The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Display honours high school grads

Charlottet­own high school recognizes its Grade 12 students with graduation gift

- DANIEL BROWN LOCAL JOURNALISM INITIATIVE REPORTER Twitter.com/dnlbrown95. Daniel Brown is a local journalism initiative reporter, a position funded by the federal government.

Colonel Gray High School students had a surprise waiting for them when they recently arrived at the facility where they studied for the past three years.

Personaliz­ed signs were posted on the front lawn at the Charlottet­own school as a way to honour this year’s graduates.

“I was actually completely shocked,” said Fatima AlQaysi.

She was one of about 300 Grade 12 students who didn't get to have a standard graduation this year due to the coronaviru­s (COVID-19 strain) pandemic.

But they were still able to celebrate the occasion – the high school’s staff made sure of it.

Suzanne Lee, a teacher at Colonel Gray, said the school contacted a Charlottet­own printing company about a month ago to have 292 signs made.

The idea was for each graduate to receive a personaliz­ed Class of 2020 sign as a graduation gift they could proudly display on their own front lawn.

Lee has helped organize the school's graduation events in past years.

“But we’ve never planned anything like this,” she said.

“We told the kids there would be a surprise on Friday.”

Ensuring pandemic health measures were adhered to was a logistical challenge on the day of the surprise.

Staff volunteers started setting up the signs at 6 a.m. to ensure they were appropriat­ely distanced from one another.

Students started to arrive by noon to discover the signs laid out in front of the school's front doors. According to Lee, many of them were surprised and appreciati­ve.

“Some of them may have guessed,” she said, laughing.

Al-Qaysi said it was a considerat­e gesture because they, like many students graduating this year, weren’t able to celebrate the milestone the way they expected to at the beginning of their school year.

“I thought it was really valuable.”

Caroline Trinh, another graduate, agreed it was an original way to acknowledg­e their achievemen­ts and act as a send-off.

“It’s something that was really different,” she said.

 ?? DANIEL BROWN/LOCAL JOURNALISM REPORTER ?? Caroline Trinh, left, and Fatima Al-Qaysi, right, present their signs during a surprise graduation event recently at Colonel Gray High School in Charlottet­own.
DANIEL BROWN/LOCAL JOURNALISM REPORTER Caroline Trinh, left, and Fatima Al-Qaysi, right, present their signs during a surprise graduation event recently at Colonel Gray High School in Charlottet­own.

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