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Date: 6/7/2004 GRADUATION IS A FAMILY AFFAIR FOR MOM AND SON
Cheryl, a secretary for Educational Administration and the Urban Educational Leadership Program in the College of Education, Criminal Justice, and Human Services, started out on the college track after graduating from high school in the mid 70’s in West Virginia. “My mom got me a job in a doctor’s office as a part-time file clerk, and I attended Marshall University for two-and-a-half years. But then that paycheck just started looking too good, so I dropped out of college and became a medical transcriptionist.” Along the way, other life matters took priority over her dream of a higher education. Cheryl’s son, Josh, was born in 1986, but this single mom was determined to get back to college. While she worked at Raymond Walters College, she earned an associate’s degree in business technology from the college in 2001 and the same year got her current job in the College of Education, Criminal Justice and Human Services. That fall, she got back into college to earn her bachelor’s degree from UC.
“He’s where I wanted to be at 18,” says Cheryl, as Josh, who graduated with honors from La Salle, looks ahead to earning a degree in accounting. Josh, an avid UC sports fan who says he has rooted for the UC basketball team since he was about eight years old, is looking forward to experiencing college life, with some valuable advice from his mother. “She says, ‘Don’t stop (college) – just keep going – because otherwise, you won’t go back.’ “I know it’s been hard at times for her,” he says. “She couldn’t always go to school full-time. She had to work, so it was a lot tougher on her. I’m happy that she will finally be able to graduate.”
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