Pomp and development
Deirdre Newman
COSTA MESA -- Students at Monte Vista and Back Bay high schools
celebrated their independent spirit and perseverance at graduation on
Thursday morning.
The Costa Mesa schools serve a population that struggles at
traditional high schools or craves the opportunity to work at its own
pace.
Ninety-eight students wearing vibrant red caps and gowns kissed their
high school years goodbye amid applause and cheers.
Many of the graduation speakers underscored the positive attributes
the school cultivates in its students.
“We have acquired more skills than we realize,” graduate Taylor Hirsch
said. “The program fosters the development of character traits that
include self-reliance and self-confidence.”
The graduation also included an emotional farewell to the founding
principal of the school, Carole Castaldo, who is retiring after 26 years
at the helm.
Castaldo was teary-eyed after the ceremony and expressed the
bittersweet feelings of the occasion.
“It’s a mixed feeling,” Castaldo said. “I know I have to leave it to
others, but it’s my baby.”
After the ceremony, students embraced family and friends, posed for
snapshots and chowed down cake.
Shannon Smith, 18, said going to Monte Vista turned out to be a
blessing after she was injured in a car accident and had to take a chunk
of time off from her previous high school.
“I got to complete everything and recover,” said Smith, who scored a
combined $3,500 from three scholarships.
Her mom, Shawn, looked on proudly as Smith reveled in the
post-graduation festivities.
“She did well since she came out with a 4.0 [grade-point average],”
Shawn said. “She’s independent and resourceful. Between the two, she came
out with flying colors.”
Although Claudia Guerra, 17, went to Monte Vista for one semester, but
she said it was more productive than her former school.
“I wanted something more independent,” she said. “School wasn’t much
help, and I thought it was a waste of a day.”
For Alberto Vasquez, 19, Monte Vista provided a clear focus that was
lacking at his old school.
“It was more one-on-one with teachers, easier to get answers to all my
questions, and I worked at my own pace,” he said.
While Vasquez said high school was a long journey, he looks forward to
college and continuing to play bass with the band Driven.
“Now he can go on tour with us without having his parents hate us,”
joked Brandon Grewal, who is also in the band.
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