"Commitment, dedication, and sacrifice."
These are the attributes of successful people, and all of
the more than 100 adults who completed high school in the Cocke County Adult
Education Program in 2007-08 have these attributes, said commencement speaker
Mike Hannon.
The polygraph expert with the Tennessee Bureau of
Investigation was introduced by his daughter, Sara, and he pointed out to the
graduates that they have already displayed "commitment, dedication, and
sacrifice." Otherwise, they would
not have finished school at the Dr. Hobart Ford, Sr., Adult Education Center.
Hannon advised the 105 graduates that they should
continue their education. "Don't be
like me and wait 26 years." The
veteran law enforcement professional was referring to his graduation from
Tusculum College after graduating from high school in 1971.
"Education is the vehicle that you use to drive you
to your dreams," Hannon added.
Hannon also pointed out that his mother, Essie Barton,
taught school for about 40 years.
"Other than my parents, the most influential people in my life were
teachers," he said. He advised the
students that they should thank their teachers.
Thanking teachers seemed to be the unofficial theme of
the May 22 graduation ceremony that was held at Cocke County High School's
auditorium. Cocke County Mayor Iliff
McMahan said, "You didn't get here by yourself, so thank them,"
gesturing to adult education teachers.
McMahan said that the adult education graduation "is
my favorite graduation," adding that "It's a long trip for you all,
and you all made it."
The county mayor also said that thanks should be given to
Cocke County School System Director Larry Blazer, who is retiring at the end of
June. McMahan said that Blazer has been
"an inspiration" to him for many years.
Bryan Douglas, the director of the Cocke County Adult
Education Program, said that without Larry Blazer the adult education program
could not be as successful as it has been.
"Mr. Blazer and the Cocke County Board of Education
have provided students with the opportunity to finish school through the GED
program, Cocke County Adult High School, and the GED option at Cocke County
High School," said Douglas.
"Without Mr. Blazer's leadership and support, these students would
not have this opportunity."
On behalf of the adult education programs and the Cocke
County Literacy Council, adult high school teacher Randy Winter presented
Blazer with a token of appreciation to help him "to deal with some of the
more difficult issues of retirement": a fishing rod.
Winter, who taught for many years at Parrottsville
Elementary School where Blazer had served as a principal, went to Parrottsville
High School and then to East Tennessee State University with Blazer.
Winter advised students that "you are judged by the
company you keep. Tonight, you've chosen
very good company.
"If we truly are judged by the company we keep, I
think I chose wisely in having Mr. Larry Blazer as part of my life's
company."
Winter also described Blazer as being "a man who has
devoted his entire adult life to teaching and to the support of better
education in Cocke County."
In thanking the group, Blazer said, "I have devoted
all of my life to education because I think it's important."
His final advice to the 2007-08 graduates was for them
"to keep learning, keep reading."
One of those graduates will for certain be doing so
soon. Marina Ivanova, a native of
Kazakhstan, will be going to college in the fall to pursue Tennessee
certification in nursing.
One of the adult education center's small but growing
population of international students, Ivanova worked as a nurse in Kazakhstan
before coming to the US with her husband, Gary Allen, who is a native of Cocke
County.
Ivanova began in the adult education center's English for
Speakers of Other Languages class to improve her reading and writing skills in
English, but she quickly moved into the GED program. She recently received her GED, indicating
that she is proficient in reading and writing English and she will be ready for
the college environment.
The 2008 recipient of the Jesse Denton Memorial
Scholarship, Darlene Jefferson, has already been heeding Blazer's advice about
continuing her education. Jefferson is a
current student at Walters State Community College where she is nearing
completion of her associate's degree in early education.
The Denton scholarship is presented in memory of the late
Jesse Denton, who was a longtime educator and was the director of adult
education in his native Cocke County upon his retirement in 2003. He passed away in 2004.