Regular Folks Give Advice to Graduates

Sunday, June 01, 2014

 

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This month, commencement speakers at Rhode Island’s Colleges and Universities will give the Class of 2014 their tips on how they can successfully find their professional niche, in a state with the distinction of having the worst employment rate in the nation and continues to be one of the last states to see an economic revival.  Rhode Islanders are also known for their inferiority complex and general attitude about the quality of life in the state.

Robed graduating seniors will sit listening closely to commencement speeches, given by very well-known lawmakers, judges, television personalities and Business CEOs, detailing their observations and advice, and how if closely followed, just might give the graduates a more rewarding personal and professional life.  

Typically a commencement speech (the length being about 10 minutes) is given by a notable, successful, stimulating figure well-known in the community, nationally or internationally.  While some colleges and universities may enhance their prestige by bringing in high profile speakers (University of Rhode Island, Rhode Island School of Design, Roger Williams University, and Providence College) sometimes at great cost, others like Brown University, unique among Ivy League institutions, features graduating seniors, rather than outside dignitaries, as their commencement speakers.  This year, Rhode Island College, under graduate and graduate commencement speakers are Rhode Islanders.  

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So, I say to Presidents of Colleges and Universities, with your tight budgets you can save a little money by not bringing in high paid commencement speakers. As can be seen below, there are many potential commencement speakers in local communities throughout the state who fly below the radar screen and can give college graduates sound strategies for success gleaned from their life experiences.  They give road maps on how one can live a more healthy fulfilling life, mature in a way to realize their potential and age gracefully in a challenging and quickly changing world. 

Jesse Nemerofsky, 60, Providence, Professional Commercial Photographer.  “Always remember that everyone you meet in life can be a potential or future client.  This being said, a positive introduction of yourself is a valuable way to be called to work together on projects, even to be hired for future jobs.  George H. W. Bush, 41st President of the United States, has stated in interviews that when he meets someone he gets their business card, and at birthdays, Christmas time, or when the person is honored, he sends them a personal note.  By taking time to acknowledge people over the lifetime of his career, the former President is highly respected by those he has encountered, even if his political position or business venture was successful or not.   Honesty and representing your capabilities is of course of the utmost importance, and small gestures like sending a personal note can ultimately have great impact, but excellence in your work should be your main goal.”    

Michael Cassidy, 66, Pawtucket, Retired. “As you go into the ‘real’ world from the sheltered ‘world of college’ don’t be too quick to judge the new people you meet in the work place.  People come in all types, sizes, shapes, temperaments, personalities, ages, and backgrounds; and they all have their own experiences from which you can learn. If you are smart enough to listen to what others have to offer, you can learn from them not only what to do, but what not to do.  And most times learning what not to do is the most valuable lesson you can have.”
 
Olon Reeder, 55, North Providence, Reeder Associates Public Relations. “Become adaptable to constant changes in your life. Today’s global environment demands that you must become faster, better and smarter and compete with yourself and everyone else to survive socially. You have to embrace non-stop learning, empower yourself with your own resources, have an independent attitude and create value for who you really are and what you want to be to shape your quality of life for the future!”

Michelle Godin, 50, Vice President, New England Economic Development Services, Inc.  “Live each day of your life with integrity. Whether in your personal life or professional life, integrity will define you as a person.  Never waiver.  When your days on earth are ended, it is your integrity that others will remember.   Those who live with integrity will be fondly remembered and missed, because with integrity comes many other admirable qualities such as compassion, empathy, tolerance, and understanding.  Those lacking integrity will be discussed with disdain and quickly forgotten.  Choose to become exemplary.” 

Paul Audette, 85, Pawtucket, semi-retired businessman.  “The Youth of today -- from puberty to whatever age one reaches maturity - tend to see life as it pertains to them, yet each person is responsible for him or herself.  While the youth may have the knowledge, they lack the life experience which is the main factor in making good sound judgments that ultimately affect (your) well-being as well as that of your loved ones. While experience cannot be taught, it cannot be overlooked as a major component in making sound decisions that affect your future.experience comes from living - and life is a journey.”  

Joan Retsinas, 67, Providence, a writer.  “Savor, savor, savor. Savor the sunshine, and the rain. Savor your friends, your family, your colleagues. Nurture the people close to you. Be a friend. Fall in love. If you fall out of love, fall in again. Read “Winnie the Pooh” to a child. Eat ice cream. Ride a bike. Swim in the ocean. Laugh. As for fame, fortune, and success, don’t fret. They don’t really matter.”

Rick Wahlberg, 61, Senior Project Manager, Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Rhode Island. Be Useful, there is no feeling like making the world a better place.  Be Aware, strike a balance between career, family, friends, and community. Be Grateful for what you have, don't be jealous of what you don't have, and share. 

Wendy Jencks, 61, Cumberland, Visitor Center Manager, Blackstone Valley Visitor Center.  “There may be a time in young people's lives when they are nervous to take a risk, don't be afraid to take a chance. If an opportunity/life experience arises and you want it, take it even if it is unconventional. You may not get another opportunity again. Also, a person's first job is not the end all be all. Your dream job may actually be something you did not study. People confine themselves to their own walls.”

Larry Sullivan, 49, Pawtucket, Director, Net Compliance Solution’s technical & consulting services. “Recognize opportunity. If you can’t identify opportunities, then they are very likely to sneak past you unnoticed. Most people’s search criteria is so narrow in focus that it can essentially blind them to opportunities available right in front of their face. It’s the old “can’t see the forest for the trees” scenario.  Also, see yourself as a valuable asset.  Your self-image will make a huge difference in the type of opportunities you attract to yourself. If you see yourself as a valuable asset, and you present yourself as such, others will see you that way as well.”

Denise Panichas, 50, Woonsocket, Executive Director of The Samaritans of Rhode Island.  “Respect cannot be given when asked for, it has to be earned.”  This is something you learn later in life.  How do you earn respect from those around you? By being true to yourself – your values, beliefs and most importantly to your commitments to family, friends and the community.”  

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Ken McGill, 51, Pawtucket, Register of Voters, City of Pawtucket. “Find time to give back to your community. In the years to come you will be looking for a good job, getting married, having children and getting on with life. Never forget those in need in your community. Mentoring children, giving time to a soup kitchen, volunteering to help civic groups in your city or town or just helping a neighbor will give you more reward than any salary or position in the corporate world.“

Gail Solomon, 59, Pawtucket, Gail Solomon, Inc., a graphic design company. “You're not the most unqualified or least knowledgeable person in the room. Everyone else thinks they are. And anyway it’s much more elegant to ask questions than to behave like you know all the answers. Because nobody does.  Ever.”

Susan Sweet, 72, Rumford, former state administrator, non- profit lobbyist and advocate.  “In the short space that we are in the world, we must create meaning in our lives by contributing to the happiness and well-being of other people and other sentient beings. To do good and useful work, caring and acting for the betterment of others is the true goal of life.”

Bob Billington, President of the Blackstone Valley Tourism Council who received his Doctorate in Education from Johnson & Wales University in 2005, says that “Star Power Sells” when seeking out a commencement speaker. “We have regular people walking amongst us who do very extraordinary things everyday but they may never get a chance to give a commencement speech at a college or university,” he notes.

If so, I say that it’s a shame.

Herb Weiss, LRI ’12, is a writer who covers aging, health care and medical issues.  He can be reached at [email protected]

 

Related Slideshow: Who’s Giving The Grads Advice This Year?

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 Brown University

Sunday, May 25

Commencement speakers:

  • Caroline Bologna ’14, Brown tour guide and managing editor for post-Magazine
  • Josh Block ’14, Brown tour guide and managing editor for post-Magazine

Honorary degrees:

  • Beatrice E. Coleman ’25, schoolteacher, church musician, and former secretary of the NAACP’s New England Regional Conference (awarded posthumously);
  • Jeffrey Eugenides ’82, Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist and author;
  • Arthur Horwich ’72, M.D.’75, physician, geneticist, and cellular biochemist;
  • Mary Lou Jepsen ’87, Ph.D. ’97, electrical engineer and innovator of computer-driven graphic displays;
  • Debra L. Lee ’76, chairman and CEO of BET Networks;
  • Lois Lowry ’58, award-winning children’s author;
  • Nalini Nadkarni ’76, forest ecologist and science communicator; and
  • Thomas Perez ’83, civil rights attorney and U.S. secretary of labor.

 

 

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Bryant University

Saturday, May 17

Commencement speaker: Richard W. Fisher, president and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas and a voting member of the Federal Open Market Committee

Honorary degrees:

  • Richard W. Fisher will address graduating seniors and guests at Bryant's undergraduate exercises on May 17;
  • Robert A. DiMuccio, chairman, president, and chief executive officer of Amica Mutual Insurance Company. DiMuccio will speak at the Graduate School of Business and Graduate Programs in Arts and Sciences ceremony on May 15;
  • Joyce M. Roché, president and CEO of the 150-year-old nonprofit organization Girls Inc.;
  • Scott C. Donnelly, the chairman, president, and chief executive officer of Textron Inc.
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Richard W. Fisher, president and CEO of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas and a voting member of the Federal Open Market Committee, the nation’s principal monetary policy making group. Fisher will address graduating seniors and guests at Bryant's undergraduate exercises on May 17;
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Johnson & Wales University

Saturday, May 24

Commencement speaker: Robert J. Palleschi, Global Head, Hilton Hotels and Resorts, Hilton Worldwide

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New England Institute of Technology

Sunday, May 4

Commencement speaker: Kathy Ireland, former Sports Illustrated swimsuit model

Honorary degrees: Cheryl Merchant, president and chief executive officer of Rhode Island’s Hope Global

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Providence College

Sunday, May 18

Commencement speaker: Dr. Temple Grandin, autism awareness advocate, leading innovator in the livestock industry, bestselling author and engineer

Honorary degrees:

  • Dr. Temple Grandin
  • The Honorable Francis J. Darigan, Jr. ’64, retired justice from the Superior Court of Rhode Island
  • Raymond M. Murphy, entrepreneur and philanthropist
  • Sister Margaret Ormond, O.P., prioress of the Congregation of Dominican Sisters of Peace
  • Carolyn Rafaelian, acting CEO of Alex and Ani
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Rhode Island College

Saturday, May 17

Commencement speaker: Valerie Tutson, founder and director of both Rhode Island Black Storytellers and FUNDA Fest: A Celebration of Black Storytelling

Honorary degrees:

  • Valerie Tutson
  • Oscar Herbert, CEO of the Warwick-based Atrion
  • Peter Arpin, partner in Arpin International Group and president of Arpin Renewable Energy and Arpin Broadcast Network.
  • Centenarian Irene Kenny, RIC Class of 1935
  • Dr. Charles MacDonald, chair of the Department of Dermatology at Brown University
  • John Hazen White Jr., CEO and president of Taco Inc.
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RISD

Saturday, May 31

Commencement speaker: Bruce Mau, innovator, designer, author, and co-founder of Massive Change Network

Honorary degrees:

  • Bruce Mau
  • Todd Oldham, author and founder of Todd Oldham Studio
  • Jean Kennedy Smith, former US Ambassador to Ireland
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Roger Williams University

Saturday, May 17 

Commencement speaker: Governor Lincoln D. Chafee, Rhode Island

Honorary degrees:

  • Governor Lincoln D. Chafee, Rhode Island
  • Doris Kearns Goodwin, Pulitzer Prize-winning author and historian
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Salve Regina University

Sunday, May 18

Commencement speaker: Richard Saul Wurman, founder of TED conference

Honorary degrees: Richard Saul Wurman

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University of Rhode Island

Saturday, May 17:

Commencement speaker: Richard Blanco, inaugural poet for President Obama’s second inauguration

Honorary degrees:

  • Richard Blanco, U.S. Inaugural Poet who will speak at commencement will receive an Honorary Doctor of Letters
  • LTG Michael T. Flynn, director of Intelligence, United States Defense Intelligence Agency, will receive an Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters
  • Bernard LaFayette Jr., Civil Rights leader, Candler School of Theology at Emory University, will receive an Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters
  • Anne Nolan, president and chief executive officer of Crossroads Rhode Island, will receive an Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters
 
 

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