Call & Times

CCRI awards degrees to more than 800 students

- By KENDRA PORT klolio@ricentral.com

WARWICK –– On Thursday the Community College of Rhode Island conferred degrees to more than 800 beaming graduates at a packed Dunkin Donuts Center filled to the brim with proud families and friends. It is the first time in the college’s history that it has held the ceremony in a space quite this large.

This year the college distribute­d over 2,000 degrees and certificat­es to the members of the Class of 2018. CCRI President Meghan Hughes opened the ceremony with welcoming remarks, followed by greetings from Rhode Island Board of Education Chair Barbara S. Cottam and Rhode Island Board of Education Council on Postsecond­ary Education Chair William G. Foulkes.

“You represent a landmark class,” said Hughes. “Why? Today you graduate as the class with the highest graduation rate of any class at our college in 18 years.”

Hughes asked: how can you live a meaningful life?

“This is a question most commenceme­nts examine,” she said. “Today marks an important transition for every single one of you.”

Hughes spoke about the theory of positive psychology and offered three pieces of advice: don’t think, do; do what comes easy and imagine the end.

“Happiness is a skill,” she said. “That means we can learn it and we can develop it. It means we don’t have to accept the condition of how we were born as the final picture of how much happiness we can achieve. Positive psychology doesn’t teach you life is easy. It teaches us that we have some power and agency in building skills that can bring some happiness to our lives in spite of challenges.”

Hughes introduced student speaker Mariela Lucaj, a 21-year-old first generation college student and immigrant living in North Kingstown who graduated with a degree in nursing.

Lucaj came to the United States with her family and three siblings from Albania 16 years ago.

“Mariela is smart, she is a realistic,” said Hughes. “She

is guided by a strong set of values and she leads with purpose.”

“When I was asked to write a speech, it was a lot harder than I thought because it comes with such great responsibi­lity,” said Lucaj.

“It’s standard for speakers to share their personal triumphs to inspire the graduating class. I could write about the time I almost dropped out because of a financial aid issue, or the many times I doubted myself as a nurse. My stories begin and end with the stories I have within all of you. It is your stories that have not only inspired me, but proven to me

that true resilience is nowhere more prominent than with the students of CCRI.”

Lucaj will be continuing her education at the University of Rhode Island where she plans to continue studying nursing and eventually public health. This summer she plans to take her nursing board exam.

“The unspoken rule of immigrant families is keep your head down and work a job to make a decent living,” she said. “CCRI has given me the courage to consider the possibilit­ies around me.”

She asked her classmates to trust their intuition and share their stories to inspire others.

“The idea of perseveran­ce ap-

pears romantic only after you’ve overcome the obstacle,” she concluded.

In her greetings, Cottam told students that success is the ability to go from one failure to another with no loss of enthusiasm.

“We need your skills, we need your enthusiasm and we need you,” said Cottam.

 ?? Photo by Kendra Port ?? Students walk to their seats during commenceme­nt ceremonies for the Community College of Rhode Island on Thursday at the Dunkin’ Donuts Center.
Photo by Kendra Port Students walk to their seats during commenceme­nt ceremonies for the Community College of Rhode Island on Thursday at the Dunkin’ Donuts Center.

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