Students Celebrate Vol State Fall Graduation

Students Celebrate Vol State Fall Graduation

 

Hundreds of students, family, and well-wishers came to Volunteer State Community College in Gallatin on Saturday as the school held the fall commencement. Cesar Espinosa of Cookeville was named Outstanding Fall Graduate at the ceremony. Faculty nominators cited his dedication in tutoring fellow students in math and science as one reason for the award.  Leukemia and three subsequent bouts of serious E. coli infections has given Espinosa quite a bit of insight into the world of medicine. Despite the challenges, he has maintained a near perfect GPA while attending Vol State at the Cookeville Higher Education Campus (CHEC). Now recovered, he wants to be one of the health care workers making a difference.

 

“I had this urge to be a nurse, like all of those who helped me,” he said. “I want to get to know my patients and let them know I’ve been in their shoes.” And it wasn’t just his own illness that provided the insight. “I had a younger cousin who also had leukemia. I saw the care and patience those nurses had with my six-year old cousin. That opened my eyes to the opportunity.”

 

Espinosa is applying to the Tennessee Tech University Nursing Program. He hopes one day to work in pediatric oncology.

 

There were 801 students eligible to graduate this year. They represent 24 different countries of birth. Thirty-eight of the graduates are military veterans. There are 302 TN Promise students graduating this fall.

Bill Sinks gave the Alumni Association welcome. Kenyatta Lovett, executive director of the educational nonprofit Complete Tennessee, gave the commencement address.

 

“This is a worthy commitment that you have made and a great accomplishment for you. It matters that you take the next step forward on your path. You learned resilience when you filled out that first college paperwork and when you took that first college class. You had resilience to take that first exam,” Lovett said. “Resiliency can be contagious. I ask that you reach out to the students you know who have not completed their degree to encourage them to come back.”

 

For more pictures from graduation visit www.facebook.com/volstate.

About Vol State

Volunteer State Community College has more than 100 areas of study and offers two-year degrees, certificates and paths to university transfer. Continuing Education and Workforce Development extends the college mission to the entire community. For more information, visit volstate.edu. The College System of Tennessee, governed by the Tennessee Board of Regents, is the state’s largest public higher education system, with 13 community colleges, 27 colleges of applied technology and the online TN eCampus, serving more than 100,000 students.

Picture titled Friends and graduate: Graduate Meaghan Brewington of Westmoreland was joined by well-wishers Jennifer Copeland, Bernie Copeland, and Joseph Pinchevsky.

Picture titled Lovett: Kenyatta Lovett, gave the commencement address, shown here with Jerry Faulkner, Vol State president.

Labelled Outstanding Graduate: Outstanding graduate Cesar Espinosa of Cookeville with his parents Taurino and Rosalba Espinosa.

Picture labeled wide shot: Vol State added a Fall Graduation due to increasing student enrollment. More than 800 students are eligible to graduate this semester.

Graduate Meaghan Brewington of Westmoreland was joined by well-wishers Jennifer Copeland, Bernie Copeland, and Joseph Pinchevsky.

Kenyatta Lovett, gave the commencement address, shown here with Jerry Faulkner, Vol State president.

 

Outstanding Graduate

Outstanding graduate Cesar Espinosa of Cookeville with his parents, Taurino and Rosalba Espinosa.

Vol State added a Fall Graduation due to increasing student enrollment. More than 800 students are eligible to graduate this semester