日韩色综合-日韩色中色-日韩色在线-日韩色哟哟-国产ts在线视频-国产suv精品一区二区69

手機APP下載

您現在的位置: 首頁 > 在線廣播 > VOA慢速英語 > VOA慢速-美國萬花筒 > 正文

VOA慢速新聞附字幕: 年輕難民在足球場上了解美國

來源:可可英語 編輯:Sunny ?  可可英語APP下載 |  可可官方微信:ikekenet
  


手機掃描二維碼查看全部內容

Young refugees in the United States are learning about each other and their new country on the soccer field.

One player is 13-year-old Win La Bar. His family is from Myanmar, also known as Burma. Win was born in Thailand after his family fled their Burmese homeland.

Win is one of about 200 refugee children who play at the North Phoenix Christian Soccer Club, in the western state of Arizona. The players in the club's 12 teams are between 6 and 18 years old.

Win lives with 10 family members. They share two apartments. Win has his own bedroom, but his sister sleeps in a room with her three young children. Win's parents and three other children live in another apartment that has two bedrooms.

He says he loves his new home because "I've got a better chance to get a better education, and (I) get to play more soccer without worrying about gunshots." He says he does not want to have a difficult life like his parents have had.

The soccer club has helped him make friends and learn about his new home. His coaches have taught his family about life in the United States.

He says it was "very different, very hard to adapt into this world. It's hard to understand," he says, because he had never seen cars or planes. "It's very different from where I used to live."

Win says he does not remember how he learned English. He says one of the coaches has helped him and his younger brothers since the family arrived in Phoenix. He says he is a good student.

Alondra Ruiz works for the soccer club. She brings the players to games and drives them home. Sometimes she drives for hours a day, and hundreds of kilometers a week.

She says during the rides the students ask her many questions about the United States. "I get the opportunity to teach kids things that maybe their parents can't answer," she says.

Ruiz says she tells them "you're not different. You're here. And you can become anything you want."

"Being part of this club, and keeping kids busy is very rewarding to me because it's good for them, and it's good for the future," she says.

"I listen a lot when I'm driving," she says. "What I hear often is that they're being treated different at school, that they're not being accepted. I relate to that 100 percent. I wasn't accepted coming from Mexico."

Ruiz was an immigrant child. She grew up in the Southwest United States.

Ruiz is married, and her two children are adults. She is not in the United States legally. Her husband also came to the United States from Mexico as a child. He has permission to work in the U.S. He cares for plants and trees at a college.

More than 70,000 refugees from many countries have been resettled in Arizona in the past 10 years. The U.S. State Department says more than 33,000 refugees have begun new lives in Arizona since 2002. Only Texas, California, New York, Minnesota, Florida and Washington have accepted more refugees than Arizona.

In the past year, refugees from 13 countries have moved to Arizona. There are players from at least 12 countries in the soccer club this year. And Alondra Ruiz says the club has had players from at least 24 countries.

Zara Doukoum knows what the other refugee students have dealt with, including when people did not understand what they were saying when they were just learning to speak English.

"Every refugee in America went through that," she says.

This year she will graduate from Central High School, the public school attended by most of her teammates. It will be four years since she arrived in Phoenix with her mother and three sisters. Her father died seven years ago.

She wants to attend college. She may play soccer or tennis.

"If that doesn't work for me, I see myself just helping around, giving back to the community the way people gave to me," she says.

Dina Berman is a professor at the University of Miami. She researches child refugee education and writes for the Migration Policy Institute. She says putting refugee children in schools is difficult because they may not have the same level of education as children their age in the U.S.

Win La Bar said he had a difficult time when he started school in the United States. He says people did not understand him.

"When I (went) to school and I (met) new people, (at first), they (didn't) really have respect for me," he says. "But as they (got) to know me, they (had) a better feeling for me, and became, like, good to me."

I'm Christopher Jones-Cruise.

And I'm Anna Matteo.

重點單詞   查看全部解釋    
opportunity [.ɔpə'tju:niti]

想一想再看

n. 機會,時機

 
migration [mai'greiʃən]

想一想再看

n. 移民,移往,移動

 
understand [.ʌndə'stænd]

想一想再看

vt. 理解,懂,聽說,獲悉,將 ... 理解為,認為<

 
institute ['institju:t]

想一想再看

n. 學會,學院,協會
vt. 創立,開始,制

聯想記憶
permission [pə'miʃən]

想一想再看

n. 同意,許可,允許

聯想記憶
drives

想一想再看

n. 驅動器;驅動力;驅動程序(drive的復數形式)

 
community [kə'mju:niti]

想一想再看

n. 社區,社會,團體,共同體,公眾,[生]群落

聯想記憶
adapt [ə'dæpt]

想一想再看

vt. 使適應,改編
vi. 適應,適合

聯想記憶
rewarding [ri'wɔ:diŋ]

想一想再看

adj. 有報酬的,有益的

聯想記憶
?
發布評論我來說2句

    最新文章

    可可英語官方微信(微信號:ikekenet)

    每天向大家推送短小精悍的英語學習資料.

    添加方式1.掃描上方可可官方微信二維碼。
    添加方式2.搜索微信號ikekenet添加即可。
    主站蜘蛛池模板: 含羞草传媒2024| 国产破处视频在线播放| 江苏卫视今天节目表| 大奉打更人电视剧在线观看全集免费播放| 颂赞诗歌| 张筱雨粉嫩啪啪人体| 黄子华最新电影| 爱情陷阱| 公主们的战国| 荒岛大逃亡电影| 永濑佳子| 欠工资不给打什么电话能最快处理| 爱在一起麻辣烫| 范瑞君| 求佛的歌词| 礼佛三拜正确动作视频| 东莞回忆录| 李采潭全部作品| 韶山研学心得体会800高中| 女生操| 电影1921| hunger game| 02j331| 看黄免费在线| 邓为个人资料及简历| 天才不能承受之重| 迷案1937电视剧剧情介绍| 紧缚视频 | vk| 真田太平记| 小敏家| 挠vk| wet pussy| 台版十七岁免费观看| 男生丝袜| 小姐诱心在线| 羞羞答答av| www.黄视频| 人民日报评墨茶| 人口高质量发展论文800字| 孙兴电影| 近距离恋爱 电影|