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  • 15
    Oct
    2012
    7:36am, EDT

    No GED? Some undocumented immigrants hit barriers in quest for legal status

    Chris Langer / for NBC News

    HOLA tutor Nancy Roberts helps out Maria Leonello complete an exercise on English capitalization at the HOLA GED tutoring in Painesville, Oh.

    By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The government’s new program offering young undocumented immigrants a reprieve from deportation presents an opportunity but also many challenges for an estimated 350,000 youths who didn’t finish high school, many of whom may not be able to qualify because the barriers are too high, experts say.

    The key hurdle is the educational requirement of the deferred action program. Immigrants must be enrolled in school, graduated from high school or have served in the military, and if they haven’t, they’ll need to get a GED, the equivalent of a high school degree, or enroll in an education, literacy, or career training program.


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    Some of those trying the GED route are hitting roadblocks. Gabriela de Jesus Diaz Bocardo, a 23-year-old immigrant from Mexico living in Phoenix, Ariz., is one of them. She has spent two months trying to find a prep class she could afford since a state law effectively prohibits undocumented immigrants from taking the free courses. One school told her a one-year program would cost her $4,000, which was way beyond her means.

    “I want to be enrolled in school, but I can’t find a way … I’m trying my hardest,” said Diaz, who was unable to finish school after giving birth to her son and wants to return. “I would be so happy. … Everyday waking up in the morning going to school, proving to my teachers that I am here early, trying to have a dream.”

    As Diaz and others have learned, merely getting into a GED prep course -- let alone taking the test -- won’t be easy: Adult education serves about 2 million people nationwide though nearly 35 million don’t have a high school diploma or its equivalent. This is mostly because the availability of services can’t meet the demand, the Department of Education said in a statement.

    Some 72 percent of adult education programs had waiting lists in 2010, according to a national survey by the National Council of State Directors for Adult Education.

    “The federal funding for these kinds of services has been stagnant for years, and … the states have been reducing their funding,” said Lennox McClendon, the council’s senior advisor. “So the opportunities for adult education in general have been waning.”

    Between 320,000 and 350,000 of the 1.7 million undocumented immigrants who are potentially eligible for deferred action are impacted by the education requirement, according to estimates from the Migration Policy Institute and the Pew Hispanic Center. They are 16 and older and do not have a high school diploma or GED, and are not currently enrolled in school.

    Overall, the government had received some 180,000 applications for deferred action as of Oct. 12, with nearly 4,600 of them approved, according to the latest data.

    “I think it’s fair to say that the immigrant rights movement is discovering the education reform movement … and that they’re really coming to understand, first of all, how hard it is to get a GED and secondly, how limited the capacity of adult education programs is,” said Margie McHugh, co-director of the Migration Policy Institute’s National Center on Immigrant Integration Policy. “Certainly this 350,000 or so young people are the most immediate concern and the most vulnerable for not making it through the process, and that’s very much related to both the difficulty of pursuing a GED or completing a GED … and also the lack of availability of programs.”

    Chris Langer / for NBC News

    Ricardo Zopez works with HOLA tutor Alan Brown on math problems during the HOLA GED classes in Painesville, Oh.

    Some take exception to undocumented immigrants accessing such programs. 

    “I think it's perfectly legitimate to bar access to them because there are waiting lists,” said Mark Krikorian, executive director of the Center of Immigration Studies, a think tank that supports tighter immigration controls. “I mean, there's obviously limited resources and in an environment of limited resources, allowing illegal immigrants to enroll would mean that legal immigrants or American citizens would not be able to get classes ... that's just math. There's no way to avoid that.”  

    Others feel it is unfair to set a requirement for some in the group that could be insurmountable.

    “It offends me as someone who comes from poverty that they have set a system up where -- people, you know, that are more likely probably the poorest of the poor -- would never be able to take advantage of it. They give a break to people that are going to college or people that are in the military,” said Carol Swain, a professor of politics and law at Vanderbilt University who writes about immigration and did the GED after dropping out of high school. “If you’re going to give mercy to the group they should set up the criteria in a way that it takes in everybody and not exclude the people that are the poorest of the poor or the ones that would never qualify based on their standards.”

    'No documents, no fear': Undocumented immigrants declare themselves
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    Spike in requests in some states
    The GED consists of five tests covering math, reading, science, language arts and social studies. It takes about seven hours to complete.  

    Some GED state testing centers are seeing a spike in requests to take the test or a course, as well as an uptick in calls with questions about the exam since the government began accepting applications for the deferred action program on Aug. 15, according to an informal survey of state GED test program administrators conducted by the GED Testing Service, the official creator of the exam.


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    In Iowa, centers have experienced a 20 percent rise in English as a Second Language attendance for GED prep, while Massachusetts has seen a 25 percent to 50 percent surge in registration for the test through Spanish. In North Carolina, there has been a 5 percent to 10 percent increase in testing requests, including to take it in Spanish, prompting adminstrators to order more such tests for next year.

    McLendon, who reviewed the GED Testing Service survey and conducted his own of state directors, said it’s been “a mixed bag” so far.

    “In some states there seems to be an impact. In other states there doesn’t seem to be very much,” he said. “It’s going to be spotty. In some areas they will … have easy access and some areas they won’t. They will just have to wait for months, perhaps.”

    In Painesville, a community of 18,000 outside Cleveland, an immigrant rights’ group knew the educational requirements would be a problem for those youth who were not the undocumented college graduates often seen leading the campaign for getting legal status.

    “We’ve always known that the Latino dropout is very high here in northeast Ohio,” said Veronica Dahlberg, executive director of HOLA, a grassroots group focusing on Latino advocacy and community organizing. “We immediately knew this was going to be an issue and started raising the money right away. We knew there was no way the local (adult education) program would meet the need in our town and I’m sure this is true in other areas as well.”

    Chris Langer / for NBC News

    Juan Maldonado works on the math section of a GED practice worksheet in Ohio.

    Dahlberg contacted the local Adult Basic and Literary Education (ABLE) program, which told them they’d be happy to partner but had already allocated their annual budget. So HOLA began a fundraising drive, which included raffling off a car donated by a local pastor. The group raised about $6,000 to pay for two ABLE teachers and four tutors, some of whom are bilingual.

    On Sept. 10, they began with eight students in makeshift classrooms in the HOLA center. Today, they have 29. Some students are proficient in English and completed a lot of school, but a majority will have to take the test in Spanish.

    “I never thought this would be as big as it’s become. It’s really great that the students … want to learn, want to do better, want to get a better job,” said Carol Darr, ABLE coordinator in Painesville.

    Juan Maldonado, 20, and the oldest of six brothers who dropped out of high school after his dad was deported to Mexico two years ago, said many of the students were excited about having another option to get their diploma.

    “You feel like now there are no limits to what you can do,” he said.

    Maldonado, who likes math but has trouble with grammar, said returning to school has taken on a whole different meaning since his first go-around.

    “It actually feels really good knowing that I am doing something good for myself,” he said. “It is really important for me because I would like to be able to go back to some kind of career, so I could start my life.”

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    1049 comments

    The government isn't enforcing current immigration laws so why the worry that they'll enforce the GED requirement? Won't happen. Also only 82,000 applications for this program out of 300,000+ eligible and only 29 applications completed!!!! These illegals are laughing their butts off...they have noth …

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    Explore related topics: immigration, education, ged, undocumented-immigrants
  • 7
    Jun
    2012
    7:31pm, EDT

    Graduating at Sing Sing: College offers inmates a chance at reform

    Erin Tennant

    Denis Martinez, right, graduates as class valedictorian from maximum-security prison Sing Sing's college program.

    By Erin Tennant, Special to msnbc.com

    Editor's note: A correction has been made to this story.

    NEW YORK -- Denis Martinez was a bright young man of 19 with a short fuse and a strong streak of machismo when he shot his victim twice with a revolver after an argument one summer night in The Bronx in 2004.


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    His victim,  Rodolfo Checo, was seriously wounded and became paralyzed from the waist down. Martinez paid the price for his impulsive violence, landing in New York’s notorious Sing Sing maximum-security prison after being convicted of first-degree assault and being sentenced to 13 years behind bars.

    Having seen his hopes and dreams evaporate in an instant, Martinez decided he needed to change and set his mind on college. He soon discovered that he didn’t need to wait until he had served his time. He just enrolled at Sing Sing.


    “After you realize you have all this time, you think: 'How can I make my time count?’” Martinez said. “Am I going to leave this place the same person as I went in?”

    On Wednesday night, Martinez took his first step toward rebuilding his life, graduating as class valedictorian with a bachelor’s degree in behavioral science after a grueling 4½ years of study.

    “One of the only things available to me is my books,” Martinez, now 27, told msnbc.com. “I don’t have anything you could call a social life, so I could give this degree my all.”

    Martinez was one of 20 inmate graduates who donned academic gowns and paraded single-file into the  large visitors room as the Sing Sing jazz band played  “Pomp and Circumstance” and the audience of 300-plus family, friends and prison officials stood up from their plastic chairs and applauded.

    Sing Sing’s college program currently has enrolled 84 inmates out of a prison population of about 1,700. The program is organized and funded by Hudson Link, a nonprofit set up a few years after state and federal funding for higher education in prisons stopped. It runs programs at four correctional facilities in New York, hiring professors from New York’s Mercy College to teach the students at Sing Sing. 

    While the statewide recidivism rate among offenders is 40 percent, not one of the 81 Hudson Link graduates who have been released from prison has been convicted of a crime, according to CEO Sean Pica. (A further 179 graduates are still incarcerated).

    To graduate, Martinez and his classmates attended four two-hour evening classes each week inside the prison’s education building per semester. They had access to donated academic journals and magazines, textbooks and 20 computer terminals, two of which have servers with encyclopedias. Internet access is banned.

    Martinez said he also studied each day inside his single-bunk cell, with its toilet and basin and window partly overlooking the Hudson River.

    Martinez said that he never lacked academic ability and obtained his GED when he was 17. But he said he was “never good at school discipline -- I wasn’t big on doing homework."

    Prison changed that.

     “Once I go outside, the odds are stacked against me in the job market. I’m labeled an ex-con,” he said. “A degree will give me something to show for my time.”

    Checo, the man whom Martinez shot in 2004, could not be reached for comment on his attacker’s achievement.

    Watch US News videos on msnbc.com

    But Dan Levey, executive director of the National Organization of Parents of Murdered Children, said he wished victims were given the same attention and opportunities as Martinez has had.

    "It's a shame that family members and survivors of homicide don't have the same opportunities. We would love a non-profit organization to come forward and pay for college degrees for survivors or the family members left behind because a bread winner was murdered. I hope the general public understands the plight of victims as well."

    Across New York, 1,220 prisoners are enrolled in college programs operated by various privately funded colleges, a spokeswoman for the state’s Department of Corrections said.

    The department’s commissioner, Brian Fischer, told Wednesday night’s graduation audience that education was the “key to re-entry” for inmates rejoining society. 

    “Our goal has been to get every inmate at least a high school diploma,” he told msnbc.com. “Once we started to get people educated, they began to ask us: 'Why can’t I get a college education?’”

    “It’s not just about book learning. It’s about acquiring self-awareness, by studying topics like psychology and philosophy and logic."

    At Sing Sing, inmates have to score well enough on an English and math test to earn a place in the college program.

    Mercy College Professor Susan Wiener said her inmate students sometimes struggle with writing skills more than her regular students, but they also tend to be more motivated.

    “They really feel proud to be able to do this,” said Wiener. “They’ve put their families through a tough time by being incarcerated. Graduation is the day their families get to come and be proud of them instead.”

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    80 comments

    Maybe, if we used tax dollars to send poor kids to college before they went to prison, they might not wind up there in the first place. We're going to pay for it one way or the other, how about doing it before we create career criminals. All education should be public education. And, I feel the same …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: college, new-york, victims, prison, ged, mercy-college, sing-sing

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