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FIU Embrace providing meaningful education to students with developmental disabilities so they can work and live independently – CBS Miami

MIAMI A local university helps young adults find their inner light. FIU Embrace provides students with developmental disabilities with meaningful education and the tools to work and live independently.

A program one parent says changed the ball game for her son.

"When we came here, it opened the door for everything," said Sandra Fertil, mother of FIU Embrace student Marcel.

27-year-old Marcel has cerebral palsy. And before enrolling at FIU Embrace in 2019, his mom worried about his future.

"What will happen to him after we are gone," shared Sandra. "That was a great concern."

Marcel was born premature, weighing one pound and 13 ounces.

"I'm a miracle baby," said Marcel. "My mom and dad take very good care of me."

Despite life's early obstacles, Marcel grew up with a loving, adventurous spirit. What he needed was an opportunity to show it.

"I used to be very shy and closed off," said Marcel. "Now, I'm more open."

Enter FIU Embrace, where Marcel developed a love and passion for cooking and being in the kitchen. He learned how to maneuver around campus by himself, make friends, advance his education, and became a proud FIU Embrace graduate last month, ready to work.

"I'm very confident in myself and my abilities and try not to worry about my disability," said Marcel. "I'm special in some way."

FIU Embrace Director Nicole Attong says creating confidence is key.

"Where they see themselves and who they see themselves becoming," added Attong.

The three-year program offers non-degree seeking and degree-seeking tracks, both geared for the individual to embrace their disability, find a career path, and land a job after graduation. Right now, the focus is on the non-degree seeking program.

"Getting the individual to learn more about themselves," shared Attong. "Fluent in areas you and I take for granted, cooking things and all the things we need to do to get through life."

It's precisely why FIU Embrace board member Cuong Do is glad his son Ben enrolled last year.

"He is thriving," said Do proudly.

Ben is on the spectrum. He lights up a room when sharing his animation projects. Ben plans to pursue a degree in digital animation. Cuong moved his family from New Jersey to South Florida to support Ben's dream and independence.

"We have to get into the mindset we will have to push them to be independent," said Do. "The more hands-off, the better."

"Number one fear is what's going to happen to my children or who is going to look after my children after I pass. Our answer is they will look after themselves."

And that's why Attong believes the single most crucial piece is pairing each student with a thriving student peer.

"See others like themselves who have jobs, enrolled in classes, living on campus in dorms, see themselves reflected in someone who was successful, believe then, for the first time they belong here," said Attong.

"I see the gleam in Ben's eye," said Do. "I see the gleam in the eyes of the other students here at Embrace. That's true happiness and true pursuit of passion."

Ben told CBS4 his dream job is to work for Nickelodeon, which happens to be part of our TV family, Paramount Global.

Attong adds community engagement and social networking create pathways for these exceptional students to land jobs after completing the program.

The program accepts young adults 18 through 28. The goal is to expand to 200 non-degree seeking students on campus by 2026.

Joe Gorchow joins CBS4 News as a seasoned reporter and anchor with extensive live and breaking news experience. Joe's competitive nature and passion for connecting with the community blend perfectly into his role at WFOR. He strives to provide the coverage our viewers deserve.

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FIU Embrace providing meaningful education to students with developmental disabilities so they can work and live independently - CBS Miami

Earnings Infographic: Highlights of Weibos Q2 2022 results – AlphaStreet

Weibo Corporation (NASDAQ: WB) on Thursday reported lower revenues and net profit for the second quarter of 2022, despite an increase in the number of users.

The China-based social networking company reported adjusted profit of $0.46 per share for the most recent quarter, down 42% from the year-ago period. On an unadjusted basis, net profit decreased to $28.3 million or $0.12 per share from $81.03 million or $0.35 per share last year.

The bottom line was hurt by a 22% decrease in revenues to $450.2 million. At the end of the quarter, Weibo had around 582 million monthly active users and 252 million daily active users.

Read management/analysts comments on quarterly reports

On monetization, although broad-based headwinds weighed on advertising demand in the near term, we are encouraged to see resilient performance of certain sectors and the gradual pick-up of the overall advertising business after the pandemic. Weibo also delivered a non-GAAP operating margin of 32% in the second quarter, which further improved from the first quarter of 2022, as we executed against our efficiency initiatives to optimize costs and expenses, said Weibos CEO Gaofei Wang.

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Earnings Infographic: Highlights of Weibos Q2 2022 results - AlphaStreet

LadBaby, a social media sensation, is accused of groping a womans Bottom – TDPel Media

LadBaby, a social media sensation, is said to have been caught on camera fondling the butt of an unidentified lady in a nightclub.

The 35-year-old, whose actual name is Mark Hoyle, has developed a cult-like following on Instagram and TikTok thanks to the family-friendly films he and his wife Roxanne post.

Hoyle seemed to embrace the lady in an 18-second film posted on TikTok this week.

The lady eventually finishes her drink and departs, leaving Hoyle alone himself in the bar.

The videos recording date and location are unknown, and some fans have speculated that the guy in the clip is not Hoyle but rather a doppelganger.

The 35-year-old, whose real name is Mark Hoyle, has gained a cult like following on TikTok and Instagram for the family friendly videos he makes with his wife, Roxanne (pictured together with their two children)

Just three hours ago, the couple shared another lighthearted video on their joint TikTok account, showing Roxanne dancing in activewear and hugging her husband

LadBaby, who has 5.6 million Facebook fans and 3.4 million TikTok followers, rose to stardom with his Christmas songs featuring sausage rolls, which have been at No. 1 for four years.

Despite being removed from the social networking platform for breaking its content policies, the original footage has nevertheless been shared hundreds of times.

If its not him, why did he stop groping the girl when he spotted the camera, wondered one fan?

Another person said: I believe people need to quit passing judgment on a subject they have no knowledge about. Give them space.

We all know Rox would have dropped and booted him out the door by this point, but she is as content as ever, so Im content with that.

Hoyles agents have been contacted by MailOnline for comment.

Hoyle, a former graphic designer, and his 37-year-old fellow YouTuber wife have two kids together. Their kids often appear on their social media accounts.

With his sausage roll-themed Christmas charity tracks, LadBaby has reached Christmas No. 1 for four years. He has 5.6 million Facebook fans and an additional 3.4 million on TikTok.

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LadBaby, a social media sensation, is accused of groping a womans Bottom - TDPel Media

EXCLUSIVE: Vlad Tells Akademiks about Tariq Nasheed Confronting Tommy Sotomayor at VladTV – VladTV

Watch the full interview now as a VladTV Youtube Member: Click Here

Part 14: DJ Akademiks on Why He Interviewed Andrew Tate, Vlad Turned Down the InterviewPart 1: DJ Akademiks on Helping Vlad & NLE Choppa End Their Beef and Do an Interview

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In this clip, DJ Vlad recalls the awkward moment when he got caught up in a beef between radio hosts Tommy Sotomayor and Tariq Nasheed during a taping for VladTV, before explaining why he is no longer interested in working with anyone from their genre again. To that, DJ Akademiks explains why he, too, was going to interview Tommy Sotomayor as long as the conversation had the potential to be productive and worthwhile. DJ Vlad responds by indicating that the impression he got from Sotomayor during their discussion was that he had something against poor people, which turned him off. Lastly, DJ Akademiks shares his thoughts on the talk radio/conservation political commentator genre as a whole.

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EXCLUSIVE: Vlad Tells Akademiks about Tariq Nasheed Confronting Tommy Sotomayor at VladTV - VladTV

2022 – Combatting Misinformation – The Seattle U Newsroom – The Seattle U Newsroom – News, stories and more

Lydia Bello, science and engineering librarian, and Jennifer Bodley, adjunct librarian, collaborated on a blog article, SIFT-ing Through Information Online to provide the campus community with guidance on media literacy, which is being critically engaged when receiving, finding, evaluating, using, creating and sharing media, particularly in an online environment.While some question the legitimacy of Wikipedia, learn how its their first trusted line of defense in avoiding misinformation.

Q: What prompted you both to write a blog article that addresses media literacy and misinformation?

JB: We were asked to write about misinformation, mostly prompted from events happening in the world. I think at the time the Russia-Ukraine news cycle had started and ... COVID-19 has obviously been in the news cycle for a long time and theres a lot of other issues where misinformation is very problematic with information getting to the public.

LB: In the early days of the invasion of Ukraine, there was information flowing fast and furious. A lot of it misinformation and unverified and a lot of people here [at SU] are directly impacted by those current events. Along with that, Jennifer had just finished teaching a workshop on these skills and it all sort of fell into place that we thought this might be a good time to offer a reminder.

JB: News is a fire hose, so whenever you have that fire hose obviously you dont have checks and balances and controlled dissemination of factual reporting.

Q: What are some of the sources where misinformation is the highest or spreads fastest (i.e., social media/specific platforms, news media, etc.)?

LB: Some of the really obvious places include social media designed to spread information quickly. Weve all seen articles and research about the addictive nature of social media, about how its designed to engage you in order to create advertising dollars. Because of that, its a core place where information moves.

Misinformation and disinformation also move quickly when theres a strong sense of emotion attached to it. Emotions like fear or anger are ones that come to mind, but also vindication, satisfaction and a really strong desire to help. When those emotions are attached or are involved, they help move the flow of misinformation on these platforms really quickly as well.

JB: Were talking about social media being behind a lot of misinformation and disinformation, but the mainstream media also reports on social media and we also know that governing bodies and other institutions of power disseminate a lot of information through social media.

Its about figuring out whats okay. I can use the social media from this organization because its a quote good organization. But then Im supposed to be able to spot this bad information from this other social media channel.

Were in a flat environment (lacking indicators around credibility). Years ago, when you went to the checkout stand, you could tell what was a tabloid like The National Enquirer by the paper it was printed on, the colors used and the sensational headlines. There was a tactile or concrete way that you could process and evaluate. And right now, everything is just in this flat environment, so it's just that much harder to process.

Q: As librarians, how do you view your roles when it comes to combatting misinformation?

LB: One of the key parts of our jobs is helping our students, faculty and staff build skills to navigate the information environment (through courses, research services, etc.). The first thing you think of when you think librarians is that we help students navigate the library and navigate the information we have in the library, which is its own type of complex information environment.

We see those skills transferring to teaching students how to navigate the world and the information environment outside of their assignments as well. Helping students build those skills and then also helping them understand that they need to be engaged with the information they see on a day-to-day basis, not necessarily as passive consumers.

We [as humans] dont innately know how to navigate information and theres a lot of talk about someone who has grown up around technology, but even young people dont innately know. It depends on who has access to what sort of technology growing up and thats very financially based. It also depends on if youre actually taught those skills or not.

A good part of our job is explicitly teaching those skills and teaching them in such a way that they fit with their day-to-day lives.

JB: As librarians, were teaching students particularly in content-related classes. When we teach students in an introductory chemistry or psychology class, we arent working with domain experts [in those subjects]. Domain experts already know seminal works and know prominent, authoritative researchers and organizations within their domain who are disseminating information. Domain experts can go to these sources directly or see them quickly in search results. Domain novices dont have that head start when evaluating information. They have to evaluate a lot of unfamiliar and complex information with no specialized knowledge.

Take for example health information. A student could say, I know the CDC, I understand the government structures, so I know that the CDC would potentially be a good source. Somebody else could say, Oh, you know doctor so and so has this blog, I think that would be a good source. This directly ties into what we teach them in the classroom and how they apply that in their lives outside the classroom.

Q: Anything you would like to highlight or expand on regarding Michael Caufields work/approach (SIFT Method, etc.)?

JB: Caulfields approach is kind of simplistic, but he specifically created it so that you could use it in that flat environment. His method helps you recontextualize information.

LB: Its grounded in a Stanford Graduate School of Education study on how students navigate the credibility of information online. There have been updates to this research recently, but one of the original studies was from 2016.

Also, I want to emphasize the SIFT method isnt like a checklist or a long, arduous process.

Its supposed to be a quick fact-checking habit. Its designed to help you decide whether you want to spend more time on a source. Its supposed to be something that you can just build in your daily practice of consuming information on a day-to-day basis. A lot of times Ill investigate sources on Wikipedia for the original source if Ive never heard of it before. Caufield calls it the Wikipedia Trickchecking to see what somebody says about a source and figure out if its a known site for misinformation.

Q: What are some ways people can spot and/or avoid misinformation?

LB: Because so many things around this flat environment are on the Internet, were losing all these contextual clues and its really easy to convince someone that something is true or something is fake. Known misinformation sites can look really well polished, have great web design and a really specific tone and a well-known and respected scholarly article or source.

All of this is why having SIFT as a habit knowing that it takes 30 seconds or less is really helpful so you dont waste time looking for clues or hints. Sometimes misinformation is not designed to be actively harmfulits satire or something else thats been moved to a completely different context.

Q: Are there any additional points, resources or intersections of media literacy/misinformation research you would like to mention?

JB: This isnt going away anytime soon or ever so theres no way we can legislate our way out of this. Corporate responsibility is not going to get rid of this. Everything from the Australian wildfires to war in Ukraine to school board meetings. I mean theres absolutely nothing that's immune to misinformation.

To view the full Lemieux Library blog article, visit https://libguides.seattleu.edu/blog/SIFT-ing-Through-Information-Online.

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2022 - Combatting Misinformation - The Seattle U Newsroom - The Seattle U Newsroom - News, stories and more