Former Queens University Dean Charged With Embezzling $1 Million

Kris Alingod – AHN News Contributor

Queens, NY, United States (AHN) – A former dean of St. John’s University was charged Wednesday with using $1 million worth of school funds to pay for her son’s tuition and other expenses such as groceries and Victoria’s Secret lingerie.

Cecilia Chang faces a 205-count indictment including first-degree grand larceny, 69 counts of second-degree forgery and 64 counts of first-degree falsification of business records.

The 57-year-old was the university’s vice president for international relations and dean of the Center of Asian Studies until her suspension and eventual removal this year. She is accused of having non-work related expenses reimbursed by the university over a six-year period, and funneling a $250,000 donation to the school from a Saudi Arabian foundation into a non-profit she created.

An alumni of St. John’s who received her doctorate from Columbia University, Chang faces as much as 25 years in prison. She has pleaded not guilty.

Chang’s official role included fundraising for the school, and she was often required to travel with dignitaries and take potential donors out for expensive meals or cater to their needs when they were visiting the United States. She would thus have her credit card charges regularly reimbursed, sometimes for as much as $50,000 a month.

A university audit last year, however, revealed that she had been submitting a credit card statement issued by a Taiwanese bank that had charges made by her son for groceries, gasoline, cable television, casino expenses, clothing and insurance.

Chang had several university-issued credit cards, according to prosecutors, but was allowed to use her personal credit card from Taishing Bank because she told school officials some places in Asia did not accept credit cards issued by U.S. banks.

Chang is also accused of using the Taishing Bank credit card to pay for her son’s tuition. She had the authority to award scholarships, and she gave her son a scholarship to the university’s law school. When she was told that her action was beyond her authority and that she had to pay for her son’s tuition, Chang allegedly used her personal credit card to cover the tuition and then submitted a false credit card statement so the expense could be reimbursed.

Prosecutors also charge that Chang misled a charity run by Prince Alwaleed bin Talal Al Saud of Saudi Arabia, the Kingdom Foundation, into believing it was donating money to the university.

Chang had proposed the creation of a non-profit, Global Development, to the university but officials had rejected the idea. Despite the decision of the school, she created the non-profit and used the university’s letterhead and official e-mail account to communicate with the Kingdom Foundation about a donation.

Her letters to the Saudi Arabian charity included statements such as, “On behalf of St. John’s University, we would like to convey our deepest gratitude.” The money, worth $250,000, was donated to Global Development and later reportedly wired by Chang to China.

Chang “was highly respected by school officials for her ability to successfully secure large, sometimes million dollar, contributions,” District Attorney Richard Brown said in a statement. “It is disheartening, indeed, to see an alleged betrayal of this magnitude which inexcusably deprived the University of much needed educational funds and could have a chilling effect on the school’s future fund-raising efforts.”

However, Chang’s lawyer, Todd Greenberg, told the New York Daily News, “Every dime that this woman spent was spent on behalf of St. John’s University, entertaining the people who St. John’s University told her to entertain.”

Article © AHN – All Rights Reserved

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How Can You Reach and Teach Children?

If your job involves teaching children you will know how difficult it can be. For starters their attention spans can be on the short side, leaving you to try and connect with them very quickly indeed.

In days gone by teachers had just some chalk and a blackboard to help them show children ideas and suggestions about the topic in hand. Nowadays we are surrounded by countless other practical and usable solutions to help teachers get their message across.

It is known that different people learn best in different ways. For example some people cannot grasp an idea unless they see it demonstrated in front of them. Others will pick it up more readily if they hear it explained to them. Still more will benefit from seeing an explanation written down.

Children are like this too. In the end we all learn in different ways and the more ways that teachers can engage the children in the classroom, the more likely it is they will get the message through.

While some think that the use of computers does not constitute learning, others beg to differ. Adults may not have grown up with the choice of using computers for learning, but like it or not today’s children have.

This means we have computers and all their associated software to help introduce our children to the type of learning that will engage them the most. All kinds of educational tools can be used by the children to connect them with the learning experience, no matter what the subject might be.

A modern pen and tablet may be a million miles away from the slate and chalk used in decades gone by but it has a place in the modern classroom and it encourages children of all ages to get involved. If this can be instilled at a young age it will also be carried through into learning throughout a child’s school years.

There is no replacement for a good teacher of course. A good teacher can make good use of a variety of tools to aid the learning experience. For example interactive whiteboards provide an essential connection between a computer and the whole class. From showing videos to sharing a presentation on a specific subject, the teacher can use colour, sound, vision and inspiration to reach all kinds of pupils who would otherwise be left behind and be disinterested.

It should be made clear that no amount of equipment can replace a good teacher. When the two form a partnership together there is no end to the ways they can engage the children and make learning fun. After all, isn’t that what learning should be? When children enjoy their lessons they learn more, and that is the power of engaging them with modern technology as well as good teaching.

Victoria Cochrane writes for a digital marketing agency. This article has been commissioned by a client of said agency. This article is not designed to promote, but should be considered professional content.

Article Source:http://www.articlesbase.com/childhood-education-articles/how-can-you-reach-and-teach-children-1670952.html