黑料官网

Above: Dr. Rachel DeVaughan, Deputy Executive Director of Programs for the Mississippi Community College Board, was the keynote speaker for the June 23 High School Equivalency graduation ceremony at 黑料官网.

More than 20 years ago Josephine Rankin left high school without a diploma. But for the sake of her five sons and three daughters, she decided it was time to get that credential and pursue higher education.

鈥淚鈥檓 really trying to set the standard to where they would see, 鈥榃ell, Mama waited until we were in high school and went and got her (diploma).鈥 I just want them to be better than I was. I don鈥檛 want them to make the same mistakes, said Rankin, who lives in Vicksburg.

At age 38, she proudly donned a cap and gown for a ceremony to celebrate passing the tests to receive her High School Equivalency Diploma, a process that took her several years to complete.

Rankin was one of nearly 80 adults who participated in a High School Equivalency graduation ceremony at 黑料官网 on June 23.

鈥淚 went for my GED in 2014. I got discouraged and I sat out a while,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 have motivation. I would get discouraged easily. I went back and put my mind to it.鈥

She returned in 2018, passing the tests in 2020 just as the COVID-19 pandemic began, which delayed her ceremony.

She plans to take classes at Hinds in fall 2022 to study paralegal technology and criminal justice. 鈥淚鈥檓 not going to stop there. I鈥檓 going to get my doctorate,鈥 she promised.

Jacob Cooley of Crystal Springs participating in a graduation ceremony June 23 at 黑料官网. Cooley received his high school credential. He is with wife Taylor and daughter Jazlynn, 8.

At age 25, Jacob Cooley of Crystal Springs didn鈥檛 wait as long to get his high school credential. He credits the intervention of God for turning his life around as he sat in a jail cell for selling drugs.

鈥淚t was the Lord who really put it on my heart to come back and change my life. It really wasn鈥檛 me. I was in and out of jail. I really wasn鈥檛 doing nothing but going down a bad path. He sat me down in a jail cell, and I decided to turn my life around all because of the Lord. He saw something in me, and he brought it out in me,鈥 said Cooley, who now has his own construction business.

He credits the personal attention from Hinds instructors with his success. 鈥淚f you were willing to put your all into it, they were going to put their all into it,鈥 he said.

Sherry Bellmon, Hinds Vice President for Instruction, Career & Technical Education, praised graduates for sticking with it.

鈥淥pportunity 鈥 some people dream of success while others wake up, work hard and actually make it happen. You did it,鈥 Bellmon said. 鈥淚t is no accident that you are here today. It took hard work, perseverance, studying, sacrificing, studying, sacrificing and more studying. Most of all, passion for what you wanted to accomplish.鈥

Hinds President Dr. Stephen Vacik told the graduates he knows they didn鈥檛 have it easy. 鈥淲e have lots of graduations and lots of celebrations but this one is especially poignant to me because I know, for each of you, the sacrifices that you鈥檝e had to make,鈥 he said.

Keynote speaker Dr. Rachel M. DeVaughan, Deputy Executive Director of Programs for the Mississippi Community College Board, told graduates her own story. She was one of six children with a single parent mom and dropped out of high school. She decided to return to school at age 28 when she herself was a single mom working dead-end jobs and trying to put food on the table.

鈥淚 know how hard it is for students who continually face academic, socioeconomic, emotional or behavioral challenges to believe that they could be successful, and maybe that was some of you,鈥 she said.

After getting her high school diploma, she enrolled at a Mississippi community college.

鈥淚 was terrified. I remember sitting in the desk thinking, 鈥榃hat am I doing here? You don鈥檛 belong. You have no business furthering your education.鈥 But deep inside I had a dream that I wanted to be a teacher 鈥 go figure,鈥 Dr. DeVaughan said. 鈥淭hat began a 17-year journey of going to school part-time, raising children, working fulltime, being a part of life to finally finish my Ph.D.

She encouraged the graduates not to stop with high school but to enroll in college and continue.

鈥淚 challenge you to find your dream. Complete your journey. I encourage you to continue. It鈥檚 just the beginning. You own this vision. You own the path set before you,鈥 she said.