The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

GATEWAY TO THE FUTURE

Graduates celebrate their milestones at a drive-in ceremony

- For MediaNews Group

Friends and family members honked their horns and cheered as the 23 graduates of Montgomery County Community College’s Gateway to College Program received their high school diplomas on Oct. 2 in the Morris Road parking lot at MCCC’s Blue Bell Campus.

Usually held at the end of the spring semester, the Gateway ceremony was postponed and then transforme­d into a drive-in event due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Despite the changes, the graduates had smiles on their faces and felt a sense of achievemen­t as they each walked onto the stage.

The graduates are Donovan Avery, North Penn High School; McKenna Benner,

Cheltenham High School; Eve Bertram, Wissahicko­n High School; Jayden Del’marmol, Pottsgrove High School; Ali Eskandary, Colonial Penn High School; Aidan Gilly, Perkiomen Valley High School; Tatiana Golovca, Wissahicko­n; Dezjah Harriott, Perkiomen Valley; Jasmine Irizarry, Wissahicko­n; Nadia Jones, Pottsgrove; Robert McKnight, Phoenixvil­le High School; William Moser, Upper Merion High School; Maximo Palestino, Pottsgrove; Desirae Pettigrew, Wissahicko­n; Desiree Purdie, Wissahicko­n; Jessica Roberson, Jenkintown High School; Ryan Romig, Hatboro-Horsham; Savannah Salguero, Daniel Boone High School; Lauren Sickel, Pottsgrove; An

thony Venuto, Wissahicko­n; Cecret Waters, Upper Moreland; Alexander Welliver, Souderton; and Devon Yost, Wissahicko­n.

Eskandary was named the class Valedictor­ian. He currently is enrolled at Temple University where he is studying Computer Science.

As part of the Achieving the Dream national network that promotes community college reform and student success, Gateway to College and its dedicated faculty and staff help students stay on track to complete the requiremen­ts they need for their high school graduation and earn college credits. Since MCCC launched the program in 2013 at its Blue Bell and Pottstown campuses, more than 200 students have earned their high school diplomas. Many students continue taking classes at MCCC.

MCCC’s Gateway Program is one of only two programs in Pennsylvan­ia and is among 31 national programs in 19 states across the country.

During the ceremony, Dr. Keima Sheriff, Assistant Dean of Student Programs, described how the program, school district and community partners, faculty and staff and family members were all part of a “conspiracy of completion” to hold the students accountabl­e to their goals and not let them give up on themselves.

“You have the power to decide what you want to do and to create the life you want to live,” Sheriff told the graduates. “Barriers may slow you down a bit, but they will not stop you from your goal attainment.”

Nineteen school districts – Boyertown, Cheltenham, Colonial, Daniel Boone, Exeter, HatboroHor­sham, Jenkintown, Norristown, North Penn, Owen J. Roberts, Perkiomen Valley, Phoenixvil­le,

Pottsgrove, Souderton, Upper Dublin, Upper Merion, Upper Moreland, Upper Perkiomen and Wissahicko­n – and Montco WorksNow, the County’s workforce investment board, collaborat­e with MCCC, referring students to the program.

A dd it ion a l ly, pa r tners Waste Management, PECO, Univest, TD Bank, the Kahn family, the Maguire Foundation, the Malik family, Ambler Savings, Thompkins VIST Bank, First Priority Bank and the Gateway to College National Network have provided financial support for the program and student scholarshi­ps.

PECO, who has been a longstandi­ng partner since 2013, provided laptops to Gateway students who needed them during the pandemic to continue taking their classes online, Sheriff said.

MCCC’s Gateway team includes Dr. Sheriff; Resource Specialist­s Jezerey Weiderman and Esau Collins; faculty Diane McDonald, Karen Harding-Tasca, Stephanie Wuertz, Jessica Dalcanton, Tracey Fida, Geraldine Plaisir, Timothy Gallagher and Durrell Jones; and Administra­tive Support Secretary Constance Stebbins.

In 2018, MCCC’s Gateway program was one of 10 community college programs nationwide to be named a finalist for the prestigiou­s 2018 Bellwether Award in the Instructio­nal Programs & Services Category. In 2019, the program received the Achieving the Dream’s Program Excellence Award — a national award that recognizes MCCC’s success in the areas of first-term success, fall-to-fall persistenc­e, two-year persistenc­e and three-year graduation rate.

 ?? SUSAN ANGSTADT — FOR MEDIANEWS GROUP ?? Twenty-three students earned their high school diplomas and college credits through the Gateway to College Program at Montgomery County Community Community College, one of only 31 national programs in the country.
SUSAN ANGSTADT — FOR MEDIANEWS GROUP Twenty-three students earned their high school diplomas and college credits through the Gateway to College Program at Montgomery County Community Community College, one of only 31 national programs in the country.
 ?? SUSAN ANGSTADT — FOR MEDIANEWS GROUP ?? Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Gateway to College graduation was a drive-in ceremony at Montgomery County Community College’s Blue Bell Campus. Families and friends watched from their cars while graduates individual­ly crossed the stage for their diplomas.
SUSAN ANGSTADT — FOR MEDIANEWS GROUP Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Gateway to College graduation was a drive-in ceremony at Montgomery County Community College’s Blue Bell Campus. Families and friends watched from their cars while graduates individual­ly crossed the stage for their diplomas.
 ?? SUSAN ANGSTADT — FOR MEDIANEWS GROUP ?? Dr. Keima Sheriff, Assistant Dean of Student Programs, congratula­ted the graduates and encouraged them to keep pursuing their goals.
SUSAN ANGSTADT — FOR MEDIANEWS GROUP Dr. Keima Sheriff, Assistant Dean of Student Programs, congratula­ted the graduates and encouraged them to keep pursuing their goals.

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