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Transcendence

Commencement 2022 Lauds Graduates Who Went Beyond the Limits
Shereika Chin in her commencement regalia behind flowers

Shereika Chin ¡¯22 (pictured with her sister, brother, and her daughter, center-right) is first in her family to graduate from college. Originally from Jamaica, Chin was able to complete an associate¡¯s degree and transfer to the University of Maryland¡¯s criminal justice program at the Universities at Shady Grove with support from the MC Foundation. Her goal is to attend law school and become a criminal prosecutor.

President Jermaine F. Williams officiated his first¡ªand Ë«Ó®ÓéÀֳǡ¯s 75th¡ªcommencement exercises May 19 and 20 at the Rockville Campus. Two days of 80-plus-degree heat did not deter nearly 1,200 of the 3,200 graduates and their families and friends from attending the ceremonies.

Dr. Williams¡¯ speech to graduates focused on transcending limits:

¡°I believe this is what higher education is supposed to do: to show you what lies beyond your limits.¡±

Dr. Williams¡¯ poignant remarks resonated with so many members of the College¡¯s Class of 2022, but one graduate in particular epitomizes transcendence.

Shereika Chin is a 30-year-old single mother of a four-year-old daughter with autism. Born in Jamaica, she came to the United States after high school, and enrolled at Berkeley College in New York. She earned a 4.0 grade point average, but could not afford to continue. She went back to Jamaica. When she returned to the U.S. in 2014, she aspired to complete her education.

Dr. Williams: ¡°[Higher education prepares you] to journey beyond what you believed were the limits of your potential.¡­

Chin began at MC in 2015. As an undocumented immigrant, she could only afford one semester. She dropped out, got married, and had a child. After three years in an abusive relationship, she left her husband, who burned all her possessions. ¡°When I was left with¡ª literally¡ªthe clothes on my back, I went down on my knees and asked God to help me,¡± she said. Chin re-enrolled at the College in 2021.

¡°You have given more of yourselves in these extraordinary times than was asked of you in earlier years.¡±

¡°A lot of us are parents¡ªproviders,¡± said Chin, who does not receive child support from her ex-husband. ¡°The quicker we can get it [a college education] done, the better.¡± Chin enrolled in six classes in fall 2021 and four more in spring 2022 to complete her degree in criminal justice. At the same time, she juggled full-time jobs at Amazon and then Home Depot, always working around her daughter¡¯s inconsistent sleep schedule. She took advantage of seven-week classes. ¡°Although it¡¯s double the work, I liked the challenge,¡± she said. She was grateful to her professors who recorded their classes.

Every single professor became my personal cheerleader.¡±

¡°You went beyond the limits of pride to ask for help when you needed it.¡±

During the pandemic, Chin reached out to the Ë«Ó®ÓéÀÖ³Ç Foundation for COVID relief funding for mounting bills. ¡°That funding stopped me from being homeless,¡± she said. ¡°It paid rent for two months, put food on the table, and saved us from being out in the freezing cold.¡±

¡°Where you could have turned away or tuned out, you looked straightforward and leaned in.¡±

Though she believed the odds were stacked against her during the pandemic, she received unwavering support from professors. ¡°Every single professor became my personal cheerleader,¡± said Chin. ¡°Each one of them played a role in me ¡®crossing the line.¡¯ You can see the humanity in each and every one of them.¡±

¡°You continued helping others to go beyond their limits, which is a sure sign of those who have truly transcended their own.¡±

While facing a seemingly insurmountable challenge to educate herself, Chin attended to the needs of her daughter, Zaraiah-Monae. ¡°I knew something was wrong when she was about a year old,¡± she said. She worked with Montgomery Ë«Ó®ÓéÀֳǡ¯s Infants and Toddlers Program, which provides early intervention services to help families address their children¡¯s developmental and special needs. ¡°She was nonverbal when she started last year. Now she can ask me, ¡®Are you okay?¡¯¡± Chin said, adding that her daughter¡¯s progress even astonished staff members.

¡°Most of you also have an internal story: about rising above self-doubt or developing self-discipline. Each of you has a story of transcendence. And you will carry that into your next chapter, along with the valuable credential you will earn today.¡±

¡°I¡¯m still battling the self-doubt,¡± said Chin. ¡°I¡¯m this Jamaican girl from a third-world country. No one in my family has ever gone to college.¡± With a 3.8 grade point average, Chin will transfer to University of Maryland¡¯s criminal justice program at Universities at Shady Grove. ¡°I want to be a lawyer, a criminal prosecutor,¡± she said. ¡°I¡¯m carrying an entire generation on my back,¡± she said. ¡°I¡¯ve got a whole community that is depending on me to walk across that stage¡ªand keep going.¡±