Amid the fanfare of faculty, family and friends, nearly 3,600 of the 9,023 University of Maryland University College stateside graduates walked the stage and received their masterâs, bachelorâs and associateâs diplomas in three separate ceremonies on Saturday and Sunday, May 14 and 15, when UMUC held its 2016 stateside commencement exercises at the XfinityÌęCenter in College Park, Maryland.
In all, at ceremonies held globally, UMUC celebrated the 9,989 graduates worldwide from all 50 states, the District of Columbia and 22 other countries and territories who earned degrees this year.
UMUCâs 49 doctoral candidatesâone of the universityâs largest groups of doctoral graduatesâwere honored and their degrees conferred in a separate ceremony at the College Park Marriott Hotel & Conference Center on Friday morning May 13.
Bryan Booth, vice dean of The Graduate School, told graduates they were both commencing into a community of scholar-practitioners, as well as membership into a doctoral alumni group of more than 400 graduates with a wealth of opportunities to assist current and future post-graduate students in their quest to earn a doctorate.
Guest speaker Charanne Smith, a recent graduate of UMUCâs Doctor of Management in Community College Policy Administration program, who said her parents instilled in her the importance of being a voice for the voiceless, asked graduates to be generous in sharing their journey.
âInvite and encourageÌęothers who may not have as many opportunities, resources or confidence [as you] to find and create their own journey,â Smith said.
COMMENCEMENT KEYNOTES
A Medal of Honor winner along with Maryland state and county officials were on hand during the weekend to deliver motivational keynote addresses urging graduates to use their hard-earned degrees to create positive change and support others in their effort to realize the dream of a higher education.
, who spoke at Saturday morningâs commencement, said that UMUC holds a special place in his heart because it serves as a shining example of access to quality higher education by allowing students to structure their education based on where they are at any given time in their lifeâs journey.
âThatâs powerful. Whether youâre a working mom, in the military, an entry-level staff person or just as a second career, UMUC provides a learning environment that enables you to succeed,â he said, adding that such access is about changing lives.
Baker challenged students to savor the graduation experience. âEnjoy the moment. Take the pictures. Take the cards from your family, which I hope have money in them,â Baker said.
âBut I hope what you will do most of all is remember.Ìę Remember what it took to get this degree. Remember the sacrifices you made. And then, give back. Give back to those communities that youâre going back to. Provide the opportunities for the next generation of folks to sit right where you are, to obtain their higher education and to change lives,â he said.
, keynote speaker onÌęSaturday afternoon, was born in France, grew up in Bethesda, Maryland, and became a naturalized U.S. citizen in 2001.
He entered the Army in 2008, Groberg told graduates, because âI wanted to earn that right to call myself an American.â
On August 8, 2012, when the security detail Groberg was leading in the Kunar Province in East Afghanistan was targeted by two suicide bombers, he said he knew it was not going to be a good day.
Pushing comrades aside, he subdued one attacker, who had already triggered his dead man switch.Ìę âI spent three years after that in the hospital. I had a lot of surgeries, but I canât complain. Iâm here right now with all of you. Iâm lucky.Ìę Iâm honored,â said Groberg, adding that he didnât always feel that way.
There were plenty of ugly days and ugly nights, he said, until a quadruple amputee walked into his room to remind him that it was a great day to be an American, a great day to be alive, that he had a second chance at life and needed to earn the right to be here.
âWhen he walked out of that room I said to myself, this will be the last day that I feel sorry for myself. ÌęI will live the rest of my life to be a better person and make a positive difference for [the] community and our country and our world,â Groberg said.
That journey started by continuing his education. âI always told my soldiers, âGo out there and learn. Nothing negative can come out of that, only positive things,ââ he said.
Groberg, who is working toward his Master of Science in Management with a specialization in Intelligence Management at UMUC, said heâs typical of UMUC students in many waysâheâs juggled classes around life, family, a full-time job.
âYou know what I did on November 12? I got the medal, right, which was an emotional moment for me. But after I got back to the hotel, I had to finish my paper. And I did it! You have all done it. You are living proof right here,â Groberg said.
âYou are our leaders. This is what weâve needed in this country and this world, individuals who are successful, that can accomplish the mission and the task under tremendous pressure, multi-tasking. This is you!Ìę We are so proud of you.â
He concluded by saying: "Iâm proud of being an American. And I sure as heck am proud to be a student at UMUC."
Said ,ÌęAttorney General of the State of Maryland and Chairman of the Maryland Cyber Security Council, âIt is a great honor for me to be here with you. Iâm impressed by all of you.â
Frosh, who delivered the commencement keynote address on Sunday, declared it a day worthy of a wise, profound, inspiring and, perhaps, poetic speech filled with advice that the graduates gathered before him could take to heart and remember for the rest of their lives.
âIâll be looking forward to hearing that speech too!â he said.
In the meantime, Frosh channeled a Greek mathematician and scholar, an English physicist, a cowboy philosopher and humorist, and a rock and roll icon to spread some collective wisdom and underscore the notion that learning ought to be a lifelong process.
He said it seemed ironic to him that heâd be giving anyone advice. He didnât have the answers and wasnât sure any one person did. Still, Frosh passed along to graduates the best job advice he said heâd ever gotten.
The first time he ever thought of running for office, a friend with political know-how told him, âThe best thing you can do is run and win. And the second best thing you can do is run, and lose.â ÌęThat sounded crazy to him at the time, he said, recalling how terrified he was of running.
âI stood outside the first house for about 10 minutes just working up the nerve to knock on the door, and when I finally did, no one was home. I was so relieved.â
Ultimately he got into the swing of things, worked day and night for about a year. âAnd sure enough, I lost. It hurt. It hurt a lot,â Frosh said.
But in hindsight, he realized that running for office the first time had taught him how to run. He ran again four years later and won.
âAnd the point of this is, we are all going to fail. We all fail once in a while. If you donât fail, youâre not trying hard enough,â he said.
As cowboy philosopher and humorist Will Rogers said, âgood judgment comes from experience, and a lot of that comes from bad judgment.â The best thing we can do is learn from our failures.
We can also learn from the collective wisdom of others. âIsaac Newton said, âif I have seen further it is by standing on the shoulders of giants.âÌę We all stand on the shoulders of giants. Every text book you read, every television show you watch represents the collective learning of millions of peopleâ Frosh said.
âThousands of years ago the Greek scholar Archimedes said, âgive me a place to stand and I shall move the world.â The fact that we know that is a good example of collective learning,â he continued.
Archimedes was talking about leverage, FroshÌęexplained, and the knowledge gained at UMUC gives the Class of 2016 powerful leverageâskills that throughout history have changed lives, he said.
Our overcrowded prisons, neighborhood conditions that dampen opportunity, a tidal wave of refugees bred by war and terrorism, global climate change all speak to the need for change.
âYouâve juggled careers, family, school, military service ⊠if anybody can make changes, you can.â
Frosh offered one last quotation, prompting a laugh. âThis [is] from one of Americaâs great poets, Jerry Garcia.â ÌęHe added, forÌęthose who didnât know, that Garcia was the front man for the rock band, The Grateful Dead.
âFor those of you who donât know who the Grateful Dead are, Iâm afraid UMUC has failed you.â More laughter.
â[Garcia]Ìę said, âSomebodyâs gotta do something. Itâs just so incredibly pathetic that itâs gotta be us.â And it does gotta be us, folks.Ìę You now have a place to stand. Move the world.Ìę Congratulations, and good luck.â
STUDENT SPEAKERS
Each year, the university selects several graduating students, who represent the special attributes of the graduating class, to deliver commencement addresses to their fellow graduates.
(BA Communications Studies), who spoke at the Saturday morning ceremony, said she hails from a typical New Orleans family that was rich in love and not much else.
Wardrick placed her college career on hold a trio of timesâfirst to serve in the U.S. Air Force, then to deal with the realities of divorce and single parenthood, and finally to come to the aid of family members when her hometown was devastated by Hurricane Katrina.
âDropping out of college a third time felt like a third strike. I gave up.â But several years ago, her husband, Dermaine, also a member of UMUCâs Class of 2016, encouraged her to dust off her dream just one more time, Wardrick said.
âWe are all here today because we did not give up. However rocky our roads may have been, they were paved with the luminous promise of this day,â she told graduates.
In the face of what, at times, seemed an insurmountable wall of obstacles in their path, she said, members of the Class of 2016 stayed the course.
âWe did not quitâwe laced up our boots and climbed that wall one foot at a time, [and] today, we kick it down! â
The self-described 45-year-old wife, mother, grandmother, native New Orleanian, U.S. Air Force veteran, legal support professional and proud graduate of UMUC encouraged her fellow graduates toÌęenergize their communities, attract constructive engagement, and chase the darkness of intolerance whenever and wherever they find it.
âAnd let us illuminate a path for those who have grown cynical of dreams, or who have resigned themselves to the belief that goals have expiration dates," said Wardrick. "I am living proof there are no statute of limitations on goals, and itâs never too late to chase dreams.â
(BA Communications Studies) said his UMUC story spans more than 15 years, 10 military duty stations, four combat deployments, two marriages, and the births of his three beautiful children.
âLike many graduates, Iâm here because of my familyâs support, the Army and the UMUC professors who all contributed to this culminating moment,â he told the commencement audience Saturday afternoon.
He had days, he said, that began at 6 a.m. and should have ended around 5 p.m., but thatâs when hisÌę âeducational dayâ began with long commutes across Germany and Korea for 6 p.m. classes that ended at 10 Ìęoâclock at night.
âOne day, my colonel asked, âhow do you do it, the early morning physical training, work, school and late night studying?ââ
Craig said he told his colonel the same thing that his grandfather used to tell him: âNine to five is work. Everything you do before and after is success.â
To all the working graduates present Craig said, âYou embody my grandfatherâs words.â
To the parents of his fellow graduates, he added, âI assure you that your sacrifice will benefit your family for generations to come.â
To graduates wearing the uniform as he does, Craig rendered a salute to both their service, and for adding another commitment to their duty.
âKnow that you are a special collegiate-military generation.Ìę Youâve achieved educational success during more than a decade of two wars, filled with 12-, 15- and 18-month combat deployments. ÌęYou are the next greatest generation,â he said.
Now equipped with the knowledge gained at UMUC, Craig told graduates, they have earned the responsibility to take action. And in this election year with so much chatter about Americaâs problems, Craig suggests we would do well to look to the Class of 2016 for solutions.
âYouâll open businesses that create new jobs. Youâll organize protests, working with community and city leaders to protect and advance civil rights.Ìę Youâll work in our state and federal agencies and departments to advance national security, immigration and foreign policy.
âYou will use your purchasing power to support businesses that strengthen our nationâs economy.Ìę Class of 2016, we will keep America great,â Craig said.
(BS Political Science) told fellow Class of 2016 graduates on Sunday afternoon that, while his story isnât as impressive as so many others, it is a typical UMUC story.
ÌęHe enrolled in college upon graduating high school in London, England, but dropped out, he said, because he truly disliked the experience.
âI hated every minute of it. And when I dropped out I thought, âthat was the end of my education.â Iâd never get a degree, never get to wear a long robe and a silly hat, never get to take a graduation photo like my brother and sister before me.â
Time and again, his then girlfriend Sonyaânow his wife and set to deliver their first child next weekâhad listened to him âcry down the phone from England.â He didnât want to quit school, he said, but he couldnât bear to stay at a school where he was so miserable.
So donât drop out, she told him. Try again.
And Franklin took her advice. He went back to school, first at Montgomery College and then at UMUC, where he met hundreds of people just like him, he said.
âMaybe this wasnât our first attempt at getting our degree, but we knew damn sure it was going to be our last one. This was our chance. And we werenât going to waste it,â said Franklin, adding âWe did this the hard way.â.
The Class of 2016 found time for college work after the kids had gone to bed and the workday was long gone. They wrote essays on the bus and took notes at traffic lights. They stayed up into the wee hours until the work was done, he said.
âSo hereâs to us. Hereâs to the grit and determination that got us here. Hereâs to proving wrong the people who said weâd never get this far. Hereâs to standing here today with the people who knew we would.â
Franklin toasted, too, the professors who made students think, the fellow students who did the same, and Ìęthe friends the world overâin Korea, or Germany or right here in Marylandâon the other side of the computer screen who graduates will never meet in person.
âGetting to this point took unbelievable courage and poise. We are parents and children, soldiers, sailors, and airmen, husbands and wives, teenagers and retirees. We are unstoppable. We are brilliant,â Franklin said.
âWe have proven that nothing can stand in our way. We are the UMUC Class of 2016, and we are destined for greatness.â
View videos of stateside commencement ceremonies and keynote addresses:
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THE GOLDEN TASSEL:
At the New-Graduate Reception on Friday evening May 13, UMUCâs Director of Alumni Engagement Kaitlin OâConnor presented two graduating students with a âGolden Tasselâ symbolizing the hours and effort expended, and the knowledge gained in the journey toward realizing a degree.
OâConnor praised awardee Simone Greggs, a single-mother of two, for being so motivated to serve as a strong role model for her children that she authored a book and started her own non-profit while achieving her bachelorâs in communication studies.
She said of awardee Benjamin Heffron, an active-duty U.S. Army soldier and father of four boys, that he lives by the motto, âFailure is not an option. It is an opportunity.â Heffron, who graduated with a master's in cybersecurity will return to UMUC this fall to work on his 91ÖÆÆŹł§.
âBy wearing these tassels this weekend, you will represent the entire class and their dedication to education and lifelong learning,â OâConnor said.
GLOBAL COMMENCEMENTS
UMUC also held commencement ceremonies for military personnel and their dependents at installations around the world:
- Tokyo, April 9
- Okinawa, April 16
- South Korea, April 23
- Europe, April 30
- Guam, May 14
Ìę
Check out messages, photos, and stories from UMUC graduates on and follow the conversation on Twitter using #UMUCGrad.
FACTS ABOUT THEÌęUMUC CLASS OF 2016:
Number of graduates stateside:Ìę 9,023
Number of graduates worldwide:Ìę 9,989
Average age of graduates:Ìę 35
Oldest graduate: 75
Youngest graduate: 19
DEGREES AWARDED THIS YEAR:
Associateâs = 1,383
Bachelorâs = 5,429
Masterâs = 3,260
Doctorate = 44
For more information about UMUC's 2016 commencement, please visit /commencement.
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