The Charlotte Observer

Palisades High School’s first senior class to graduate

- BY REBECCA NOEL rnoel@charlotteo­bserver.com

Nadia Sesay is comfortabl­e in uncharted territory.

The soft-spoken, upbeat senior at Palisades High School is a first-generation American, the daughter of immigrants from Sierra Leone and spent Saturdays during her childhood listening in on her family members’ meetings with immigratio­n lawyers.

Now, she wants to become one.

“Less than three generation­s ago, the women in my family didn’t even attend school, so being a first-generation American is a huge honor for me,” Sesay said. “From the time I was a little kid, I’ve desired to be in that space where people can come to me and I can help them.”

Sesay is among 412 students comprising the first graduating class of Palisades High School. On June 11, she and her classmates will be the first people to walk across the stage with a Palisades diploma.

“We really are everything coming together in CMS from completely different background­s: there are people from Olympic, Harding, East

Meck,” Sesay told The Charlotte Observer. “There are people from rivaling high schools now going to school together.”

STARTING HIGH SCHOOL DURING A PANDEMIC

This year’s graduating seniors started ninth grade online during the 20202021 school year. They are first class to have experience­d the totality of high school remotely after the pandemic started. It changed everything.

“For me, everything felt a little delayed,” Sesay said. “My tenth grade year

felt like ninth grade, in terms of my social learning.”

Sesay told one teacher before she came back to in-person school the prospect of seeing her old peers again made her nervous. She’d forgotten how to talk to people.

“You know, learning things about friends or peers or the opposite sex – there really are such fundamenta­l milestones that you have throughout high school, and I feel like that was a little delayed for me and I can only imagine others, too,” Sesay said

In August 2022, for the first time Palisades High School opened its doors. It was built to relieve overcrowdi­ng at surroundin­g campuses like Olympic High School, where Sesay started her high school career. For Palisades students, the school represente­d a new beginning.

“We have diversity that I don’t think we even had at Olympic,” she said. “Even if you look out in the parking lot, I have a friend that drives here every day in a Tesla, and then there are people that have hand-me-down, hand-me-downs …”

With this patchwork of experience­s comes the challenge of creating a shared identity.

“You hit roadblocks and obstacles as you work to find your identity and who you are because we all came from different places,” said Palisades principal Erik Olejarczyk, who previously had been the principal at Olympic High School.

“They had different identities of what it meant to be an Olympic Trojan or a Harding Ram, and now they had to figure out what it means to be a Palisades Puma, and that’s something that was a challenge because it’s outside their comfort zone. And our staff was experienci­ng the same thing.”

A UNIQUE GRADUATING CLASS

Olejarczyk told his staff ahead of the start of this school year that they were entering their “second first year,” as the school continued to shape itself. This year was the first time the school had students in all four grade levels.

Sesay says the process of creating Palisades has been largely student-led, with the help of administra­tors who empower them to make their visions a reality. Sesay is also the senior class president and involved in Model U.N. and the school’s Christian club.

“I think the main way we’ve done that is with events and organizati­ons, just making sure we’re engaging the student body and evaluating how they feel,” Sesay said.

There are already 41 clubs and organizati­ons at Palisades, according to the school’s website. Most of its students came from schools with around 20 clubs.

“My role as principal was to remove the obstacles and empower the students to create opportunit­ies to build culture through clubs and other events,” Olejarczyk said. “I think the majority of our students are really starting to understand what it means to be at Palisades and the majority of our clubs are very successful.”

He says the senior class is largely to thank for the surge in student engagement.

For example, the class wanted a prom last year, despite not having a senior class — or funding for the event — at the time. Instead, they planned fundraiser­s themselves to collect the needed cash and ultimately were able to put on the event.

“I think this senior class has done a remarkable job of setting up this culture and creating a legacy that will transcend the rest of the years that Palisades High School is standing,” said Olejarczyk.

Sesay admits she wasn’t ready to leave Olympic when she was rezoned to Palisades. However, she said the change has shaped her. And she’s not alone.

“There wasn’t anything establishe­d when we got here, so we really had to do it ourselves. I do think that it made me a leader,” Sesay said. “When you look at our school, a lot of the main leaders at this school weren’t necessaril­y leaders at Olympic. I think it’s really brought the leader out in everybody.”

Sesay plans to study political science in the fall at Spelman College in Atlanta, Georgia.

For law school, she already has her sights on Syracuse University, the University of Georgia or Columbia University, but she says, when it comes down to it, “only God really knows.”

 ?? JEFF SINER jsiner@charlotteo­bserver.com ?? Nadia Sesay is in the Palisades High School inaugural graduating class of 2024. Sesay is a first-generation American whose family came from Sierra Leone, West Africa. Sesay is the Palisades Student Body President and will be attending Spelman College in the fall.
JEFF SINER jsiner@charlotteo­bserver.com Nadia Sesay is in the Palisades High School inaugural graduating class of 2024. Sesay is a first-generation American whose family came from Sierra Leone, West Africa. Sesay is the Palisades Student Body President and will be attending Spelman College in the fall.

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