Graduations commence this week in Surf City
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Andrew Edwards
For more than 1,800 seniors at Surf City high schools, this week will
mark the end of their high school years.
Graduation ceremonies for the four Huntington Beach high schools
were scheduled for Wednesday and today. The strains of “Pomp and
Circumstance” fill the air, and parents and relatives cheer for their
loved ones as the graduates’ names are called. “I look to the
graduation as being a formal rite of passage,” Huntington Beach High
School Principal Frank Berry said. “It’s a tradition that’s been time
honored for hundreds of years.”
The high school experience is unique for all students, but one
common denominator remains -- high school and all of its joys and
trials will be over.
Many graduates will continue their studies in colleges and
universities, while others will go into the workforce or wear the
uniforms of the armed forces. But all will have grown up a great deal
in the past four years.
“It’s exciting to see that scrubby little freshman come in and
mature into a mature adult,” Marina High School Principal Steven
Roderick said.
Marina and Ocean View high schools celebrated commencement
ceremonies Wednesday. Graduation can be a powerful experience, not
only for students and their families, but also for educators,
Roderick said.
“That’s when you realize that what you’re doing as a profession
makes a difference,” he said.
Roderick described his students as a very well-rounded bunch.
Ocean View High School’s Principal Karen Gilden described her
graduating class as very community oriented.
“It’s unusual to have as many kids in this class as there are that
have worked in the community,” she said.
Huntington Beach and Edison high schools will hold commencement
celebrations today. Like the Seahawks, Edison’s Chargers are also
remarkable for their willingness to serve, Principal Cynthia Clarke
said.
“This year’s class, I would say, these seniors are unique in their
community service, volunteering that they do on their own,” she said.
Clarke offered 2004 Valedictorian Rebecca Gayle as an example of a
service-minded student. Gayle said her work includes youth ministry,
tutoring, wearing an Easter Bunny suit at the city Easter egg hunt
and giving her time at Hoag Hospital. She agreed with her principal
that many of her fellow students are ready to aid others.
“A lot of kids go out of their way to help the community,” she
said.
Gayle plans to study science at UC Santa Barbara and is
considering a career as a pharmacist or a teacher.
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