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'Nontraditional' grads kick off commencement
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By CLAUDINE SAN NICOLAS, Staff Writer
WAILUKU - Graduation season kicked off this weekend
with Friday's commencement for "nontraditional" graduates
receiving degrees through the University of Hawaii Center at Maui
Community College.
The center's annual commencement held Friday
in Baldwin High School's auditorium featured the symbolic conferring
of degrees to approximately 70 graduates.
"Now is our chance to go full circle and give back to the
community," student speaker Melinda Anne Gohn told her fellow
graduates.
Gohn earned a bachelor of arts degree in English
from the University of Hilo and was one of four students selected
to speak at Friday's graduation ceremony.
The featured guest speaker was Georgina Kawamura,
state budget director and county budget director for then-Mayor
Linda Lingle.
Kawamura herself is an MCC graduate in accounting
and finance.
"We are very proud of you," Kawamura
said.
Graduates receiving degrees through the UH Center
are often described as nontraditional because they tend to be
older than their early 20s, with families and holding full-time
jobs while raising children.
Courses offered through the UH Center allow students
to earn four-year degrees or master's degrees within the UH system
without having to leave Maui.
Most of the classes are held in the evenings,
on weekends or over the Internet.
The UH Center was launched in 1997, when Lingle
and other Maui leaders were pressing for a four-year university
on the Valley Isle.
UH was not willing to set up a full four-year
campus on Maui, and efforts to attract other accredited colleges
fell short.
With the county providing a $200,000 grant, UH
kicked in funds to provide four-year degrees and fifth-year teaching
certification through distance-learning programs provided by faculty
at the UH's four-year campuses.
The center has steadily increased its degree
offerings, with more than 300 graduates finishing studies since
1997, including one Ph.D. candidate.
At the same time, Maui Community College plans
to offer its own a four-year degree program beginning this fall,
in applied business and information technology.
At the UH Center ceremony Friday, student speaker
Sandra Kealohilani Hanson opened her address with a Hawaiian chant,
giving thanks to educators who provided the distance-education
programs.
"We greet you with our love, our appreciation,
for all you've done for us," Hanson said.
She earned a bachelor of education, elementary
education from UH-Manoa.
Student speaker Kelly Watanabe, a graduate earning
a master's in accounting from UH-Manoa, said nontraditional graduates
are often deprived of sleep and have no social life during their
two to four years of studies.
But commencement can signal the beginning of
celebration.
"I have three words for you," Watanabe
told her fellow graduates: "Party, party, party!"
Ghada Mariam Early, who earned a bachelor of
arts degree in business administration from UH-West Oahu, listed
qualities possessed by nontraditional graduates - pride, commitment,
perseverance, dedication, tenacity, strength and the aloha spirit.
She urged fellow graduates to take all their
qualities and "continue success in whatever you pursue."
Next up is the MCC graduation at 1 p.m. today
at the Maui Arts & Cultural Center, with about 130 students
participating in the ceremony to receive degrees and certificates.
Maui's graduation season will continue with the
37th commencement exercise for another group of nontraditional
students through the Maui Community School for Adults. The ceremony
will be held at 6 p.m. Wednesday in the Baldwin auditorium.
According to the school, more than 246 students
completed requirements necessary to receive their general educational
development diploma or GED.
The graduates are from a variety of study programs
provided by the Maui Community School for Adults, Hui Malama Learning
Center, Hawaii Job Corps, Maui First-to-Work, Department of Human
Services, Maui Youth and Family Services, and Ka Hale A Ke Ola
Homeless Resource Center.
Ten high school campuses in Maui County also
have scheduled graduation services through June 6.
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