A path to higher education and employment for refugees | Chrystina Russell

40,761 views ・ 2020-07-10

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:14
Saida Aden Said: I still have this horrific image in my mind.
0
14753
3255
00:18
I could see people falling down,
1
18032
2290
00:20
gunshots.
2
20346
1164
00:21
I was so terrified.
3
21534
1328
00:22
Really, I was crying a lot.
4
22886
2209
00:25
Someone who knew my father and my mom grabbed my hand, and he said,
5
25119
3336
00:28
"Let's go! Let's go! Let's go!"
6
28479
1964
00:30
And I was like, "Where's my mom? My mom? My mom?"
7
30467
2857
00:34
Noria Dambrine Dusabireme: During nights we would hear shots,
8
34245
3096
00:37
we would hear guns.
9
37365
1193
00:38
Elections were supposed to happen.
10
38582
1694
00:40
We had young people going in the street,
11
40300
2547
00:42
they were having strikes.
12
42871
1826
00:44
And most of the young people died.
13
44721
2017
00:47
SAS: We boarded a vehicle.
14
47627
1801
00:49
It was overloaded.
15
49452
1200
00:50
People were running for their lives.
16
50676
2505
00:53
That is how I fled from Somalia.
17
53205
2457
00:56
My mom missed me.
18
56221
1464
00:57
Nobody told her where I went.
19
57709
2071
01:00
NDD: The fact that we did not go to school,
20
60520
2034
01:02
we couldn't go to the market, we were just stuck home
21
62578
2731
01:05
made me realize that if I got an option to go for something better,
22
65333
4604
01:09
I could just go for it and have a better future.
23
69961
2894
01:13
(Music)
24
73448
1092
01:14
Ignazio Matteini: Globally, displaced people in the world
25
74564
2710
01:17
have been increasing.
26
77298
1154
01:18
Now there are almost 60 million people displaced in the world.
27
78476
3938
01:22
And unfortunately, it doesn't stop.
28
82438
2353
01:25
Chrystina Russell: I think the humanitarian community
29
85410
2574
01:28
is starting to realize from research and reality
30
88008
2265
01:30
that we're talking about a much more permanent problem.
31
90297
2684
01:33
Baylie Damtie Yeshita: These students, they need a tertiary education,
32
93005
3381
01:36
a degree that they can use.
33
96410
2490
01:38
If the students are living now in Rwanda,
34
98924
2344
01:41
if they get relocated, still they can continue their study.
35
101292
3287
01:44
Still, their degree is useful, wherever they are.
36
104603
4203
01:49
CR: Our audacious project was to really test
37
109778
2759
01:52
Southern New Hampshire University's Global Education Movement's
38
112561
3101
01:55
ability to scale,
39
115686
2034
01:57
to bring bachelor's degrees and pathways to employment
40
117744
3235
02:01
to refugees and those who would otherwise not have access to higher education.
41
121003
4574
02:06
SAS: It was almost impossible, as a refugee person,
42
126402
3141
02:09
to further my education and to make my career.
43
129567
3763
02:13
My name is Saida Aden Said,
44
133354
1877
02:15
and I am from Somalia.
45
135255
2569
02:17
I was nine years old when I came to Kakuma,
46
137848
2702
02:20
and I started going to school at 17.
47
140574
3061
02:23
Now I am doing my bachelor degree
48
143659
2851
02:26
with SNHU.
49
146534
1826
02:29
NDD: My name is Noria Dambrine Dusabireme.
50
149896
3269
02:33
I'm doing my bachelor of arts in communications
51
153189
4394
02:37
with a concentration in business.
52
157607
2364
02:39
CR: We are serving students across five different countries:
53
159995
3699
02:43
Lebanon, Kenya, Malawi, Rwanda and South Africa.
54
163718
4303
02:48
Really proud to have 800 AA grads to over 400 bachelor's graduates
55
168045
5570
02:53
and nearly 1,000 students enrolled right now.
56
173639
3412
02:59
So, the magic of this is that we're addressing refugee lives as they exist.
57
179391
5172
03:04
There are no classes.
58
184587
1417
03:06
There are no lectures.
59
186028
1707
03:07
There are no due dates.
60
187759
1480
03:09
There are no final exams.
61
189263
1713
03:11
This degree is competency-based and not time-bound.
62
191573
3930
03:15
You choose when you start your project.
63
195527
2401
03:17
You choose how you're going to approach it.
64
197952
2523
03:20
NDD: When you open the platform, that's where you can see the goals.
65
200499
3478
03:24
Under each goal, we can find projects.
66
204001
3252
03:27
When you open a project, you get the competencies
67
207277
3081
03:30
that you have to master,
68
210382
1853
03:32
directions
69
212259
1325
03:33
and overview of the project.
70
213608
1583
03:35
CR: The secret sauce of SNHU
71
215754
2199
03:37
is combining that competency-based online learning
72
217977
4220
03:42
with the in-person learning that we do with partners
73
222221
3158
03:45
to provide all the wraparound supports.
74
225403
2390
03:47
That includes academic coaching.
75
227817
2306
03:50
It means psychosocial support,
76
230147
1822
03:51
medical support,
77
231993
1593
03:53
and it's also that back-end employment support
78
233610
3020
03:56
that's really resulting in the 95 percent graduation,
79
236654
3484
04:00
the 88 percent employment.
80
240162
2095
04:02
NDD: I'm a social media management intern.
81
242281
2933
04:05
It's related to the communications degree I'm doing.
82
245238
3699
04:08
I've learned so many things out of the project and in the real world.
83
248961
5268
04:14
CR: The structured internship is really an opportunity
84
254253
2579
04:16
for students to practice their skills,
85
256856
2262
04:19
for us to create connections between that internship
86
259142
3351
04:22
and a later job opportunity.
87
262517
2521
04:25
(Music)
88
265703
1990
04:28
This is a model that really stops putting time
89
268110
3981
04:32
and university policies and procedures at the center
90
272115
2676
04:34
and instead puts the student at the center.
91
274815
2539
04:38
IM: The SNHU model is a big way to shake the tree.
92
278158
4572
04:43
Huge.
93
283770
1152
04:44
It's a huge shake to the traditional way of having tertiary education here.
94
284946
4953
04:51
BDY: It can transform the lives of students
95
291610
3915
04:55
from these vulnerable and refugee communities.
96
295549
2996
04:58
NDD: If I get the degree,
97
298569
1437
05:00
I can just come back and work everywhere that I want.
98
300030
3511
05:03
I can go for a masters confidently in English,
99
303565
3495
05:07
which is something that I would not have dreamt of before.
100
307084
3300
05:10
And I have the confidence and the skills required
101
310408
3387
05:13
to actually go out and just tackle the workplace
102
313819
3537
05:17
without having to fear that I can't make it.
103
317380
3859
05:21
SAS: I always wanted to work with the community.
104
321263
2516
05:23
I want to establish a nonprofit.
105
323803
2617
05:26
We advocate for women's education.
106
326444
3281
05:29
I want to be someone who is, like, an ambassador
107
329749
3478
05:33
and encourage them to learn
108
333251
2717
05:35
and tell them it is never too late.
109
335992
3094
05:40
It's a dream.
110
340206
1571
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7