Everyone at the Start of the ceremony
Time for awards and certificates
The award winning Saint Luke's Choir sings their rendition of the National Anthem
Anthony's Introduction as Guest Speaker
Good Evening Reverend Papaloute, General Manager Patricia Bennet, Reverend Goff, parents, family, friends, teachers and staff of Saint Luke, Principal, Ms. Bodden, Vice Principals Miss Welch and Mr. Parham, and the students from the graduating class of 2010.
There’s an old joke about a young student’s first day of school. A little boy returns home after his first full day in the classroom, and his mother says to him, “What did you learn at school today?” the little boy turns and looks back at his mother and says, “Not enough I guess, they want me to come back again tomorrow.”
Twelve years ago I began my teaching career with the Los Angeles Unified School District. I was new, inexperienced, slightly intimidated, and even a little bit terrified of what seemed like an impossible challenge that lay before me. The only experience I had ever had in a classroom was as a student, and never in my wildest of dreams did I ever think to myself that I would become a teacher. Well, as it was, I entered my classroom on the first day of school not knowing if I would be chewed up, squashed, and eaten alive, or welcomed by the 36 young students who sat at their desks staring back at me. As we all looked back and forth at one another, I was silently overwhelmed. I gazed into their eyes and saw not just a young group of boys and girls, but rather the future of our country. As their teacher, I was not only tasked with simply dispersing information, facts, figures, and ideas, but rather I was given responsibility for helping to mold these young minds into doctors, teachers, bankers, business men and women, and future leaders of the world. As it turned out, we all survived, no one was eaten alive, and actually things ended up being a lot less scary than I had initially thought they would. So, after my first teaching experience and a number of additional years working in various schools, my decision to leave my family behind, move to Belize to work with teachers and students, make attempts at trying to understand a new language, and being assigned to work with the students, teachers, and staff at one of the largest primary schools in Belize was also initially overwhelming. However, it didn’t take very long before the students of Saint Luke made me feel as though I had found a second home. The students here and the moments that we spent reading, learning, and laughing together further cemented for me the incredible and sincere importance we must all place on the welfare of a child, since they are indeed to become the very backbone of our society. Whether they are the brightest or the funniest, the quietest or the loudest, the most creative or the most athletic, we must remember that each student is an individual, every one is unique and special.
To the graduates of Saint Luke, you are at a crucial point in your lives right now. You have successfully completed your primary school education. For some of you, it has been a lot more difficult than it has been for others, but for all of you, this is the first, in a long series of steps that will lead you to the new, exciting, and sometimes challenging adventures you will face throughout your life. Although you will always be part of the Saint Luke family, you are each moving on from here. Some of you are heading in a similar direction, some even to the same schools, and others still have yet to determine where their next path in life may lead. This being said, and you can take this directly from someone who has been in your shoes many times, it’s okay to not always know which direction the road will lead, it’s okay to take a chance on something after carefully considering all of your options, and yes, the unknown can be a pretty scary place. When faced with a question or a problem, we can try to avoid making choices by doing nothing, but even that is a decision. In every single thing you do, you are choosing a direction. Your life is a product of choices. We alone are responsible for our choices, and we have to accept the consequences of every deed, word, and thought throughout our lifetime. You will indeed be faced by adversity, challenge, heartbreak, and tough decisions, but you will also be granted moments, opportunities, and experiences that will be filled with such happiness and bliss that to dwell on the negative or bad experiences in life will seem pointless.
The theme that you have chosen for your graduation is very appropriate for the event. Our dreams and our aspirations are our invitations to set new goals, attempt new tasks, and dare to travel uncharted courses. We each have gifts to offer one another, but many, frequently need encouragement to recognize our own strengths and talents. Be proud of yourself, your talents, and all that you can offer. Do not be shy about offering help, support, and encouragement to those around you. Today’s successes and accomplishments were once yesterday’s struggles and challenges.
I have never heard of anyone dreaming of failure or aspiring to be unsuccessful. Failure does not play any part in dreaming. It is a dreamer that encourages failure, not the dream. History has proven to all of us that there were many very successful dreamers who failed numerous times before they experienced success. The difference is that their experience with failure was not going to end their dreams, but instead only motivate them to dream bigger. "If You Can Imagine It, You Can Achieve It, If You Can Dream It, You Can Become It.”
Over the last few years I’ve watched you grow from boys and girls to young men and women who will become the future of Belize. In the few years that I have worked with Saint Luke Primary School, I feel as though I have been blessed with many opportunities to get to know each and every one of you both individually, and as a collective group. You have made us smile each and every day; some of you have even made me laugh so hard that my sides hurt. Above all, you have all treated me like a member of your family, and I thank you for that. I know that no matter what path you choose to follow, you will forever be part of one another’s lives, and the experiences that you have had thus far will continue to mold each of you for many years to come. We love you all and wish you all the success in the world. I hope your dreams take you to the corners of your smiles, to the highest of your hopes, to the windows of your opportunities, and to the most special places your heart has ever known. Congratulations and good luck.