Class of 2024 Models Resilience, Celebrates Graduation With Joy
May 13, 2024
- Author
- Mary Elizabeth DeAngelis
They started college masked and keeping a social distance in the early days of a worldwide pandemic; they ended in celebration, unmasked, basking in the happiness of accomplishment.
国产福利精品推荐 said its farewells to the Class of 2024 on Sunday, May 12, marking an end and a beginning as they enter a world filled with ever-changing possibilities and challenges.
This class experienced its fair share of both.
They didn鈥檛 have traditional high school graduation ceremonies because of the COVID-19 pandemic, which started a few months before that 2020 milestone. Instead, many marked high school鈥檚 end with drive up diploma handoffs and Zoom. Their college careers started amid pandemic restrictions.
It's a Davidson tradition for incoming first-year students to take a class photo during the week of orientation. Because of the pandemic, the Class of 2024 didn't take their class photo in 2020 -- instead, they gathered as seniors to create the image.
Those memories made Sunday an especially anticipated moment for the 505 graduates, who donned their black robes and caps as their families, friends and the Davidson community celebrated the college鈥檚 187th commencement.
After a week of destructive storms hit the United States, including the Charlotte region, Sunday arrived with welcoming sunny skies and warm, pleasant spring temperatures.
鈥淲hat a joy it is to be together as a community on this glorious day,鈥 President Doug Hicks 鈥90 said. 鈥淐lass of 2024, you make us proud 鈥 for your brilliance, your determination, and your contributions to our distinctive college.
鈥淵ou modeled resilience. And grit. And now joy.鈥
Majors, Honors, Scholars
The graduates represent 24 countries, 43 American states, Washington, D.C., and Puerto Rico. Their most popular majors were economics 90, biology (83), political science (56), psychology (49) and computer science (44).
Twelve graduated with the highest Latin honors of summa cum laude; 236 magna cum laude, and 131 cum laude.
The class spent their four years at Davidson helping refugees from faraway wars, and local students and families in need. They committed their time and talents to research, the arts, and athletics. They worked toward social justice and to combat climate change.
Some leave Davidson as aspiring physicians, attorneys, scientists and academics, and will head to postgraduate studies. Others will go right into careers such as finance, government, social work, teaching and marketing. And others will go on to fellowships in the United States and around the world.
The class includes six John M. Belk Scholars, bringing the Belk alumni total to 164. The Belk Scholarship recognizes students for leadership, creativity, compassion, integrity, intellectual curiosity and outstanding academic achievement. The award, which covers tuition, fees, room, board and two $3,000 stipends for special study abroad, is one of the country鈥檚 most competitive and generous undergraduate scholarships.
Hicks took a moment to remember Class of 2024 member Sam Anderson, a Belk scholar who died in 2021.
鈥淲e feel Sam鈥檚 presence with this class through the friendships he formed on this campus and beyond,鈥 Hicks said. 鈥淲e hold Sam鈥檚 family and friends close today and we give gratitude for Sam鈥檚 life.鈥
Hicks urged graduates to enter their next roles as learners, leaders and forces for positive change.
鈥淩emember that hope is an action verb,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou are not just inheriting a world; you can and must shape that world. Be an example and prove the power of education not only for yourselves but also for your families and everyone you meet along the way.鈥
Teaching & Service Awards
The college also handed out awards to professors and community members. They include:
Hunter-Hamilton Love of Teaching Award
Students nominate professors for the annual award. The professors will each receive $7,500, and each gets to direct an additional $7,500 to fund a campus project of their choice. This year鈥檚 recipients are:
Karen Hales, Professor of Biology
The award commends her 鈥渦nwavering dedication, profound impact on students, and nurturing of a generation of scientists who not only excel in their fields but who also approach problems with independence and creativity.鈥
鈥淗er legacy is evident in the success and gratitude of her students, who continue to benefit from her wisdom, humor, and mentorship long after they leave her classroom.鈥
Raghu Ramanujan, Chair and Associate Professor of Mathematics and Computer Science
The award commends 鈥測our ability to effectively convey material to students of varied abilities and backgrounds, and capacity to simultaneously be a great support for 鈥 students while pushing them towards greater achievement.鈥
鈥淔or recognizing students鈥 potential and challenging them to realize it, for your contagious enthusiasm and dedication to the craft of teaching, for broadening participation in computer science and having an impact鈥hat can鈥檛 be measured.鈥
Algernon Sydney Sullivan Awards
The awards go to one graduating student and one member of the larger Davidson Community who exemplify 鈥渢he fine spiritual qualities practically applied to daily living 鈥 persons who have given unselfish service without due recognition.鈥
Student Award: Samuel Ndichu Waithira
The Bonner Scholar, an economics major and applied mathematics minor, held multiple leadership roles and 鈥渉as led with creativity and care to make a positive impact here and in the Davidson community.鈥
Waithira has logged more than 1,600 hours of community service during his college career. Last year, he received a Project for Peace grant to implement an initiative named 鈥淕rowing Futures鈥 in Kenya, his home country. The project promotes sustainable agriculture and agribusiness to create a viable economic model to cover the operational costs of the Hosanna Children鈥檚 Home.
鈥淚n addition to his wonderful service contributions, he has maintained a strong academic record while taking very challenging courses,鈥 one professor said. 鈥淗e hopes to use his academic prowess to continue helping others during his professional career.鈥
Community Member Award: Jane Elizabeth Campbell 鈥87
Campbell grew up in a military family and lived around the world before attending Davidson. She worked briefly for the college, then served 26 years in the U.S. Navy, with assignments ranging from Afghanistan to the White House, before retiring as a captain.
She moved back to Davidson in 2015 and became an active advocate for affordable housing 鈥 as a Habitat for Humanity volunteer, and through the program Room in the Inn, a coalition of churches that helps feed and shelter people without homes.
Often those who receive the community award are invited to the ceremony with a bit of subterfuge so that it remains a surprise. In Campbell鈥檚 case, award nominators were confident she鈥檇 be at the ceremony in one of her roles:
鈥淚t is hard to remember a significant college or town event where she was not present to take photos for the non-profit website News of Davidson.鈥
Honorary Degree Recipients
The college also conferred two honorary doctorate degrees to alums Porter Halyburton and Douglas Orr.
Porter Halyburton 鈥63, Doctor of Humane Letters
After graduation, Halyburton joined the U.S. Navy and went to Vietnam on a fighter bomber, completing 75 missions before his F-4 Phantom was shot down near Hanoi and he was captured, spending more than seven years in POW camps.
His family and country thought he鈥檇 died; he was listed as Killed in Action, and they held a funeral for him in Davidson. (To this point, Halyburton鈥檚 trademark dry humor about his unlikely return from the dead has entertained many media interviewers over the years.) On Sunday, Hicks drew a laugh from the commencement crowd as he conveyed that Halyburton鈥檚 鈥渉eadstone moved with him around the country and is now a fixture in his daughter鈥檚 Greensboro back yard.鈥
Halyburton received many top military awards and served on the faculty of the Naval War College. Now retired, he鈥檚 active in reconciliation tours of Vietnam, sharing 鈥渓essons of courage, of the importance of freedom and power found in forgiveness.鈥
Douglas M. Orr, Jr. 鈥61, Doctor of Letters
Orr served as a faculty member and vice chancellor at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte, 鈥渉elping shape the fledgling university and support the astonishing growth of the region.鈥
He later served as the president of Warren Wilson College in Asheville. His philosophy: college should 鈥渞aise the basic questions of calling and selfhood, and thereby allow students to find the pathway to a life full of meaning and service in a free society.鈥
At Warren Wilson, Orr launched the Swannanoa Gathering Summer Traditional Music program that now attracts 1,500 participants from all over the world.
He co-authored Wayfaring Strangers: The Musical Voyage from Scotland and Ulster to Appalachia with Fiona Ritchie, host of the popular NPR program 鈥淭he Thistle and Shamrock.鈥
鈥淗is scholar鈥檚 heart, musician鈥檚 ear and knowledge of North Carolina led him to a path of traditional music,鈥 Hicks said. 鈥淗is work has shaped the educational and cultural landscape of North Carolina and beyond.鈥
Watch the Livestream of Sunday's Ceremony: