Over 20 individuals who successfully completed work to obtain a high school diploma were applauded Wednesday, Oct. 10 at the Calvert County Public Schoolsโ€™ 18th annual Adult Education Graduation ceremony. The event was held at Huntingtown High School (HHS).

ย 

The students earned their diplomas either through the general education development (GED) program or the External Diploma Program (EDP).

ย 

The ceremony comes complete with the participants donning the traditional caps and gowns. The HHS String Quartet played Elgarโ€™s โ€œPomp and Circumstanceโ€ as the grads marched into the HHS Auditorium.

ย 

Not all of the programโ€™s graduates opt to participate in the commencement exercise. Still, the Oct. 10 event honorees represented what Adult Education Coordinator Marjorie Zimmerman called โ€œa very diverse group.โ€

ย 

โ€œWe did not choose the usual path,โ€ said graduate speaker Brittany Nebel-Sturgess, who told her story of becoming pregnant at 15 and the way it altered her path toward achieving a career goal. By successfully completing the EDP, Nebel-Sturgess now finds herself ahead of her high school class and is on track to realize a career in nursing. โ€œIโ€™m anxious to be out in the real world,โ€ said Nebel-Sturgess.

ย 

โ€œI got lazy,โ€ said Mandel Way, another graduate speaker. While he found work after dropping out of high school, Way explained he was let go when his employer found out he didnโ€™t have a high school diploma. Way said he was able to complete the Adult Education program despite sustaining injuries in a motorcycle accident. For that he thanked the programโ€™s staff.

ย 

โ€œThe more you advance in your education the more you increase your job security,โ€ said Maryland Department of Labor, Licensing and Regulation (DLLR) Adult Educat