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

40,276 views ・ 2020-07-10

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Saida Aden Said: I still have this horrific image in my mind.
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I could see people falling down,
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gunshots.
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I was so terrified.
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Really, I was crying a lot.
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Someone who knew my father and my mom grabbed my hand, and he said,
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"Let's go! Let's go! Let's go!"
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And I was like, "Where's my mom? My mom? My mom?"
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Noria Dambrine Dusabireme: During nights we would hear shots,
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we would hear guns.
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Elections were supposed to happen.
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We had young people going in the street,
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they were having strikes.
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And most of the young people died.
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SAS: We boarded a vehicle.
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It was overloaded.
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People were running for their lives.
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That is how I fled from Somalia.
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My mom missed me.
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Nobody told her where I went.
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01:00
NDD: The fact that we did not go to school,
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we couldn't go to the market, we were just stuck home
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made me realize that if I got an option to go for something better,
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I could just go for it and have a better future.
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(Music)
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Ignazio Matteini: Globally, displaced people in the world
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have been increasing.
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Now there are almost 60 million people displaced in the world.
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And unfortunately, it doesn't stop.
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Chrystina Russell: I think the humanitarian community
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is starting to realize from research and reality
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that we're talking about a much more permanent problem.
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Baylie Damtie Yeshita: These students, they need a tertiary education,
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a degree that they can use.
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If the students are living now in Rwanda,
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if they get relocated, still they can continue their study.
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Still, their degree is useful, wherever they are.
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CR: Our audacious project was to really test
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Southern New Hampshire University's Global Education Movement's
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ability to scale,
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to bring bachelor's degrees and pathways to employment
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to refugees and those who would otherwise not have access to higher education.
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SAS: It was almost impossible, as a refugee person,
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to further my education and to make my career.
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My name is Saida Aden Said,
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and I am from Somalia.
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I was nine years old when I came to Kakuma,
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and I started going to school at 17.
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Now I am doing my bachelor degree
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with SNHU.
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NDD: My name is Noria Dambrine Dusabireme.
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I'm doing my bachelor of arts in communications
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with a concentration in business.
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CR: We are serving students across five different countries:
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Lebanon, Kenya, Malawi, Rwanda and South Africa.
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Really proud to have 800 AA grads to over 400 bachelor's graduates
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and nearly 1,000 students enrolled right now.
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So, the magic of this is that we're addressing refugee lives as they exist.
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There are no classes.
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There are no lectures.
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There are no due dates.
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There are no final exams.
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This degree is competency-based and not time-bound.
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You choose when you start your project.
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You choose how you're going to approach it.
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NDD: When you open the platform, that's where you can see the goals.
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Under each goal, we can find projects.
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When you open a project, you get the competencies
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that you have to master,
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directions
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and overview of the project.
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CR: The secret sauce of SNHU
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is combining that competency-based online learning
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with the in-person learning that we do with partners
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to provide all the wraparound supports.
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That includes academic coaching.
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It means psychosocial support,
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medical support,
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and it's also that back-end employment support
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that's really resulting in the 95 percent graduation,
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the 88 percent employment.
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NDD: I'm a social media management intern.
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It's related to the communications degree I'm doing.
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I've learned so many things out of the project and in the real world.
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CR: The structured internship is really an opportunity
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for students to practice their skills,
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for us to create connections between that internship
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and a later job opportunity.
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(Music)
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This is a model that really stops putting time
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and university policies and procedures at the center
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and instead puts the student at the center.
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IM: The SNHU model is a big way to shake the tree.
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Huge.
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It's a huge shake to the traditional way of having tertiary education here.
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BDY: It can transform the lives of students
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from these vulnerable and refugee communities.
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NDD: If I get the degree,
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I can just come back and work everywhere that I want.
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I can go for a masters confidently in English,
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which is something that I would not have dreamt of before.
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And I have the confidence and the skills required
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to actually go out and just tackle the workplace
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without having to fear that I can't make it.
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SAS: I always wanted to work with the community.
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I want to establish a nonprofit.
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We advocate for women's education.
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I want to be someone who is, like, an ambassador
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and encourage them to learn
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and tell them it is never too late.
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It's a dream.
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