EDT, Aug. 6, 2008)<br /><br />Here&rsquo;s <em>Stateline.org</em>'s&nbsp;state-by-state rundown of&nbsp;significant legislative action in&nbsp;2008.

Visit the Stateline.org Education Page

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