The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Cobb 14-year-old picks up A.A. degree

- By Eric Stirgus estirgus@ajc.com

Matthew McKenzie’s black graduation gown for his college commenceme­nt was a little oversized. Well, he turned 14 last month. Matthew, who lives in the Acworth area, received his associate degree Thursday from Chattahooc­hee Technical College. He enrolled there two years ago, taking classes as part of the state’s dual-enrollment program, which allows high school students to get college credits. Matthew was home-schooled.

Matthew is the youngest student to earn a degree (interdisci­plinary studies) this year from the Technical College System of Georgia. He also received a technical specialist certificat­e.

“It proves there is nothing you cannot do,” said Matthew.

Matthew actually had to get a waiver to attend the college because he was too young to enroll there, said his mother, Monique McCord. Mom learned about the program and encouraged her son to try taking the courses.

“I’ve been given the opportunit­y to do something big, so what was the worst that could happen,” Matthew thought.

Matthew finished classwork faster than the other kids, his mother said. McCord said she did research on accelerate­d learning and began home-schooling Matthew in the second grade after school officials declined to skip him to a higher grade.

“Educationa­lly, he’s always been ahead,” she said. “I felt like it would be a disservice to stop him.”

Matthew quickly stood out on campus. The bulk of the students are between ages of 25 and 44. Matthew said the greatest adjustment to college life was being in classrooms after home schooling.

Chattahooc­hee Tech had about 2,500 dual-enrollment students in 2017, a record, according to its most recent annual report. Amy Ward, who taught Matthew in U.S. History and World History, said he’s well-prepared and highly motivated, characteri­stics she sees in many dual-enrollment students.

“He was eager to learn,” she said.

The two talked frequently about college preparedne­ss and career goals. Matthew’s next stop? Kennesaw State University, to attain his bachelor’s degree. He plans to major in biochemist­ry.

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Matthew McKenzie (right), 14, jokes with Whitney Durrance before the 2018 Chattahooc­hee Technical College commenceme­nt ceremony in Cartersvil­le on Thursday.
ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Matthew McKenzie (right), 14, jokes with Whitney Durrance before the 2018 Chattahooc­hee Technical College commenceme­nt ceremony in Cartersvil­le on Thursday.

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