
FCC grads grateful for support systems, proud of their achievements
Agopome was one of two student speakers at Frederick Community College's commencement ceremony Thursday evening at Knott Arena in Emmitsburg.
She received an associate degree in social sciences with a concentration in psychology. She plans to continue pursuing a bachelor's degree in counseling psychology at the University of Baltimore with a full scholarship.
Agopome's parents are immigrants from Togo, a country in Africa. As she faced the crowd of hundreds at the arena, she told everyone important lessons she and her sister learned from her parents.
One was that hard work and perseverance are not just tools, but survival skills. Another lesson was that no matter where people come from, the knowledge they carry can't be taken away from them.
Before coming to FCC, Agopome was a student at Montgomery College.
In 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic, Agopome gave birth to her daughter. She realized that to give her daughter everything she wanted, Agopome needed to reflect and look at what she personally wanted, too.
She realized she was pursuing the wrong major and was not at the best school for her, so with the help of her family and friends, she found FCC.
Agopome said her daughter is the main reason she could complete her associate degree and continues to have purpose in her actions and life.
She thanked her own family and support systems during her speech, tearing up at the mention of her daughter. She told the arena to raise their imaginary glasses, cellphones or whatever else they preferred to cheer the class of 2025.
"The world is already yours, you're capable of so much more than you know, and the knowledge you've gained here will never be taken away," Agopome said.
FCC's class of 2025 has 915 graduating students, and about a quarter of the class consists of first-generation college graduates.
The vast majority of the class — 90% — received associate degrees, while the rest of the graduates received certificates of accomplishment.
As the graduates processed into the arena wearing their green robes, audience members cheered loudly and waved excitedly down at the graduates they came to support.
Giulietta Jafari was the other student speaker for the ceremony, alongside Agopome. She also made it a point to thank her parents for the sacrifices they made, so Jafari could pursue her education.
Jafari received associate degrees in English and paralegal studies. She will attend the University of Maryland in the fall to study philosophy and linguistics, according to a Facebook post from FCC announcing the 2025 commencement student speakers.
Jafari said her father is Persian and fled to Iran to escape religious persecution. Her mother was 16 years old and alone, and had little money to support herself.
While her parents' biggest concerns were survival, Jafari said, her biggest concerns were unplugging the family's Wii gaming console fast enough before her sister could beat her in the video game Mario Kart.
Jafari said her dad would tell her to never give up and never surrender whenever she faced an obstacle. She keeps that sentiment in mind to this day.
"I'll always be grateful for [my parents], for the opportunity and sacrifices that they made, so that I could graduate on this day with all of you today, so that I could attend university without denying who I am, so that I could grow into the best version of myself and seize every opportunity that comes my way," she said.
FCC President Annesa Payne Cheek spoke about the diverse range of backgrounds in the graduating class.
She said the class ages ranged from 18 to 68. Some people might have gone to FCC right after graduating high school, while others might have returned to school after years away.
Cheek told the class to also remember the people who believed in them when the students didn't believe in themselves.
She gave the graduates some words she said she would've needed to hear when she was graduating from college herself: "I belong," "I earned this" and "I'm ready."
Jacques Mbengang said he feels accomplished now that he's graduated.
He received an associate degree in STEM technology with a concentration in cybersecurity, as well as certificates of accomplishment in computer studies and information security and assurance.
Mbengang began attending FCC right after he graduated from high school. He got his first job in information technology at Meritus Medical Center last month and will continue working there after graduation.
He said his professors were hands-on and "really took care" of him in and out of the classroom. His father died while he attended FCC, and the college's staff helped him get through that hard period to get his degree.
"In my culture, education is really important, and I believe that knowledge is very important," he said. "Being able to acquire it and finish it to the end, even when I could've gave up multiple times, the fact that I was able to keep moving was something that I really take pride in."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Cable detaches on Ohio amusement park ride
A cable on a ride at a popular Ohio amusement park detached while people were riding it on Sunday. [DOWNLOAD: Free WHIO-TV News app for alerts as news breaks] Cedar Point's Power Tower ride was closed on Monday after a cable on one of the ride's towers detached from the ride vehicle on Sunday evening, CBS affiliate WOIO-19 reported. TRENDING STORIES: Check your tickets! 3 winning Powerball tickets sold in Ohio 1 in custody after county-wide call for help issued in Montgomery County Man found in sewer drain after large search forces shelter-in-place in Montgomery County The safety system performed as designed, and the ride vehicle returned to the loading position, according to Cedar Point Spokesperson Tony Clark. None of the guests were injured, WOIO-19 reported. 'Safety is a top priority, and the ride will remain closed while we complete a thorough review and inspection of the ride,' Clark said. [SIGN UP: WHIO-TV Daily Headlines Newsletter] Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Experts suggest school holidays shake-up
Researchers in the South West have suggested school summer holidays should be shortened, along with lengthening half-terms. A report on tackling post-pandemic education inequalities, which forms part of a project funded by the Nuffield Foundation, said it was time to consider a reform to school calendars. Experts in the report said reducing the six-week summer holiday to four weeks and introducing an extra week to half-term breaks could help tackle "educational divides" which have grown since the Covid-19 pandemic. The Department for Education said the academic year was structured to provide plenty of time for holidays and schools had flexibility to plan term dates. Experts said they believed benefits achieved through changing the holiday structure would include balancing out childcare costs for parents and improving the wellbeing of pupils and teachers. The report also said spreading the holidays more evenly across the academic year could prevent "learning loss" - a term experts used to describe difficulties pupils when going back to school after the summer break. More news stories for Cornwall Listen to the latest news for Cornwall Prof Lee Elliot Major, from the University of Exeter, one of the report's authors, said the structure of the academic year dated back to Victorian times and it was "time to review this". He said: "We need bold ideas and ultimately trying to find ways of levelling that education playing field so all children from all backgrounds can prosper in school." Mother-of-three Helen Eaton, who runs a blog called Cornwall with the Kids, said her family enjoyed the six weeks of summer holidays. However, she said she understood other families had different issues to deal with during the break and some changes to the structure could be beneficial. Ms Eaton said: "I know a lot of people in Cornwall work in the tourism industry, so maybe when it's quieter at Christmas or October, it might benefit people to have an extra week off." She added her children - aged 11, eight and four - had been able to learn things during the holidays and put their skills from school into practice. "Sometimes you can go out and about and the children are actually learning all the time," Ms Eaton said. "They've learned how to paddleboard and fish, and sometimes you do an activity and maths and English come into that." Follow BBC Cornwall on X, Facebook and Instagram. Follow BBC Devon on X, Facebook and Instagram. Send your story ideas to spotlight@ More on this story Should school summer holidays be shorter? The schools still deciding on two week half term Cost of summer holiday clubs rises to £1,076 a child Related internet links Nuffield Foundation Department for Education


Boston Globe
a day ago
- Boston Globe
And for the bride, a tractor
'I had never taken anybody there, and I always knew that it was a place that was really special,' he says. Advertisement Emma was the smart, attractive, 23-year-old PhD student enrolled in the UMass Amherst resource economics program where he was starting his master's degree. When she had agreed to go out, he knew cancelling wasn't worth the risk. Emma packed turkey sandwiches from the campus dining hall (consistently Emma said she was too excited to notice anything strange about Andrew's behavior. The two had flirted for weeks in the computer lab, getting to know each other while doing homework. While quickly smitten, she wasn't impressed by Andrew at first; he skipped their cohort's pre-semester summer math camp session without notice. Advertisement 'It was like, 'Oh, you think you're better than us?'' remembers Emma, who had moved from her native Albuquerque to Amherst that August. 'It turns out that he was literally working in the hayfields because it's summer time, and when you're a farmer, you can't not do that.' His father owns After they met, Emma's initial skepticism dropped as he asked, in earnest, about her travels and studies. They helped each other with school work and discussed their shared passion for their subject area. Andrew was drawn to economics in an entrepreneurial sense — 'I enjoy the level of pragmatism' — while Emma was interested from an academic and policy standpoint. The commonality translated into a shared lens as they began to date. 'Whenever we experience anything or we go to something cool, on the drive home, it's always like, 'How does that business work?'' she says. 'Like, I wonder how they make money doing that.' Being together felt natural; they were an official couple by that winter. Andrew was enrolled in Emma's PhD program consisted of two years of coursework and three of independent research. One year of distance was doable, he remembers thinking. As they approached year three, he hoped they could find a home base somewhere in the middle. But when the Covid-19 pandemic shut down campus, Emma traded her Amherst apartment for a family farmhouse with Andrew and his two roommates and high school friends, Jack Ritchie and Jessica DiLorenzo. Advertisement They raised baby goats and brought his GoPro to the Crane Estate. They'd hop into their cars to show Emma the places from their childhoods. Andrew grew his company, When restrictions lifted, their roommates moved out; a tabby cat, Frida, had moved in. The couple remained, as Andrew likes to say, 'parallel lines.' When they had first discussed a shared future, Andrew took out a piece of paper and drew 'stick figure Emma and Andrew' with two parallel lines. 'It really threw me because I'm super literal,' says Emma, who is now an economist for a consulting firm in Cambridge. 'I went to the math definition of parallel — 'two planes moving towards infinity, never shall they meet.' I thought he was trying to say, 'We're just too different.'" His intent, however, was metaphorical: 'I wanted us to be intensely independent people and have our own agency to do things,' Andrew explains. 'There's never an assumption that either one of us was going to deeply compromise without talking it through.' 'We're together because we're parallel. We're not diverging,' adds Emma. The concept drove the relationship onward and would appear in Emma's vows when they wed years later. On Dec. 22, 2023, Andrew proposed at 36,000 feet on a connecting flight from Denver to Albuquerque. He made arrangements with the airline, and when the seatbelt sign went off, a flight attendant announced: 'On this trip to Emma's hometown to see her family, Andrew has a special question.' Advertisement The couple maneuvered to the aisle and their fellow passengers cheered as Andrew took a knee, pulling a ring from a Husqvarna earplugs case. 'I was surprised ... [but] this is so Andrew," says Emma. 'Andrew curates really fun, surprising things for everyone in his life.' Emma, now 31, and Andrew, 30, wed on May 2 in a ceremony at Guests sipped lavender gin and tonics and green chile margaritas as they roamed exhibits and the museum's theater that screened home movies Andrew had captured over the years — including the mid-flight proposal, courtesy of the Southwest Airline staff. Emma's father, Mark, is an engineer and he and his partner, Tera, had constructed a colorful stained glass archway for the ceremony. They then transported the arch to Massachusetts, where a second reception was held at On June 7, it was a family meal for 200 : sugar cookie ice cream sandwiches from Andrew gave closing remarks that he coordinated with his father, Gary, beforehand. Advertisement About a year before the wedding, he bid on a 1939 Allis-Chalmers model B tractor at an estate sale. Emma's grandfather, a Pennsylvania farmer, was an antique tractor hobbyist, Allis-Chalmers being his favorite. (The Shepherds are a John Deere family.) The family fixed up the persimmon-colored model B, and when Andrew neared the end of his speech, he texted Gary: 'Go.' 'You could hear him start up in the distance,' remembers Andrew. As his father drove by the tent, the groom delivered it home: 'Emma, you know, if you're going to be part of the family, you're going to need your own tractor.' The newlyweds rode off into the field — Emma laughs, 'very slowly.' Rachel Kim Raczka is a writer and editor in Boston. She can be reached at