15-year-old graduates from OCC
Amy R. Spurgeon
ORANGE COAST COLLEGE -- Around this time of year, most 15-year-olds are thinking about the beach, the latest summer flicks, or denying the fact
that they have to attend summer school.
But not Daniel Vera. The 15-year-old from Lake Forest has very different
priorities -- and an associate’s degree.
Vera joined the ranks of a prestigious group Thursday at OCC’s 52nd
commencement ceremony at LeBard Stadium in Costa Mesa. In front of
thousands of spectators, he received his associate’s degree, finishing
with a 4.0 grade-point average with honors in a two-year program he
completed in a year and a half.
Vera is now a junior at UCI, majoring in mathematics. He wants to get his
bachelor’s degree in two years, and soon after that, plans to earn
master’s and doctorate degrees from Stanford, Harvard or NYU.
Vera is not a child genius and he’s not socially inept. He’s just an
extremely focused kid with very dedicated and supportive parents.
“Oh, there he is,” his mother, Estelle Vera, said Thursday from the
bleachers, where two rows of family members and friends gathered to cheer
on Daniel. She pointed toward the grassy field where a tall, young man
donning a blue cap and gown stood among other graduates.
“We knew you could do it,” bellowed UCI friend Kevin Olson, 19.
“I didn’t know he was 15 until I saw a reporter interviewing him last
week. I was like, ‘whoa,’ ” Olson said. “It certainly took me by surprise
because he looks a lot older. The whole aura about Danny is that he looks
like a normal college student. He doesn’t look like one of those child
geniuses. I think it’s great that we don’t restrict someone from going to
college because of their age. He’s obviously mature enough and
intelligent enough to go.”
The story of Vera’s feat is quite simple. As a child, his parents
constantly read to him and paid him much attention. He was nurtured,
respected, disciplined and valued more than money, job status and
business meetings.
“I brag about him to everybody. I get to tell everybody what a great
family I have,” said Daniel’s older brother, Aaron Roblero, 25, who is in
the U.S. Navy. “But he’s a brother. He’s a pain sometimes, but I love him
with all my heart. And girls, he’s available.”
Starting in the fifth grade, Daniel was home-schooled by his mother. But
it was soon evident that he could excel at an accelerated pace, so his
parents hired UCI doctorate students to tutor him.
He did well, even enrolling in extension courses at UCI and earning the
highest marks in his classes, said his father, Joe Vera, an Orange County
mortgage broker.
However, UCI would not admit Vera as a full-time student until he proved
he could handle the work in a “traditional setting.” So he was referred
to OCC.
Overcast skies and on-and-off drizzle provided the backdrop for the
two-hour graduation ceremony Thursday. Graduates ranged in age from 15 to
55. More than 1,977 students were honored during the ceremony with
associate’s degrees or certificates.
Vera’s short- and long-term plans include getting his bachelor’s degree
from UCI and then a doctorate in math. He plans to pursue a career as a
screenwriter.
Perhaps benefiting most from Vera’s ascent to manhood is his mother, who
left her job as manager of a title insurance company to be a full-time
mom.
Over the past few years, she has driven Daniel to and from two schools
for study groups, library books, classes, bookstore necessities and
meetings with professors -- not to mention extracurricular activities
with friends.
“The most important thing right now is for him to get his driver’s
license,” Estelle laughed. “I am at his mercy.
“Mothers and housewives should be the CEOs of the family and get at least
$200,000 a year,” she said. “My job at the insurance company only
required one-third of the work I do between Danny and the house.”
After the commencement ceremony, the family huddled on the football field
for pictures. Then the group left for pepperoni pizza at Gina’s Pizza on
Harbor Boulevard -- Danny’s favorite.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.