Boston Herald

Fed schools chief visits students at Lowell High

- By Prudence Brighton Lowell Sun

LOWELL >> U.S. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona told a room full of Lowell High School students and staff, as well as the leaders of Middlesex Community College and UMass Lowell, that ”the masks are off, but the pandemic is still with us.”

U.S. Rep. Lori Trahan invited Cardona to spend an afternoon at LHS for conversati­ons with students trying to recover from the pandemic academical­ly, with needed mental health support as well as connection­s to high-quality workforce opportunit­ies.

Cardona said the pandemicca­used pause made it possible to address disparitie­s in access, equity and opportunit­y.

It was also a chance for the secretary to hear from students enrolled in the Early College Lowell and Lowell High School Pathway programs about the difference these initiative­s have made in their lives.

Cardona, who started his career as a fourth grade teacher in Connecticu­t, has been a teacher, principal, superinten­dent and state secretary of education.

In his new job, he said, “I have 50 million students.”

Early College Lowell enables students to take collegelev­el courses while still in high school, earning real college credit. The courses are offered at no cost to the students. When they graduate, students enrolled in the separate Early College Promise program can attend MCC for one year at no cost.

The Pathways program includes three STEM programs and several other paths that connect learning to real-world work experience­s.

Cardona first visited an engineerin­g class where students explained an assignment to envision a new product and solve engineerin­g problems around its manufactur­e. Then, they went on to develop business and marketing plans for their products. Thus, the projects integrated engineerin­g and writing skills.

Next he visited an Advanced Placement English class and asked students to relate Wisława Szymborska’s “The End and the Beginning” poem about the burden of war on everyday citizens.

He ended his visit with a roundtable discussion with student participan­ts in the Early College program.

The Early College program, he said, is not just about getting a head start on earning college credits at no cost. “It’s also about getting a head start on confidence.”

Students shared their thoughts on the programs, and one said that taking an introducto­ry engineerin­g class at MCC helped him become “confident in saying I want to be a mechanical engineer.”

Other students spoke about the opportunit­y to do a “new kind of research” beyond what is usually available to high school students.

Cardona promised that he and the Department of Education will be pushing for change and closing the opportunit­y gap.

 ?? JULIA MALAKIE PHOTOS / LOWELL SUN ?? ON DISPLAY: U.S. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona visits Lowell High School with U.S. Rep. Lori Trahan, and hears from senior Michele Pham about her project in Intro to Engineerin­g class through Middlesex Community College.
JULIA MALAKIE PHOTOS / LOWELL SUN ON DISPLAY: U.S. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona visits Lowell High School with U.S. Rep. Lori Trahan, and hears from senior Michele Pham about her project in Intro to Engineerin­g class through Middlesex Community College.
 ?? ?? WELCOME!: U.S. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona, visiting Lowell High School, greets Lowell Public Schools Chief Equity & Engagement Officer Latifah Phillps, as Superinten­dent Joel Boyd and Assistant Head of School Jill Rothschild look on.
WELCOME!: U.S. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona, visiting Lowell High School, greets Lowell Public Schools Chief Equity & Engagement Officer Latifah Phillps, as Superinten­dent Joel Boyd and Assistant Head of School Jill Rothschild look on.

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