Tag Archives: college

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Anna Kern, an asylum seeker from Ukraine with her Leaving Cert results, her mother, Lyudmyla Kyrychenko and sister, Olga Kyrychenko

Anna Kern, 19, originally from the Ukraine but who is seeking asylum in Ireland, and who is living in a direct provision centre in Limerick, received 575 points in her Leaving Cert.

Anna had hopes to study physiotherapy in the Royal College of Surgeons in Dublin, which would cost €25,000 a year for four years.

But, as her mother is not allowed to work and because asylee students are treated as international students, she couldn’t afford fees for third-level education.

However, on RTÉ Radio One’s Morning Ireland, Anna, who hopes to study physiotherapy, just told the show:

“[Education Minister] Jan O’Sullivan said I should accept my offer on Monday. She contacted the Royal College of Surgeons in Dublin and she will, they will together find a way. I think that’s great and I want to thank Jan O’Sullivan for her help and support. This means, if I get a place on Monday, I could accept it.”

Meanwhile…

Limerick asylum seeker got 575 points in Leaving Cert (Limerick Leader)

Asylum seeker students ‘abandoned’ by system (Irish Times)

Pic: Adrian Butler/LImerick Leader

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Via Trinity News:

An anonymous foreign student at Trinity College Dublin writes:

Women in college are four times more likely to be sexually assaulted than any other demographic. But most college women, myself included, don’t report incidents for reasons such as denial, fear, or just plain old confusion. The media presents rapists as being satanic old buck-toothed men with axes in hand, but that’s not always the case. The unwanted hook up in your own dorm room with a friend you’ve known for months can be, and in many cases is also rape….

…Having only been in Dublin a few short months, I still naively thought that I was going to leave this county in four years with a university degree and nothing else. Maybe that’s why I didn’t think twice before opening the door upon hearing the sharp buzzing of my apartment doorbell that woke me one November night. His pupils were dilated, his body shook with energy, and his breath reeked of alcohol. He knew what he wanted and he knew that I could do nothing about it. I resisted for a while, but after very quickly realising my sporadic attempts were being made to no avail, I stopped. I was emotionless, at least that’s what I told myself. I waited what felt like hours for it to be over. Eventually, his friend phoned him and he left “for something better”.

I didn’t tell anyone that night. I didn’t tell anyone the next day or the day after that either. For months, I stayed quiet. Over a year later, I’m still not sure why I stayed quiet. I suppose I didn’t want to admit that something so unthinkable could have possibly happened to me, but mostly, I was so horribly afraid of what he would do. I have spent every day since in denial, shame, regret, and more than anything, fear. I have denied myself the opportunity to heal by hiding in my self-created shadows of shame. Rumours still exist in my circle of friends that I was the one that took advantage of him because I was sober. I guess I was just too polite or passive or something to justify sticking up for myself, but in hindsight I regret not screaming the truth. But when I go to sleep every night, I don’t think about any of that. I think of him. The image of his face exactly as it was that night will never escape my mind, and it will never cease to terrify me. To this day, I haven’t done so much as kiss a boy without being physically ill within 24 hours. And I probably never will.

That being said, I didn’t write this article to victimise myself. I didn’t write this article to demonise my rapist. I didn’t write this article to shame my “friends” that were quick to judge the situation. I have come to a fuzzy conclusion that I owe this article to myself.

Personal expression could be the element, if any element exists at all, that will be helpful. I have spent over a year in nearly complete silence, and that was over a year too long…

More here: I Could Be Anyone: The Aftermath of Rape (Trinity News)

(Sam Boal/Photocall Ireland)

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Statistics from the Higher Education Authority revealed on Morning Ireland this morning which compare the percentage of young people who go to college from Dublin 6 – which includes Milltown, Ranelagh, Rathmines, Darty and Rathgar – with the same from Dublin 17, which includes Balgriffin, most of Coolock, Belcamp, Darndale and Priorswood.

Listen back here