An early adopter of automated technologies, Jeremy Liaw, has upgraded his lifestyle with the assist of such products. With a touch a button on his smartphone he’s able to control the lights, appliances, and even the locks on his doors when he’s not home. The advancement of such products have had such an impact on Jeremy’s life that there’s no way he’d ever go back.
Eight states which include California, Utah and Kansas are fighting to keep cursive in the curriculum and their argument is: The ability to write in cursive distinguishes the literate and the illiterate. Here on the Baruch College campus, some students are carrying on he seemingly dying staple of cursive writing as they get ready to move on to the work force.
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In an effort to engage more fans on Twitter, the NYPD prompted followers to share their photos posing with NYPD members, tagging the image #myNYPD. The tweet, which was sent out with good intentions, took on a life of its own, becoming a worldwide campaign for police brutality. In the wake of the NYPD Twitter-storm of controversy, two experts weigh in on how companies can effectively use social media networks.
Ben Guttmann, CEO of Digital Natives Group, consults clients on how to best use social media. He notes that, while controversy is rare, it can happen. But his steps to posting on social media take away some of that risk. He advises to “be a person: act like a person, respond like a person.”
Nicole Beltrami is a partner at digital marketing agency, LORIMER/LEX. Beltrami’s job is to manage many different social media accounts for her brands. As she says, it’s important to have a distinct voice for each one of her clients. Beltrami shares her 3-to-5 rule for social media best practice.
For decades, women advocated for equal rights. Not only did they fight for legal rights, but they also fought for society to accept women who work outside of the home while raising families.
The U.S. Census Bureau reported in 2010 that 55% of mothers are in the labor force.
The following three reports tell the stories of four women from Long Island who decided to be stay-at-home moms.
They often face questions about their choices, but each agreed that they had made the right decision for their families.
BECOMING A MUSLIM AND A MOTHER
Danielle LoDuca and her family live about 20 miles east of New York City in West Hempstead, Long Island.
LoDuca’s husband, Shakiel Humayun, is a C.E.O of a private elementary school in Hollis, Queens that offers Arabic and Islamic classes. Three out of their five children attend the school while LoDuca stays home taking care of the two younger children.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ir_nSaofnMU
LoDuca’s journey to becoming Muslim began while she was studying Art and Philosophy at Pratt Institute in Brooklyn. LoDuca considered herself a “thinker.”
“I used to kind of look at people who were really religious and scoff at them a little bit,” LoDuca said.
One semester, LoDuca looked out the window with the rest of her 9 a.m. class at the sight of the World Trade Center being attacked. This shook and confused LoDuca and compelled her to want to do something. She attended lectures about terrorism in Israel and researched more about what was going on there at the time as well. This led her to go with a humanitarian-efforts group to cities in Israel that were under regulated curfew.
That same semester, LoDuca enrolled in a Political Philosophy class. She wanted to prove that political philosophies and religions were similar in that they are both flawed and therefore man-made. She spent countless hours studying different religions, including Islam.
While in Israel, LoDuca witnessed the Islamic way-of-life and heard the Qur’an read out loud. LoDuca’s connection between her past studies of the Qur’an and hearing it intrigued her. Hearing the Qur’an was a “beautiful sound” that LoDuca initially thought was music.
When she came home from Israel, LoDuca read more books about Islam and decided to accept the religion as truth.
MOM’S GROUP: A COMMUNITY OF MOTHERS
Melanie Ciccarello and Barbara Korycka
A simple Google search for a mom’s group will link you to several different types of support groups by location, hobby, religion, and more. MOPs (Mothers of preschoolers) and Moms Club are two of the many groups that are nationally known and with various locations.
The majority of mom-support groups meet by neighborhood. There are groups for working moms, stay-at-home moms, and single moms. There are even groups for dads!
This particular mom’s group began about 30 years ago at Church of the Intercessor in Malverne, N.Y. by mothers in the church. They currently meet almost every Wednesday to hear a teaching, engage in discussion, and pray together.
AUDIO PODCAST: Melanie Ciccarello and Barbara Korycka of Mom’s Group
The mothers also set up events to go to the zoo or the Long Island Children’s Museum with their children.
“I could learn from other moms. I could also share where I was struggling and I had support. And I tell my kids, I’m a better mom because of mom’s group in particular because I wasn’t isolated,” Ciccarello said.
STARTING ALL OVER AGAIN, MOTHER WELCOMES A LATE ARRIVAL
The trend of when women are having children and the circumstances surrounding that decision has been changing for the last few decades.
The National Center for Health Statistics found that “the number of women giving birth at age 30 has doubled, at age 35, tripled and after age 40 has almost quadrupled” from 1980-2004, Psychology Today said in 2008.
There’s a correlation between going to school and having a family. “The average female college grad (of any race) starts her family at 30 and many wait longer, according to the CDC,” CBS News reported in 2012.
Jamie LeGrand is part of the increasing number of women giving birth over the age of 35. Instead of delaying pregnancy for later to go to school first, LeGrand delayed school and became a mother first…and then again.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AWg4Zew_xf0
LeGrand became a step-mom, at about 20 years old, to a young boy when she married her husband. LeGrand’s first pregnancy came shortly after she got married and she gave birth to her daughter. LeGrand birthed her second daughter four years later.
By the time LeGrand’s stepson moved out of the house, and her two daughters were in high school and middle school, she made plans to go back to school herself to fulfill her dream of becoming a Social Worker.
While working hard to achieve her Associate’s Degree, LeGrand became unexpectedly pregnant with her third child at age 37.
LeGrand had to shift gears in her life in order to raise a new baby, two teenagers, and figure out if she would ever finish school.
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