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Trying something new

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Off Key - General Discussion
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  • ShiroKuroS Offline
    ShiroKuroS Offline
    ShiroKuro
    wrote on last edited by
    #24

    @wtg that's really wonderful!!! It sounds like a great program too, with the session about ESL as well. That's great!

    1 Reply Last reply
    • wtgW Offline
      wtgW Offline
      wtg
      wrote on last edited by wtg
      #25

      What my Ukrainian student and her family are going through. Reuters reporting.

      Nearly 200,000 Ukrainians in US thrown into legal limbo by Trump immigration crackdown

      https://archive.is/izxz0

      Our representative is quoted in the article. My student has already reached out to ask for his help in ascertaining the status of their re-parole applications, and she's asked me (as a voting constituent) to contact his office as well.

      This is an excerpt from the letter she sent to our congressman's office office.

      My family and I moved to the United States in March 2023, under the U4U program, legally and with all proper documentation. We are from Crimea—Ukrainian Crimea—which has been under Russian occupation since 2014. Those years of occupation were extremely difficult for my family. Schools and kindergartens forced children into Russian indoctrination; families were pressured to take Russian citizenship under the threat of losing access to education, healthcare, and employment. Ukrainian language and culture were suppressed, but we did our best to preserve them and to continue supporting Ukraine discreetly.

      After 2022, everything changed dramatically. For even a small word of disagreement with the occupation authorities, people began receiving prison sentences of 5–15 years under Russia’s so-called “law against discrediting the military.” I never planned to immigrate, but the situation forced us to seek safety, fairness, and the rule of law. Moving to the United States was a very difficult decision, but we were ready for hard work and to contribute positively to our new community.

      My husband is a skilled plumber and has received strong recommendations from his workplace. He also frequently provides his services for churches and charitable organizations such as the X. I received a WIOA grant from the Job Center to study at ITExpert School and make a transition into a new career. I am proud of my children as well. My older son, despite the language barrier, has been accepted into AP History, Honors Math, and Honors Physics, and he also participates in community service. My younger son is very friendly, helps his teacher with classmates who speak Ukrainian or Russian, and is a promising taekwondo athlete, already winning two gold medals and other awards.

      Our family is determined to contribute fairly and fully to the U.S. community, economy, and society, always respecting law and order. All we ask is for your help in securing our legal status and work authorization permits sooner (since ours have expired), so that we can continue building our future here and giving back.

      Thank you very much for considering this request.

      Yea, these are the people who need to be deported.

      😠 😢

      When the world wearies and society ceases to satisfy, there is always the garden - Minnie Aumônier

      D 1 Reply Last reply
      • D Offline
        D Offline
        Daniel
        wrote on last edited by Daniel
        #26

        Well, good all around!!

        Sometimes I feel somewhat guilty about not not doing something like what you're doing.

        I might not be past the point of contributing to society by writing a book(s) if I get the resources.

        I've said this before but I'd like to have an office/ study in place of a living room.

        I've been asked to make a list of furniture I want.

        A new full sized mattress is what I'll need first but a good desk and office chair along with a farmhouse table aren't far behind.

        Dumb question, wtg-- but is there any linguistic similarity between Lithuanian and Ukrainian?

        wtgW 1 Reply Last reply
        • D Daniel

          Well, good all around!!

          Sometimes I feel somewhat guilty about not not doing something like what you're doing.

          I might not be past the point of contributing to society by writing a book(s) if I get the resources.

          I've said this before but I'd like to have an office/ study in place of a living room.

          I've been asked to make a list of furniture I want.

          A new full sized mattress is what I'll need first but a good desk and office chair along with a farmhouse table aren't far behind.

          Dumb question, wtg-- but is there any linguistic similarity between Lithuanian and Ukrainian?

          wtgW Offline
          wtgW Offline
          wtg
          wrote on last edited by wtg
          #27

          @Daniel said in Trying something new:

          is there any linguistic similarity between Lithuanian and Ukrainian

          Turns out there is, at least as far as vocabulary is concerned. We talk about a lot of things, including food, and sometimes I'll say "this is the word in Lithuanian" and she responds "yes, yes, we have the same word in Ukrainian".

          We haven't really talked about grammar but I think there are lots of similarities there, too.

          Their Cyrillic alphabet is still a mystery to me. Lithuanian uses a Latin alphabet.

          When the world wearies and society ceases to satisfy, there is always the garden - Minnie Aumônier

          1 Reply Last reply
          • wtgW Offline
            wtgW Offline
            wtg
            wrote last edited by
            #28

            My Ukrainian student's situation continues to be uncertain. She and her family are worried that their temporary protection status could disappear at any time. I asked her if Canada was an option and she said it wasn't because they had closed the program that was accepting Ukrainian refugees.

            Saw this article today. I can see why Canada isn't an option:

            https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/nova-scotia/ukrainians-permanent-residency-applications-backlog-9.7039848

            When the world wearies and society ceases to satisfy, there is always the garden - Minnie Aumônier

            ShiroKuroS 1 Reply Last reply
            • wtgW wtg

              My Ukrainian student's situation continues to be uncertain. She and her family are worried that their temporary protection status could disappear at any time. I asked her if Canada was an option and she said it wasn't because they had closed the program that was accepting Ukrainian refugees.

              Saw this article today. I can see why Canada isn't an option:

              https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/nova-scotia/ukrainians-permanent-residency-applications-backlog-9.7039848

              ShiroKuroS Offline
              ShiroKuroS Offline
              ShiroKuro
              wrote last edited by
              #29

              @wtg I’m really sorry to hear this, I missed your update in Nov above, I didn’t realize your student was dealing with this.

              Things seem very bleak. 😢

              1 Reply Last reply
              • AdagioMA Offline
                AdagioMA Offline
                AdagioM
                wrote last edited by
                #30

                @wtg I hope things improve for your student. I’m so sorry.

                D 1 Reply Last reply
                • wtgW wtg

                  What my Ukrainian student and her family are going through. Reuters reporting.

                  Nearly 200,000 Ukrainians in US thrown into legal limbo by Trump immigration crackdown

                  https://archive.is/izxz0

                  Our representative is quoted in the article. My student has already reached out to ask for his help in ascertaining the status of their re-parole applications, and she's asked me (as a voting constituent) to contact his office as well.

                  This is an excerpt from the letter she sent to our congressman's office office.

                  My family and I moved to the United States in March 2023, under the U4U program, legally and with all proper documentation. We are from Crimea—Ukrainian Crimea—which has been under Russian occupation since 2014. Those years of occupation were extremely difficult for my family. Schools and kindergartens forced children into Russian indoctrination; families were pressured to take Russian citizenship under the threat of losing access to education, healthcare, and employment. Ukrainian language and culture were suppressed, but we did our best to preserve them and to continue supporting Ukraine discreetly.

                  After 2022, everything changed dramatically. For even a small word of disagreement with the occupation authorities, people began receiving prison sentences of 5–15 years under Russia’s so-called “law against discrediting the military.” I never planned to immigrate, but the situation forced us to seek safety, fairness, and the rule of law. Moving to the United States was a very difficult decision, but we were ready for hard work and to contribute positively to our new community.

                  My husband is a skilled plumber and has received strong recommendations from his workplace. He also frequently provides his services for churches and charitable organizations such as the X. I received a WIOA grant from the Job Center to study at ITExpert School and make a transition into a new career. I am proud of my children as well. My older son, despite the language barrier, has been accepted into AP History, Honors Math, and Honors Physics, and he also participates in community service. My younger son is very friendly, helps his teacher with classmates who speak Ukrainian or Russian, and is a promising taekwondo athlete, already winning two gold medals and other awards.

                  Our family is determined to contribute fairly and fully to the U.S. community, economy, and society, always respecting law and order. All we ask is for your help in securing our legal status and work authorization permits sooner (since ours have expired), so that we can continue building our future here and giving back.

                  Thank you very much for considering this request.

                  Yea, these are the people who need to be deported.

                  😠 😢

                  D Offline
                  D Offline
                  Daniel
                  wrote last edited by
                  #31

                  @wtg said in Trying something new:

                  What my Ukrainian student and her family are going through. Reuters reporting.

                  Nearly 200,000 Ukrainians in US thrown into legal limbo by Trump immigration crackdown

                  https://archive.is/izxz0

                  Our representative is quoted in the article. My student has already reached out to ask for his help in ascertaining the status of their re-parole applications, and she's asked me (as a voting constituent) to contact his office as well.

                  This is an excerpt from the letter she sent to our congressman's office office.

                  My family and I moved to the United States in March 2023, under the U4U program, legally and with all proper documentation. We are from Crimea—Ukrainian Crimea—which has been under Russian occupation since 2014. Those years of occupation were extremely difficult for my family. Schools and kindergartens forced children into Russian indoctrination; families were pressured to take Russian citizenship under the threat of losing access to education, healthcare, and employment. Ukrainian language and culture were suppressed, but we did our best to preserve them and to continue supporting Ukraine discreetly.

                  After 2022, everything changed dramatically. For even a small word of disagreement with the occupation authorities, people began receiving prison sentences of 5–15 years under Russia’s so-called “law against discrediting the military.” I never planned to immigrate, but the situation forced us to seek safety, fairness, and the rule of law. Moving to the United States was a very difficult decision, but we were ready for hard work and to contribute positively to our new community.

                  My husband is a skilled plumber and has received strong recommendations from his workplace. He also frequently provides his services for churches and charitable organizations such as the X. I received a WIOA grant from the Job Center to study at ITExpert School and make a transition into a new career. I am proud of my children as well. My older son, despite the language barrier, has been accepted into AP History, Honors Math, and Honors Physics, and he also participates in community service. My younger son is very friendly, helps his teacher with classmates who speak Ukrainian or Russian, and is a promising taekwondo athlete, already winning two gold medals and other awards.

                  Our family is determined to contribute fairly and fully to the U.S. community, economy, and society, always respecting law and order. All we ask is for your help in securing our legal status and work authorization permits sooner (since ours have expired), so that we can continue building our future here and giving back.

                  Thank you very much for considering this request.

                  Yea, these are the people who need to be deported.

                  😠 😢

                  Well written.

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  • AdagioMA AdagioM

                    @wtg I hope things improve for your student. I’m so sorry.

                    D Offline
                    D Offline
                    Daniel
                    wrote last edited by
                    #32

                    @AdagioM said in Trying something new:

                    @wtg I hope things improve for your student. I’m so sorry.

                    +1

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    • D Offline
                      D Offline
                      Daniel
                      wrote last edited by Daniel
                      #33

                      I learned a few days ago my sister-in-law, a public school librarian, has taken on an after school assignment teaching students English in preparation for college. She told me her assignment is difficult because the district is poor and the students she's teaching aren't starting at expectable grade level English skills.

                      I also learned she has her PhD and one of her specialties is designing course instruction. I have no doubt she'll do an excellent job.

                      My guess would be, generally, even without having been a teacher, that the more a teacher expects, and the more rigorous a teacher is, at any grade level, the better the result will be.

                      For my part, I told her about my experiences in grades 11- 16, she kindly compared me to my sister (not quite warranted in all humility) and of course I said thank you.

                      Teaching, tutoring, and mentoring are essential. I myself would probably sound like and have the communication skills of a caveman it hadn't been for my luck in having a mother who taught me how to read and write and great teachers who had the resourses to do their jobs.

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