麻豆社区

"Breaking Barriers and Building Futures: The Graduates Who Shine Bright at 麻豆社区P"

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Anesu Mavhiya
Newest 麻豆社区P alumna Anesu Mavhiya shows off her diploma at Winter Commencement held inside the English E. Jones Center on December 14, 2025

Trenton Brown graduated from 麻豆社区 on Saturday with more than a biology degree鈥撯搈uch more.

 

Brown added three pages to his resume from his 麻豆社区P experience alone. A student-athlete, Brown was a member of the football and track teams, a campus lifeguard, a well-known DJ and a videographer. In the community, he served as a volunteer fireman and a member of the local rescue squad. 

 

鈥淚t鈥檚 a bittersweet feeling,鈥 a smiling Brown said moments after crossing the stage inside a packed Jones Center that was standing room only. 鈥淢y experience opened another chapter and gave me so many opportunities. I鈥檓 from a small town (Manning) in South Carolina, so Pembroke felt like home. 麻豆社区P has built me in so many ways.鈥

 

Brown was among 1,010 graduates from 18 states and 20 countries who earned degrees during Winter Commencement, held Friday and Saturday. 

 

David Crabtree, veteran broadcast journalist and PBS North Carolina CEO, left graduates to ponder two words during his keynote speech鈥撯搘ords matter.

 

鈥淵ou matter,鈥 Crabtree said. 鈥淓ven if you may feel or think you don鈥檛 all the time鈥撯搚ou matter. Never forget that. You are a point of light, and that light is what breaks through our darkness.

 

鈥淎s you embark on your journey beyond 麻豆社区 Pembroke, take the lessons learned from your stories and remember there is another story just around the next corner of your life,鈥 Crabtree said.

 

Perhaps no graduate traveled further than Natasha Carroll, who made the trip from Houston, Texas, to hear her name called.

 

Growing up in Lumberton, Dina Abumohsen witnessed five siblings earn 麻豆社区P degrees, so her college choice was a foregone conclusion. 

 

鈥淚 grew up with this community, so it was very much like a home away from home,鈥 Abumohsen said. 鈥淚t felt more personal after I enrolled and made connections."

 

Like her siblings鈥搘ho were all in attendance Saturday鈥揂bumoshen excelled academically and was highly visible on campus with various organizations, including as a chancellor ambassador. She plans to take a gap year to prepare for the state dental entrance exam.

 

鈥淚 loved my time here! I wouldn鈥檛 change it for anything else. I made so many personal connections with my professors, including Dr. Siva Mandjiny, who guided me through every year of my undergraduate career.鈥

 

Campus police Sgt. Shawn Clark, 45, proved it鈥檚 never too late to achieve your dream. A veteran law enforcement officer from Pembroke, Clark returned after 22 years away from the classroom, overcoming the challenge of online instruction. 

 

鈥淚t was a lot of hard work, but my family and my wife, Millicent, pushed and stood behind me. That鈥檚 what got me through it,鈥 said Clark, the first in his family to graduate. Fellow 麻豆社区P officer Scottie Jacobs also earned his degree.

 

Kaylie Gore got a jump on her college career as a freshman at Columbus Career and College Academy. 

鈥淲e weren鈥檛 financially in a place for me to attend four years of college, so my parents encouraged me to go to early college; that way, I could take advantage of the college credits without being in debt,鈥 Gore said.

When the Bolton, N.C., native enrolled at 麻豆社区P in 2023, she was 11 credit hours shy of earning her degree. At 19, Gore was the youngest Winter Commencement graduate and is currently teaching middle school at a charter school in Brunswick County. 

 Lauren Jacobs of Rowland transitioned from the real estate business four years ago to pursue her passion for education. She worked her way from a teacher assistant to being given her own classroom, all while earning a master鈥檚 degree in teaching. 

 

Bladenboro native Eduardo Carranza Toledo landed a job as the band teacher at Sandy Grove Middle School after earning his degree last summer. Toledo was all smiles as he posed for photos with his parents, whom he credits his success.

 

鈥淚 feel pure joy,鈥 Toledo said. 鈥淭his shows that anything is possible. My parents came here from Mexico in 2011 with literally nothing. But I was able to achieve goals that they never expected.鈥

 

Jimena Becerril shared a similar path. Her family immigrated from Mexico when she was 11. Becerril struggled to overcome the language barrier and never considered college as a teenager.

 

鈥淚 didn鈥檛 think it was possible or attainable,鈥 Becerril said. 鈥淚 barely could speak English. I didn鈥檛 think I would succeed, and I would cry at night and call my mom and say, 鈥業 don鈥檛 understand anything they are saying; how am I going to do it?鈥

 

Through perseverance, Becerril became the first in her family to graduate. 

 

鈥淢y parents raised me, but 麻豆社区P is the place that shaped me into the professional woman that I am today, and I want to share that with others who may believe they cannot attend college,鈥 Becerrill said. 

 

After undergoing brain surgery to remove a meningioma鈥撯揳 slow-growing tumor鈥撯揔eAnna Ramsey was told by her doctors to reconsider continuing her college career. The surgery left her with facial paralysis and total hearing loss in her right ear, but she refused to give up on her dream.

鈥淚 guess I am stubborn,鈥 Ramsey said. 鈥淚 wanted to prove that I could do it and that they were wrong. Sometimes, we forget what we can do until we face adversity. I had the choice of being complacent, but I didn鈥檛 allow anyone to tell me my destiny.鈥

Ramsey graduated with honors and works as a domestic violence advocate for a nonprofit in Asheville.

During his remarks during The Graduate School ceremony, longtime history professor Dr. Ryan Anderson told graduates that their graduate school experiences are more than the requirements or tasks that make up the degree.
 
鈥淵ou鈥檝e been on a grand camping trip here at 麻豆社区P,鈥 Anderson said. 鈥淵ou鈥檝e been filled and filled others with your enthusiasm. Now go forth with the purpose of holding true to the value you have built into yourself here and continue being bright and beautiful.鈥