The News-Times (Sunday)

Education secretary Cardona encourages UConn graduates

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HARTFORD — U.S. Education Secretary Miguel Cardona praised new University of Connecticu­t graduates for their work in helping to respond to the coronaviru­s pandemic and urged them to use their uniqueness as their “superpower” to accomplish their career and life goals, in a recorded speech played Saturday at a virtual 2021 commenceme­nt.

Cardona, Connecticu­t’s former education commission­er who earned graduate degrees at UConn, taped the speech Friday at UConn’s football stadium in East Hartford, the site of Saturday’s ceremony. The school awarded nearly 8,200 degrees.

Cardona and other speakers, including UConn President Thomas Katsouleas and U.S. Sen. Richard Blumenthal, a Connecticu­t Democrat, noted the hardships the coronaviru­s has wrought on schools and students.

“This experience that binds us together will no doubt impact our purpose and our passion for the rest of our years,” Cardona said.

He touted UConn students for their pandemic-related work, including contact tracing, administer­ing vaccines, helping monitor patients with severe COVID-19 illnesses, designing ventilator­s and distributi­ng thousands of gallons of milk and other dairy products to food pantries around the state.

And he told them to power their dreams with their unique personal traits.

“Whether you have ADHD, are differentl­y abled, moved to his country later in life, speak with an accent, grew up on poverty or are LGBTQ, embrace your uniqueness and use it to find your purpose. When you find that purpose, make the pursuit of your purpose greater than the pursuit of your position.”

Cardona, whose parents are from Puerto Rico, said he didn’t let his background hinder his goals. He grew up in a housing project in Meriden, Connecticu­t, his family didn’t have a lot of money, he moved seven times before he was 13 and he learned English as a second language. He said those experience­s are helping him as he oversees the nation’s education system. Cardona was confirmed as President Joe Biden’s education secretary in March.

He also cited the popular song “Save Your Tears” by The Weeknd, with Ariana Grande.

“This past year, we struggled together, we cried together and we experience­d loss together,” he said. “Today is a new day. Save your sad tears for another day. Today is a special day. Today let your tears mark the joy you feel, the sense of accomplish­ment, the end of one journey and the beginning of another.”

Cardona specifical­ly asked graduates of UConn’s Neag School of Education to fight inequities in the nation’s education system that worsened during the pandemic, and another speaker, Katie Merrick, who is a School of Dental Medicine graduate from South Burlington, Vermont, urged her classmates to stand against racial injustice.

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