Ohio
As Ukrainian refugees settle in Northeast Ohio, teachers push for more resources to help with language barrier
PARMA, Ohio — Whereas the warfare abroad in Ukraine continues, households who fled and ended up proper right here in Northeast Ohio nonetheless face an extended listing of challenges.
At St. Anthony of Padua in Parma, faculty leaders instructed Information 5 they’ve taken in six refugees from Ukraine previously six months, they usually say they count on their English-as-a-second-language Ukrainian pupil inhabitants of greater than 40 to solely develop going ahead.
Nonetheless, whilst extra households select to ship their kids to St. Anthony of Padua, lecturers mentioned they’re nonetheless struggling on the subject of the right assets to show college students who are available with little or no English comprehension.
“No matter we’re doing, I am attempting to do in English and in Ukrainian,” instructor Peggy Krayzel mentioned. “However discovering that useful resource in Ukrainian is close to unimaginable. What’s on the market appears to be for our youthful youngsters, not for our older.”
It’s a puzzle for principal Patrick Klimkewicz — discovering the best assets and studying supplies for a language most thought of obscure just some years in the past.
“What you discover is a whole lot of assets are in Spanish,” principal Patrick Klimkewicz added. “Our state of affairs is totally completely different. We have now not been very profitable catering to that Ukrainian language finish of it. It stretched us in methods I do not suppose many have been anticipating.”
With the assistance of their eighth-grade classmate-turned-translator Taras Peleh, Information 5 spoke with two college students who fled Ukraine earlier this yr whereas their households stayed within the war-torn nation.
Within the curiosity of their households’ security, Information 5 is declining to publish the scholars’ final names.
“It’s very onerous for me as a result of I do not communicate English,” 14-year-old Mykhailo mentioned.
“I’m good at math and science, however my English and social research usually are not so good,” added 14-year-old Yefym.
Going ahead, many lecturers and directors instructed Information 5 they hope extra assets might be centered to assist clean the transition for college students reminiscent of Yefym and Mykhailo.
“If anybody is aware of share any of those assets or assist us with the communication, that’s the toughest half,” she mentioned. “We’re attempting our greatest. We actually need these youngsters to really feel comfy and welcome.”
Obtain the Information 5 Cleveland app now for extra tales from us, plus alerts on main information, the most recent climate forecast, site visitors data and way more. Obtain now in your Apple gadget right here, and your Android gadget right here.
You can too catch Information 5 Cleveland on Roku, Apple TV, Amazon Fireplace TV, YouTube TV, DIRECTV NOW, Hulu Stay and extra. We’re additionally on Amazon Alexa gadgets. Study extra about our streaming choices right here.
Ohio
Ryan Day reveals why Ohio State must change gameplan in rematch vs. Oregon
Ohio State‘s convincing 42-17 win over Tennessee in the first round of the College Football Playoff set the stage for a blockbuster rematch between the Buckeyes and the undefeated, top-seeded Oregon Ducks.
The Buckeyes have known this rematch was looming in the quarterfinals since the CFP bracket was set, but weren’t able to look past the Vols until the final whistle.
Get your team’s official College Football Playoff watch from AXIA by CLICKING HERE: “Watches that tell so much more than time”
Now set to face a fresh Oregon squad coming off a Big Ten Championship win over Penn State and a first-round bye, Ohio State head coach Ryan Day explained why this Ducks squad isn’t the same one they lost to earlier this year — and either are they.
“It’s not like we played them just a couple weeks ago,” Day said. “This was midseason, and there’s been a lot of football played since then. Like I said, I feel we’ve evolved. They’ve evolved. Different teams. So there are certainly things that you want to look at that happened in that game but also, as time’s moved on, how they’ve changed, how we’ve changed and how does that fit as we put together the game plan.
“But ultimately, we want to make sure that we’re putting together a great game plan so our guys can play fast, they understand what we’re trying to get done in terms of attacking in all three phases, and they can play with emotion and physicality.”
During the regular season, the clock literally ran out on Ohio State and left Eugene with a heartbreaking 32-31 loss. The Ducks are still undefeated heading into Saturday after edging past the Buckeyes in October.
“We’ve made adjustments coming off that game, and we worked hard to make sure that we’re putting our guys in the best position to be successful,” he continued. “We’ll do that again against these guys this week and go compete our tails off.”
The rematch between the Buckeyes and Ducks is set for 5 p.m. ET on New Year’s Day and will air live on ESPN.
Ohio
Ohio State Buckeyes’ Will Howard Earns Major Ranking
Going into the 2024 college football season, there were a lot of questions about Ohio State Buckeyes quarterback Will Howard.
Heck, there were concerns about him following Ohio State’s dreadful loss to the Michigan Wolverines in the season finale, and the jury is really still out on the Kansas State transfer.
However, there is no denying that Howard stepped up in the Buckeyes’ first-round College Football Playoff game against the Tennessee Volunteers, as he went 24-for-29 with 311 yards, a couple of touchdowns and an interception.
As a result of his impressive performance, Tom Fornelli of CBS Sports ranked him the second-best quarterback remaining in the College Football Playoff, placing only Oregon Ducks signal-caller Dillon Gabriel above him.
“It was easy to say Ohio State should’ve thrown the ball more in the loss to Michigan — I know because I said it, too — but there are two sides to the story,” Fornelli wrote. “You can’t just call more pass plays; you need your quarterback to execute. Howard did that in a frigid Ohio Stadium on Saturday night. He dropped some absolute dimes en route to 311 yards passing while completing 24 of his 29 attempts. This week, he’ll get a chance at redemption following his late-game gaffe in Eugene earlier this season.”
On the season overall, Howard has thrown for 3,171 yards, 29 touchdowns and nine picks while completing 73.2 percent of his passes. He has also punched in seven rushing scores.
Howard still has head-scratching moments, like when he threw an interception in the red zone during the first half against Tennessee.
But, for the most part, he has been everything Ohio State could have asked for since acquiring him via the transfer portal last year.
We’ll see how he fares against Oregon in the Rose Bowl.
Ohio
Ohio minimum wage to increase Jan. 1 – Washington Examiner
(The Center Square) – Ohioans working for minimum wage will get another Christmas present in a week.
The state’s minimum wage rises by 25 cents on Jan. 1, going to $10.70 an hour to account for inflation. The current Ohio minimum wage for tipped employees is $5.25 per hour and $10.45 for nontipped workers. The minimum wage for youth workers is $7.25 per hour.
“Ohio voters are to thank for next month’s increase in the minimum wage,” Policy Matters Ohio Economist Heather Smith said. “Voters enshrined adjustments for inflation to the minimum wage law in 2006, when they voted overwhelmingly to raise the state minimum wage. Over 28% of Ohio families with incomes below the federal poverty level will get some relief from rising prices as a result.”
The Economic Policy Institute estimates about 112,700 Ohioans paid less than $10.70 will see a direct wage increase Jan. 1, and another 206,000 making just above the minimum will also see an increase when employers adjust pay scales.
A proposed constitutional amendment that would raise the state’s minimum wage to $15 per hour plus tips by 2026 failed to reach the required number of signatures to reach the ballot earlier this year.
As previously reported by The Center Square, the Ohio Chamber of Commerce opposed the proposed amendment, saying it would hurt small businesses that continue to struggle.
“The proposed minimum wage amendment to the Ohio Constitution is not only ill-advised and economically detrimental, it would be next to impossible to correct once the unintended consequences transpire,” Chamber CEO Steve Stivers said, including the potential for layoffs and reduced jours for workers.
-
Technology6 days ago
Google’s counteroffer to the government trying to break it up is unbundling Android apps
-
News1 week ago
Novo Nordisk shares tumble as weight-loss drug trial data disappoints
-
Politics1 week ago
Illegal immigrant sexually abused child in the U.S. after being removed from the country five times
-
Entertainment1 week ago
'It's a little holiday gift': Inside the Weeknd's free Santa Monica show for his biggest fans
-
Lifestyle1 week ago
Think you can't dance? Get up and try these tips in our comic. We dare you!
-
Technology3 days ago
There’s a reason Metaphor: ReFantanzio’s battle music sounds as cool as it does
-
Technology1 week ago
Fox News AI Newsletter: OpenAI responds to Elon Musk's lawsuit
-
News4 days ago
France’s new premier selects Eric Lombard as finance minister