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In a packed auditorium at Austin Community College’s Eastview Campus, Suha Kavakli addressed students being inducted into the National Adult Education Honor Society.
Kavakli was inducted last year and had a simple message for her fellow students: “I will pursue my future with determination.” Kavakli is no stranger to determination. In 2010, when she was 17, Kavakli moved from Iraq to Austin as a Palestinian refugee, with no high school diploma in tow. Schooling wasn't so easy for her in Texas, either. “I was bullied a lot for not speaking English, for wearing a scarf,” she said. “I wasn't expecting it to be that much.”
She dropped out after three months, got married, and had two kids. Then, in 2021, she decided to get her GED so she could have a career of her own.
“My husband told me, go to school. Don't just be at home,” she said. “Don't wait for anybody to do things for you. You fight for yourself.” Living in the U.S. is becoming less affordable. A study by the Urban Institute showed people are struggling to pay for essentials like food, childcare, and housing. This is a complex problem, but one area of hope is adult education programs, which can help people increase their ability to earn as prices rise.
The hope of better earnings is often what drives people into GED classes, as earning potential goes up when adult education students get the certificate. Improving educational outcomes for adults is one way to combat the affordability crisis, said Sharon Bonney, CEO of the Coalition on Adult Basic Education.
“There have been studies done that show for every dollar given to adult education, there's a $60 return to the economy,” she said. “Because it helps [people] to get a better job.” |