When my parents saw me on stage at the Skyline High School's 2006 graduation class, I knew they were proud of my accomplishments. My parents place great emphasis on education so I will do anything to attend college. However, the economy is not funded because it is affected by layoff, bank closure, education loan approval decline. Thanks to their SSI, obstacles, and cash aid they saved money and sent my brother and sister to college for good education. They hope that we accept education that we have not received since living in poverty in Laos. When they arrived in America in 1980, their economic situation did not change. Because they are living in poverty in Auckland, my time ...
At the end of the semester when the results were announced, I got misunderstood from time to time because I was mistaken for someone else.
As a Clear Channel Outdoor receptionist and as a part-time circuit city as a customer service representative I know that I will be able to pay slowly through the university, but it is not as planned. I was dismissed in September 2008 and since January 2009 I was dismissed at Clear Channel Outdoor for over 2 years due to the financial crisis of our country. At the moment it is difficult to find a part-time job, but I was able to earn the minimum wage in my friend's Deli. Therefore, in the case of a small savings, in August 2009 I returned to school with the goal of becoming a nurse. As the tuition fee of California Community College has increased, we are trying to pay tuition and books because we need to acquire 14 credits.
My dream of becoming a nurse began when I was a little girl. With the help of many nurses and doctors, I am still alive today. In Auckland, when I was one year old, I fell down from the third floor of the apartment and got on the first floor hard concrete. I carried the cracked skull, internal bleeding, and wrist fracture to the emergency room, and the staff took care of me without hesitation. I experienced a difficult process
When I was a little girl, I always dreamed of becoming a nurse. This is the dream of an 8 year old girl living in a refugee camp in a very harsh environment. I just want to be a nurse, I do not have anything. Every morning I will stop thinking about how to become a nurse unless I go to school. I cry and ask my parents to go to school every day. My parents will not let me go to school. They are dressed in school and have a backpack. My tears will fall from my eyes. When these other children are ready to attend school, I am ready to make farms with my parents. I hope my parents go to school just like any other kids but the next morning I will see sitting in the same place watching you go to school. Deeply, I know that the problem is not my parents.
My journey is not the same as many journeys of my high school classmates. We all started to go to college with the same dream, became nurses, doctors, teachers, engineers, IT department. But my dream has ended as soon as it started. Everyone around me has wealthy parents who can make payments and donations to the university or at least want to finish FASFA or co-sign the loan, but this is my reality It is not. My parents work hard and struggle - just to get through
My dream of becoming a nurse began when I was a little girl. With the help of many nurses and doctors, I am still alive today. In Auckland, when I was one year old, I fell down from the third floor of the apartment and got on the first floor hard concrete. I carried the cracked skull, internal bleeding, and wrist fracture to the emergency room, and the staff took care of me without hesitation. I experienced a difficult process