Education
3 years ago

Ambassador Miller praises power of young minds in Bangladesh

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US Ambassador to Bangladesh Earl Miller has congratulated Sylhet's 20 newest graduates of the US State Department-funded English Access Microscholarship Programme.

He praised the 10 young women and 10 young men from local madrasas and public schools for their hard work in completing the course during the pandemic and encouraged them to continue their studies to prepare for the future.

"Bangladesh just marked its Golden Jubilee - the day when it declared its intention and ability to chart its own path. There's no better time to recognise the power of young minds - like yours - to design the next 50 years. You can take your new skills and use them as leaders who will shape the future of Bangladesh," he said during a virtual ceremony on Monday.

The English Access Microscholarship Programme is a rigorous, two-year interactive programme building a foundation in English language, American culture, critical thinking, and leadership skills for 13-17-year-olds from economically-disadvantaged backgrounds and helps them become more competitive for higher education and employment opportunities.

Currently, 76 students are participating in Access programmes in Rajshahi and Chattogram.

Two hundred additional students will start the programme in 2021. Since the programme began in 2004, 1,260 Bangladeshi students have successfully completed it.

The latest graduating class joins 95,000 other Access programme alumni in more than 85 countries around the world.

The Access programme is one of US Embassy Dhaka's many initiatives during this Golden Jubilee year to strengthen and expand people-to-people ties and educational linkages between the United States and Bangladesh, enhance the quality of education locally, and empower Bangladeshi youth through innovative learning opportunities, said the Embassy.

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