![]() |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Achiever StoriesCollege Dream Comes True for Fullerton Mom Earning Top Honors at CommencementThe following story appeared on the California State University, Fullerton Web site.Thanks to Dr. Gerald Bryant, McNair director, the story is presented here with permission from Dave Reid, Public Affairs, dreid@fullerton.edu. At age 33, the single mother of three will be graduating with a bachelor’s degree in two majors from Cal State Fullerton, and will be receiving the President’s Associates Scholastic Award, the university’s top honor for academic achievement, which carries a $1,000 cash award. She will be graduating summa cum laude, having achieved a 4.0 grade point average in both of her majors — Afro-ethnic studies and criminal justice. “One of my goals is to be a role model for my children in getting an education,” she said. “I want to give them the message that if mom could do it, they could it.” Her quest to inspire her children — all students at Sunny Hills High School — is all the more remarkable because mom is blind. She considers her blindness, which came about as the result of a violent assault years ago, as a “limitation and not a disability.” Her professional goal is to become a university professor and to perform research to help others in need. As a Ronald McNair Scholar, she plans to attend a doctoral program in the future. (The Ronald E. McNair Scholars program prepares traditionally underrepresented students for doctoral studies. It is named for one of the astronauts who perished in the Challenger space shuttle tragedy.) Following graduation, Lawson plans to attend a monthlong training class at the Braille Institute to study computer training in voice recognition technology. “I can say in all honesty she is the best student I have instructed in my 15 years of university teaching, which includes Washington State University, Arizona State University and USC,” said James Lasley, CSUF professor of criminal justice. “In the classroom, Ms. Lawson almost always emerges as a discussion leader and is highly admired by her peers.” The Fullerton resident will receive her President’s Associates award at the campus Honors Convocation May 30. The next day, she will be recognized at ceremonies for Afro-ethnic studies graduates at the first of the university’s two commencement events. On Sunday, June 1, she will be recognized at ceremonies for criminal justice graduates. She will be a student commencement speaker at both individual ceremonies. Lawson has won a number of awards and presented research at conferences at UC Berkeley, the University of Maryland and the John Jay Criminal Justice College. She has helped organize a drive to provide teddy bears for the youngest victims of the 9/11 terrorist attacks and plans Christmas parties for a children’s home. Her research projects have included evaluating a computer program to prevent child abduction by predators who frequent online chat rooms, analysis of data relating to sex crimes against minors in Huntington Beach and several studies in connection with the afro-ethnic studies program. Lawson also has completed a number of certificate programs, including basic applied forensics and technical writing. Lawson, who was born in Puerto Rico and grew up in New York, says she is a living example of the saying, “When life give you lemons, then make lemonade.” “The source for me to make lemonade from the negative experiences in my past,” said Lawson, has been the countless positive experiences I have had at Cal State Fullerton. “ She praised her professors, mentors and fellow students for helping her succeed in her academic journey in pursuit of two majors. “If I soar,” she told an interviewer, “it’s because they’ve given me the feathers to soar. Cal State Fullerton has been a tremendous inspiration and driving force in my life. “Unlike all the other students who had had the pleasure of seeing the beauty of our campus, I have felt the beauty of our campus. This is a special place that creates special graduates.” Other than her children, Lawson is without any other family members in California. “Cal State Fullerton is my family,” she says with great pride.~~~ Courtesy of http://www.fullerton.edu/ Postscript: In requesting permission to reprint this story, the author Dave Reid added this about Lawson: "Sunshine is one of the most remarkable people I have ever met. When I interviewed her for the first time I could feel the determination just feel the determination oozing out of her. I found her intellectual curiosity and her drive to succeed almost as compelling as her ability to cope with her blindness. Read about other achievers Erlinda Ulloa, Jose Ronstadt, Ned Doffoney, Heather Morrison, Blanca Escobar, Christopher Harrison, Wendy Sanchez, Hazel Amina, Sunshine Lawson, Jennifer Dyke, Laura Ochoa, and Michael Christiansen. [TOP] If you have a story about a participant or staff achiever, send it to Dave Ferguson. The person does not have to be nominated for the WESTOP Achievers Award. He or she is a person, in your eyes, whose story is inspirational. Afterall, if we don't tell the stories of our participants and staff, who will? [TOP] |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
©2008 WESTOP | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||