@s_i_r_t20: #بنغازي_ليبيا🇱🇾 #فرجاني2020🔥✊ #جامعة_السلام_الدولية #السعودية🇸🇦 #

﮼الفرجاني🐅🔥.
﮼الفرجاني🐅🔥.
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Wednesday 10 June 2026 02:40:08 GMT
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s._alah0
صلاح القطراني :
🔥🔥🔥
2026-06-10 08:59:25
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hamze.khaled31
حمـزه الفرجاني❤️‍🔥 :
❤️❤️❤️🔥
2026-06-16 12:04:46
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They see tenure track, NASA scientist, doctor, professor and think people like us just fell from the sky. Students don’t see it. Colleagues judge it. And people who grew up in private schools, boarding schools, riding ponies and swimming in pools are often the first to lecture you about your supposed “ivory tower.” My ivory tower looked very different. It looked like public schools in Puerto Rico with deteriorating infrastructure that has been neglected for decades and somehow keeps getting worse. Textbooks with missing pages—or no textbooks at all. Teachers who cared deeply but were stretched beyond belief, and others who had long since given up. Physical education facilities that barely existed. Limited opportunities. Constant shortages. Even within Puerto Rico, many people prefer to showcase the best parts of the island while ignoring the social and educational disparities that shape so many lives. When I got into one of the most prestigious science and engineering campuses for undergrad, I was too naïve to fully understand what I was seeing. Looking back, the socioeconomic divide was obvious. Most students came from elite schools. Those coming from barrios and under-resourced communities weren’t less capable—they simply had fewer tools and had to fight ten times harder because the education they received was lacking. Becoming an educator didn’t just open my eyes to the injustices in Puerto Rico’s educational system. It made me appreciate my own journey. It humbled me. I think about cousins and family members who had every bit of the intelligence I did and could have gone just as far, but never had the opportunity or the guidance. They weren’t less talented. They just weren’t given the same chance. Most people can’t even imagine what it’s like to sometimes not have enough to eat, to leave college because you have to work, to come back later feeling like a failure, or to grow up inside broken systems that make success the exception instead of the expectation. So no, we’re not sitting in ivory towers. Some of us climbed out of places where there wasn’t even a ladder. #education #puertorico🇵🇷 #socialjustice #firstgenerationstudent #professor
They see tenure track, NASA scientist, doctor, professor and think people like us just fell from the sky. Students don’t see it. Colleagues judge it. And people who grew up in private schools, boarding schools, riding ponies and swimming in pools are often the first to lecture you about your supposed “ivory tower.” My ivory tower looked very different. It looked like public schools in Puerto Rico with deteriorating infrastructure that has been neglected for decades and somehow keeps getting worse. Textbooks with missing pages—or no textbooks at all. Teachers who cared deeply but were stretched beyond belief, and others who had long since given up. Physical education facilities that barely existed. Limited opportunities. Constant shortages. Even within Puerto Rico, many people prefer to showcase the best parts of the island while ignoring the social and educational disparities that shape so many lives. When I got into one of the most prestigious science and engineering campuses for undergrad, I was too naïve to fully understand what I was seeing. Looking back, the socioeconomic divide was obvious. Most students came from elite schools. Those coming from barrios and under-resourced communities weren’t less capable—they simply had fewer tools and had to fight ten times harder because the education they received was lacking. Becoming an educator didn’t just open my eyes to the injustices in Puerto Rico’s educational system. It made me appreciate my own journey. It humbled me. I think about cousins and family members who had every bit of the intelligence I did and could have gone just as far, but never had the opportunity or the guidance. They weren’t less talented. They just weren’t given the same chance. Most people can’t even imagine what it’s like to sometimes not have enough to eat, to leave college because you have to work, to come back later feeling like a failure, or to grow up inside broken systems that make success the exception instead of the expectation. So no, we’re not sitting in ivory towers. Some of us climbed out of places where there wasn’t even a ladder. #education #puertorico🇵🇷 #socialjustice #firstgenerationstudent #professor

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