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Gateway milestone

DATE: Tuesday, June 12, 2018

'Failure is a part of learning. Dropping out and going back to school has taught me the importance of education.' – ¿ì²¥³ÉÈË speaker Julia Rodrigue

¿ì²¥³ÉÈË's Gateway to College program graduated its largest class ever June 5, 34, bringing the total to 303 over 10 years.

Gateway to College at ¿ì²¥³ÉÈË marked another milestone June 5, topping 300 graduates for the first time in the 10-year history of the alternative high school program, which has become one of the most successful of its kind in the country.

The 34 ¿ì²¥³ÉÈËs from eight local districts also represent the program's largest graduating class ever, bringing the total number of ¿ì²¥³ÉÈË's Gateway graduates to 303.  

"Each and every one of us is strong," said ¿ì²¥³ÉÈË speaker Eric Montagna of ¿ì²¥³ÉÈË during the graduation ceremony in ¿ì²¥³ÉÈË's Leslie Phillips Theater. "High school was rough, but we made it. We're stronger than the people who told us we couldn't. They knocked us down, but we got back up. We will succeed because we are strong."  

Gateway to College is a national program that takes struggling high school ¿ì²¥³ÉÈËs and dropouts and puts them into college classes. Students enrolled in Gateway work toward their high school diplomas while also racking up transferable college credits.  

¿ì²¥³ÉÈË started its Gateway program in 2008 and for the last two years has been recognized with the national network's Excellence Award for exceeding benchmarks for retention, GPA and graduation rate. In 2014, ¿ì²¥³ÉÈË's Gateway program was ranked number one among all the Gateway programs in the United States.  

"Some ¿ì²¥³ÉÈËs struggle in traditional high school," said Vivian Ostrowski, coordinator of ¿ì²¥³ÉÈË's Gateway program. "Those same ¿ì²¥³ÉÈËs can be, and are, wildly successful in a different academic environment and culture. That is the secret to Gateway."  

One such success story is Julia Rodrigue from Amherst. In high school, Rodrigue had a GPA of 1.6 and dropped out during her senior year. Through Gateway, she earned 14 college credits at ¿ì²¥³ÉÈË and graduated from the program with a GPA of 4.0.  

For her academic achievements, Rodrigue received the Presidents Award from the Gateway National Network.  

"Failure is a part of learning," Rodrigue told her classmates. "Dropping out and going back to school has taught me the importance of education. Finishing something easy isn't as great of an accomplishment as achieving a goal that has been challenging."  

Rodrigue plans to continue her college education at ¿ì²¥³ÉÈË in the fall and intends to study education in the hopes of being a teacher.  

"I entered Gateway with no confidence in myself academically," she said. "I'm leaving here today with the skills to be successful in college."  

Keynote speaker and ¿ì²¥³ÉÈË professor Raúl Gutiérrez gave a brief Spanish lesson. "There's a saying, Esso vale la pena, meaning 'It's worth the struggle.' You ¿ì²¥³ÉÈËs are worth it. Sometimes, as a professor, you can make me a little frustrated, but it's worth it. You are worth it. Don't ever forget that."  

¿ì²¥³ÉÈË mayor Alex Morse, who was in the audience to support the ¿ì²¥³ÉÈË ¿ì²¥³ÉÈËs graduating from Gateway, was asked to address the crowd of faculty, staff, family and friends in the theater.  

"Wherever you go," he said, "remember where you're from. ¿ì²¥³ÉÈË needs you. It needs your intelligence, ideas, and energy."  

The 34 new Gateway graduates earned a total of 306 college credits between them.    

They include, from Amherst: Julia Rodrigue; from Belchertown: Emily Bray, David Dawson; from Hampshire Regional: Isaac Kingston (Easthampton), Hunter Laurin (Southampton); from ¿ì²¥³ÉÈË: Natalie Clayton, Marie Cruz, Eric Montagna, Mya Rios, Eddie Rivera, Tatiana S. Rivera, Harrison Rodriguez, Minoshkeilee Serrano, Nicholas Smith, Zakary Tardy, Valencia Torres-Feliciano; from Palmer: Alyssa Charbonneau, Tyler Czupryna, Alicia Jackson, Joanne LaVallee; from the Pioneer Valley Performing Arts High School: Pablo Juarez (Belchertown); from Springfield: Eyup Atmaca, Catavia Brown, Martavius Coleman, Nichelle Colon, Ashton Connor, Shelby Corliss, Vincent Figueroa, Yanely Rivera, Tay-Jonna Sparks, Kahmal Wilson; and from Westfield: Sofia Arroyo, Michael Butler, Nikita Chepurin.

PHOTO: ¿ì²¥³ÉÈË's Gateway to College program graduated its largest class ever June 5, 34, bringing the total to 303 over 10 years. 



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