|    Register
   
Friday, December 05, 2008
Latest News & Information

Current Articles | Categories | Search | Syndication

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. 

Arriving in El Cajon, California, Fadi Shaya was far behind his 8th grade peers at Emerald Middle School.  Speaking no English and with almost no formal schooling of any kind, the young teenager had only dreams and the support of his family’s determination that education is the key to success. 

“I wanted to go to college so bad that staying in newcomer (a high school academic program) is not going to help me. I had to advance as much as I can just to be equal to other students,” said Fadi, 18.  

He caught up to them this past spring when he received an e-mail informing him he had been admitted to the University of California Los Angeles, where he will be a pre-med major. Shaya graduated from Grossmont High in June with a 4.3 grade-point average.

Fadi vaulted to the top of a local group of strivers known as AVID students. With his father, Salim Audesh, and his mother, Hanan Essa, a community college student, in the audience, Shaya received a $25,000 scholarship from AVID, which started in San Diego in 1980 and has grown to a program serving 300,000 students in 45 states.

AVID is a college-prep program that teaches students how to take notes, prepare for college entrance exams, succeed in their school's toughest courses and meet the deadlines for college admission.

Olivia Wilson, Shaya's AVID teacher, said AVID gives students something to shoot for.
“How are you going to reach for something if you don't know it's there?” she said.

In Shaya's case, AVID also means money. The scholarship, a UCLA grant and his work-study job will cover most of his expenses, Shaya said. His family will help him cover the rest.
Shaya has said that the relatives in Iraq whom he has told about his success have never heard of UCLA, but they understand that being admitted to a university is an honor.

Shaya credits his quick advancement to six hours a day of reading in addition to his regular schoolwork. His AVID teacher gave him extra books to read when he finished his English assignments. He wrote down new words and their definitions in three-section notebooks and committed them to memory.

By the end of high school, he had taken eight Advanced Placement courses, for which high school students can earn college credit.

In a convention hall in Mission Valley, California, Fadi Shaya shares his life story and passion for education raising over 3,400 educators from all over America, to their feet.  Grateful for AVID program, Shaya declares, “I am living the American dream.”   A dream made possible by discipline, determination, and American opportunity. 


Filed in Career & Education, Chaldean Education & Career Center :: :: By CE&CC on Monday, August 11, 2008 :: 1639 Views
Rating
Syndicate  

How Junior Lawyers Can Deal With a Difficult Boss
The legal profession often imposes stress, especially on junior lawyers. Many aspects of the work, such as deadlines, changing client needs and unreasonable adversaries, can contribute to that stress. But what if your boss, instead of helping you, makes your life more difficult? Jones Day partner Steven C. Bennett informs us of the essential steps for coping with a difficult boss. For instance, learn to "gripe for the good" and you can help change your boss's misbehavior.

Will Billing Rate Freezes Become a Trend?
Levenfeld Pearlstein, a 75-lawyer Chicago firm that targets middle-market clients, won't raise its billing rates for services next year after learning that 2009 corporate legal budgets will be under pressure. And Pepe & Hazard, a Connecticut-based firm with about 60 lawyers, has announced a rate freeze for existing clients as a way of shouldering some of the burden that the current economic environment has put on clients.

Law Firms Consider Overhaul of Associate Bonus Structures
A shift may be coming in the way associate bonuses are structured, as firms use the economic downturn as a reason to overhaul associate compensation packages. Leaders at several firms say that while bonus structures aren't changing this year, models for next year may be more closely examined. Meanwhile, in the short term some firms are predicting reductions. K&L Gates managing partner Peter Kalis said he wouldn't be surprised if, across the country, bonuses were "more subdued" than they have been.

Getting Young People Into the Law School Pipeline
"Discover all the places the world DOES need another lawyer," teases a Web site aimed at college students who may have never considered law as a profession. It's one of the ambitious projects undertaken by the University of Connecticut School of Law's Ellen K. Rutt for the Law School Admissions Council. Rutt notes that LSAC's "pipeline initiatives" to expand access to legal education "are meant to be driven by what interaction gets [young people] going, not what we as stodgy law school types think will work."

Reed Smith Lays Off 115 Staff in U.S.
Reed Smith announced significant staff cuts Wednesday, letting go 115 staff positions in several departments across its U.S. offices. The firm also said 11 associates may be let go in its U.K. offices along with seven staff members after the firm does a "redundancy consultation exercise" in the country.

Networking Success for the Single Attorney
Previously, the American Dream meant getting married and having kids and a suburban life, but now many people are savoring their unmarried lifestyles. For single attorneys, being unattached doesn't have to negatively impact networking. They can leverage the freedom of being single to creatively develop their business networks. With the benefits of being single, though, come some drawbacks, such as having to deal more with drawing the line between professional and personal contacts.

Brown Rudnick Cuts 10 Percent of Work Force
Brown Rudnick has become the latest firm to make job cuts in the wake of the credit crisis, with the announcement that it is to lay off almost 10 percent of its global work force. The losses affect 20 lawyers, three paralegals and 20 support staff across the firm's Boston, Hartford, New York and Providence offices, and three associates and one member of the firm's support staff in London. The cuts are intended to help the firm "be successful in this more challenging economic environment," said CEO Joseph Ryan.

Boutique Firms Well-Positioned in Current Economy
While some boutique firms have suffered serious blows from the economy, many are seeing distinct advantages over larger competitors when it comes to weathering the storm, say boutique leaders and law firm observers. Boutiques generally have much lower overhead costs, little to no major debt, and more flexibility when it comes to costs and billing rates. One boutique chairman likens the difference between big firms and boutiques to the difference between driving a Lincoln Town Car and a Ferrari.

Fired Public Defender's Case Goes to Calif. Supreme Court
This week the California Supreme Court heard arguments in a case involving a former public defender who was fired after invoking his right to remain silent in response to an internal investigation. "You've got a landmark decision in the works," says Thomas Spielbauer, now a solo attorney with a mostly civil practice, about the case which has gained widespread interest. A lower court had partly vindicated Spielbauer by ruling that the PD's office violated his Fifth Amendment rights.

Bleak Outlook for Bonuses at Some N.Y. Firms
Early indications point to a bleak outlook for bonuses this year. Three New York firms -- Cravath, Swaine & Moore; Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom; and Simpson Thacher & Bartlett -- have confirmed that bonuses for 2008 will be down. Skadden announced it will pay the same base bonus as last year, but has done away with supplemental special bonuses. Meanwhile, at Cravath and Simpson, 2008 bonuses will be about half of what was paid last year.

Calif. Firm Trims About Half Dozen Attorneys, 15 Staff Members
Stradling Yocca Carlson & Rauth, a California law firm with a sizable corporate and securities practice, has cut five to seven attorneys and up to 15 staff members in recent weeks, according to sources familiar with the situation. Several sources say that the firm recently conducted two rounds of job cuts. Most of those affected were let go in November.

Advice for the Lawlorn
In the list of job-hunting-tips [from your last column], I think number 20, advising applicants to use fake names and misrepresent themselves as recruiters, would constitute an ethical violation in the states where I've worked as an attorney.

Renewable Energy Fuels Finance Boom
Firms that have built expertise financing renewable-energy projects for equity investors are enjoying solid business, despite the credit crisis. They are completing a stream of deals to build power lines in Asia, trade "carbon credits" in Europe and nurture an array of new technologies expected to find markets in a world where power comes increasingly from wind and sun.

Pay Proves GCs Are Part of Elite Club
A review of the compensation of Southeastern chief legal officers who are listed among the top five highest-paid executives in their public companies' most recent Securities and Exchange Commission filings reveals an average total package in the neighborhood of a million dollars -- about $965,000. Their average base salaries were just a bit over $300,000, with bonuses and stock awards adding most of the value. And the top 62 had packages valued at more than $1 million. The highest exceeded $7 million.

Award to Halliburton Worker Upheld
A federal judge has refused to overturn an arbitrator's award in favor of a former Halliburton worker who claimed he was fired from a job in Iraq because of a sexual harassment complaint that the company never investigated. In Edward Harris v. Kellogg Brown & Root Technical Services Inc., U.S. District Judge Timothy J. Savage found that the Halliburton Dispute Resolution Plan gives broad powers to the arbitrator to interpret the company's rules and to determine the scope of the arbitrator's powers.

Bayer to Pay $97.5 Million to Settle Kickback Probe
German medical conglomerate Bayer will pay $97.5 million to settle U.S. government allegations that it paid kickbacks to medical suppliers to boost sales of its diabetes products. The Justice Department said on Nov. 25 that the settlement resolves an investigation into whether Bayer bribed 11 diabetic suppliers into switching patients to its products from competitors' offerings.

Federal Judge Penalizes Broker Over 'Egregious' Conduct


null: In re Ballard
Federal law did not preclude auto manufacturer from filing unsecured deficiency claim based on state law where Chapter 13 consumer debtor proposed to surrender "910 vehicle" whose value was less than balance remaining on auto loan (applying "hanging paragraph" to cases involving surrender of 910 vehicle).

null: Siepel v. Bank of America, N.A.
Securities Litigation Uniform Standards Act preempted state-law claims that trustee breached fiduciary duty by failing to disclose conflicts of interest in selection of nationally-traded investment securities.

Expanding the Scope of the Consumer Fraud Act in Real Estate Transactions
In Matera v. M.G.C.C. Group, Inc ., the Law Division has recently held that a cause of action can be alleged under the Consumer Fraud Act absent any contact between the parties, as long as there is a causal nexus between the alleged violation of the CFA and the alleged ascertainable loss. This holding marks a dramatic expansion of the CFA, threatening a new unforeseen and unwarranted breed of liability for real estate developers, lending institutions, and any entity which falls under the ambit of the CFA.
www.CHALDEAN.org Copyright 2004 - 2008, All Rights Reserved.     |    Privacy Statement    |    Terms Of Use