Stories

Stories

Immigration Policy Splits the Startup That’s Making a Wildly Popular History Teaching Platform

Immigration Policy Splits the Startup That’s Making a Wildly Popular History Teaching Platform

Thomas Ketchell hopes to transform America’s education system through a simple digital platform. The Belgian native is the CEO and co-founder of Sutori, a tool that allows students and educators to create free interactive timelines — similar to those on Facebook or Twitter — to document historical events. Ketchell first… Read More

An Immigrant Family Behind America’s Pita Craze

An Immigrant Family Behind America’s Pita Craze

In elementary school, Karen Toufayan’s friends never knew what to make of her lunch. While the others munched on Wonder Bread, Karen usually unwrapped a pita. “Nobody knew anything about pita bread,” says Karen. “They couldn’t even pronounce it. People were like, ‘What is that?’” She says it was like… Read More

Immigrant Voices: An Ohio Entrepreneur Who Sees the World Differently

Immigrant Voices: An Ohio Entrepreneur Who Sees the World Differently

Dr. Ayman Salem came to the United States from Egypt in 1998 to pursue a PhD in material science and engineering at Drexel University. Today he lives in Dayton, Ohio, where he started his own company, Materials Resources, LLC (MRL). In this podcast, Dr. Salem talks about founding and growing… Read More

A New Cooking Class Concept: Immigrants Open Their Kitchens

A New Cooking Class Concept: Immigrants Open Their Kitchens

Lisa Gross was raised on the cuisine of her grandmother’s native Korea. Growing up, when she came home from school, her halmoni would give her a snack of salt- and sesame-sprinkled rice. Dinners were made of Korean miso soup called Doenjang Guk, sautéed Korean beef, and multiple kinds of pungent… Read More

Immigrant Entrepreneur Named “Engineer of the Year”

Immigrant Entrepreneur Named “Engineer of the Year”

Dr. Karen Lozano is no stranger to public recognition for her achievements. A Mexican-born professor of mechanical engineering at The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley and a leading researcher in the field of nanotechnology, Lozano has won prizes ranging from R&D grants to outstanding teaching awards. Still,… Read More

The H-1B Employment Effect

The H-1B Employment Effect

The Partnership for a New American Economy’s new research brief, “The H-1B Employment Effect,” shows that high-skilled immigrants create jobs for U.S.-born workers in states across the country. Key findings include: By 2020, 700,000 American jobs will be created by the high-skilled foreign workers awarded H-1B visas between 2010 and… Read More

MIT Graduate from Greece Develops Cutting-Edge Technology in Wireless Electricity

MIT Graduate from Greece Develops Cutting-Edge Technology in Wireless Electricity

Aristeidis Karalis always imagined a career in math and science. What he couldn’t have predicted was just how successful his research in wireless electricity transmission would become. In many ways, Aristeidis Karalis always knew he’d wind up spending some of his academic career in the United States. Read More

Successful Belgian Entrepreneur and Stanford Graduate Worries About His Future in the U.S.

Successful Belgian Entrepreneur and Stanford Graduate Worries About His Future in the U.S.

Pierre-Jean Cobut, a Belgian entrepreneur who always dreamed of moving to America, was accepted into Stanford Business School in 2012. While at Stanford, he and his Israeli-born classmate Elad Ferber developed a hi-tech wearable fitness device that landed them on a list of “Stanford Business… Read More

A Successful Hairstylist from France is Held Back by US Immigration System

A Successful Hairstylist from France is Held Back by US Immigration System

Philippe Ma, a Hong Kong native who grew up in France, started a successful hair salon in the Orlando area. Unfortunately, the uncertainties of the E2 visa – which doesn’t put him on a path to getting a green card – have kept him from expanding and… Read More

An Immigrant from Mexico Makes a Big Impact through Nanofiber Technology

An Immigrant from Mexico Makes a Big Impact through Nanofiber Technology

Karen Lozano, the first Mexican national to earn an engineering PhD from Rice University, invented a spinning technology while working at UT-Pan American that could manufacture nanofibers 900 times faster than technologies currently on the market. That technology eventually was incorporated into FibeRio Technology Corporation, a firm that’s… Read More

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