President Crow exhorts new grads to 'make this country better, stronger, more just'
Biomedical sciences major Emily Heuchan and her fellow graduates celebrate as confetti streamers fall at the end of Fall 2024 Undergraduate Commencement at Mountain America Stadium in Tempe on Monday, Dec. 16. Photo by Samantha Chow/Arizona State University
Thousands of Arizona State University graduates were urged to help heal the inequities and divisions in American society as they celebrated at commencement ceremonies Monday.
ASU President Michael Crow gave that message at the graduate commencement at Desert Financial Arena on Monday morning and at the undergraduate ceremony at Mountain America Stadium in the afternoon.
Overall, about 11,300 ASU students graduated this fall, about two-thirds of them undergraduates and the rest earning graduate degrees.
More than half of the new degree-holders took classes through ASU Online, including more than 1,000 graduates of the Starbucks College Achievement Plan.
At the undergraduate commencement, Crow told the graduates that income disparities have led to social inequity.
“There's not a single negative number in the top third of family incomes. Lifespan is expanding. Income is expanding. Educational attainment is expanding,” he said.
“And in the bottom one-third of family incomes, you have 7% with college degrees, 35% to 40% high school non-completion. Lifespan going down. Income going down.
“This is at the root of so many things going on in this country right now that it’s beyond belief.”
Crow said the new bachelor’s degree holders must work on fixing it.
“Worry about what you're going to do to make this country better, stronger, quicker, more just and to help everyone in the country have a pathway forward,” he said.
In the morning commencement, Crow urged the graduates to fight for democracy.
“You have an assignment. If you’re from the United States, or you live in the United States, or you’re going to live in the United States, you’re in the middle of one of the most significant experiments in human history — our democracy and its forward progress, which is very, very unusual in the scheme of human history,” he said.
Crow said that the history of democracy has always included conflict and debate.
“And so there’s no walking into a better future. There’s only hard work. There’s only the fight. There’s only the drive.
“And all of you have been wildly, boldly empowered to do these things.”
And he exhorted both groups to be grateful to the taxpayers.
“People working at McDonald’s are paying taxes for you to be able to be here to pursue your PhD,” he said at the graduate ceremony.
“They're doing that because it is for the good of our society, and you all are here as a part of that.”
Cecilia Mata, chairman of the Arizona Board of Regents, also addressed both ceremonies, describing how she was a first-generation college student in Panama before immigrating to the United States.
“And now as chairman of the Board of Regents, I have come full circle with the privilege of inspiring and encouraging the next generations of the leaders on their commencement day,” she said.
“This is the power that higher education gives you — the ability to chart your own path.”
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