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CPCS
News Archive
October-November
2005
After
Poverty, Women Coach Others on Survival
Run
Date: 11/28/05
By
Elizabeth Mehren
WeNews correspondent |
Excerpt:
Poverty rates are rising in the United States and
the burden on women is rising too. Diane Dujon and
Dottie Stevens are two who escaped. Now the Boston
women who pushed themselves over the poverty line are working
to help others do the same.... Survivors, Inc.--an
organization of only two dozen women--took root more than
20 years ago when Diane Dujon and Dottie Stevens met at a
University of Massachusetts-Boston program designed to help
women on welfare earn college degrees. At the time, Stevens
and Dujon were enrolled in the College of Public and Community
Service. Neither woman could have foreseen the relationship
that would follow.
To read the article, please go to
http://www.womensenews.org/article.cfm/dyn/aid/2540/context/archive |
CIRCLE
Celebrated its 10th Year Anniversary on November 10th!


On Thursday November 10th more than 120 people packed into the Campus
Center Ballroom to celebrate the 10th Anniversary of the College's
Center for Immigrant and Refugee Community Leadership and Empowerment.
Nineteen students graduated from CIRCLE’s leadership program
and 4 received certificates of participation. Students represented
the countries and immigrant communities of Brazil, Dominican Republic,
Iran, Haiti, Mexico, Jamaica, Somalia, Bosnia Herzegovina, Uganda,
Democratic Republic of Congo, Ireland and Spain.
Pierre Imbert, executive Director of the Massachusetts Office for
Refugees and Immigrants, and CPCS Alum, was honored by the graduates
for exemplifying outstanding leadership in the immigrant community.
Elaine Ward, Director of CIRCLE, would like to extend her sincerest
thanks to all who made this event the success it was;
Amelia Onorato, Sarah Bartlett, Ismael Ramirez-Soto, Suzanne Allmendinger,
Evelyn Wong, Andrea Wight, Peter Kiang, Miwa and Soramy from Asian
American Studies, the student planning committee – Journel
(for chairing the committee and for his work on the video), Andrea
Sousa, Marie-Banatte, Fadumo, Beverly, Fritz, Ria, Lamos, and Alfred--,
Linda Barros for MCing and Omar Oliveira for filming and editing
the video, and our sponsors Café Belo, Sabur Restaurant,
and Hi-Fi Pizza. A special thank you to Interim Associate Dean Anna
Madison for supporting the event.
Professor Andrew Leong's Asian Americans and the Law class in Chinatown

What do the recent Voting Rights law suit against the City of Boston,
a Chinatown street theater to highlight gentrification, and a re-creation
of the 1965 Martin Luther King Selma to Montgomery Civil Rights
March have in common? If you were in Professor Andrew Leong's
Asian Americans and the Law class this semester, they
were all topics of recent discussion as well as learning opportunities.
During the course of the last several years, Boston Chinatown has
been taken over by gentrification. Wherever one looked, there were
signs of construction cranes. Current residents are quickly feeling
the impact of gentrification from the rent increases that landlords
are demanding. Residents have been fighting back such increases
by organizing amongst themselves to form tenant's union in order
to negotiate with the landlord. Aside from detailed discussions
of these topics in class, several students participated in the preparation
of the Chinatown Street Theater. Baindu Coomber
was one student who participated in the planning and strategizing
of the event. Along with Prof. Leong and other organizer/activists
from the Chinese Progressive Association, a small group wrote the
script, made the props, organized actors and residents, did outreach
to the broader community - all within a very intense 6-week long
period. Baindu was followed by other CPCS students such as Stephanie
Kung who assisted in other preparation activities weeks
in advanced of the event. On the day of the theater, other CPCS
students also came out to help and learn from the street theater
event: Antonia Moler, Vicki Murphy, Candice Mundy and Alan
Lau. Overall, it was a great day to participate in advocating
for a present cause and learn about the significance and our collective
legacy to the historic passage of the Voting Rights Act.
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On
October 3rd, CPCS hosted a meeting with the Irish Minister
of State at the Department of Education and Science,
Sile de Valera. Staff and faculty from the
Adult Literacy Resource Institute and the College of Public
and Community Service were invited to meet with the Irish Minister.
The representatives from CPCS were: Ernest Best,
CPCS alum and Executive Director of the Massachusetts Alliance
for Adult Literacy, Professors Lorna Rivera, Deborah
Schwartz, and Elaine Ward, Director,
Center for Immigrant and Refugee Community Leadership and Empowerment
(Circle). The panelists addressed adult literacy policies and
practices in the United States and how to strengthen bridges
between adult literacy, higher education and workforce development.
The discussion also focused on the impact of adult learners'
voices on policy and practice, the need for transitional programming
from adult literacy to higher education, the costs and benefits
of prioritizing workplace education and the role of employers,
the uses of distance learning, and the impact of federal policies
such as Welfare Reform and the Workforce Investment Act on low-income
adult literacy programming. Plans are developing for future
collaborations with the National Adult Literacy Agency of Ireland.
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| Photo
by Harry Brett. From left to right: Brian Power, Irish
Diplomat to the European Union in Brussels in Education and
Youth Affairs; Sile de Valera, Minister of State at the Department
of Education and Science; Ann Griffen, Secretary to Minister,
Elaine Ward, CPCS; Deborah Schwartz, CPCS & Adult Literacy
Resource Institute. |
A
planned Roxbury building with 46 units of subsidized elder
housing will be named "Spencer House," in honor of CPCS faculty
member Marian Spencer of the Gerontology
undergraduate program. Spencer, a long-time activist in her
neighborhood, is president of Forward, Inc., which is developing
three buildings on a three-acre Roxbury site in collaboration
with the management company Rogerson Communities. Spencer
took part in a ribbon cutting on October 5, 2005 with Mayor
Thomas Menino, CPCS Graduate 1988, and other Dignitaries for
the first of the three buildings, named Carleton House, which
offers 44 subsidized units for people who work in human services
and other service-sector jobs.
Pictured
at the Ribbon cutting Ceremony: Mayor Thomas Menino ('88),
Marian Spencer, and Jamie Seagal, President of Rogerson Communities
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Professor Amelia Onorato received the "Outstanding
Teacher Award" from the Massachusetts Coalition for Adult Education.
Amelia was honored at the MCAE annual conference in Marlborough
. This award is a very special honor given to one teacher in Massachusetts
every year.
Student
Leaders in the Field
Thirteen
students, representing six countries and more than ten different
languages, went on a research trip to Queens, New York. The trip
was hosted by former CPCS faculty member, Madhulika Khandelwal,
now Professor and Director of Queens College's Asian/American Center.
The group visited with immigrant community based organizations,
places of worship, and ethnic restaurants, and Ellis Island 's Immigration
Museum. Students commented that the trip not only "gave us an opportunity
to talk and share ideas with one another" but also to "share one
another's cultures" and "learn about the history of immigrants in
this country" as well as learn about "growing immigrant communities
being successful in Queens ". Students went on to comment how the
trip helped them gain knowledge and experience which they can put
into practice in their communities here in Boston. "From the visit
to the South Asian Youth Action (SAYA), I really learned about the
youth, this is an issue I want to work on here", "with the historical
information from Ellis Island I can write a good paper on current
immigration policy".
As
part of its Leadership Institute, CIRCLE hosts research trips to
immigrant and refugee community organizations in Boston. This is
our first trip out of state. We hope it will be the first of many.
Students:
Nicole Albert, Blanca Barrantes, Danh Huynh, Jean Joseph, Beverly
Kerr, Faduma Maour, Agnes Nansubuga, Alfred Pierre Noel, Lamos Paul,
Ronald Paul, Marie-Banatte Simon, Andrea Souza, and Fritz St. Louis.
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