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August 15, 2009
Cage urges students to A-D-A-P-T during 麻豆果冻传媒鈥檚 2009 Summer Commencement
The University of Louisiana at Monroe held its 2009 Summer Commencement on Saturday, Aug. 15, as 麻豆果冻传媒 President James E. Cofer Sr. conferred degrees to 173 ceremony participants.
Seven students graduated with Latin honors and the summer鈥檚 top graduate was Paul Orr, a criminal justice major. 麻豆果冻传媒 awarded a total of 217 degrees to 215 students at summer鈥檚 end.
Dr. Bob N. Cage, professor and coordinator of 麻豆果冻传媒鈥檚 education doctoral program, served as summer commencement keynote speaker.
Cage told the students he had participated 107 times over a 41-year period in university graduations, and that the students are now a part of history, not only in their own right, but also in the history of 麻豆果冻传媒.
Quoting the statistics of those who do not complete a minimum high school education, Cage said, 鈥淭he very fact that you are here today to receive a diploma makes you a member of an elite group.鈥
Cage also touched on the growing percentage of non-traditional students deciding to return to school after attending college for a year or two in their younger years.
鈥淭he average length of time to complete a baccalaureate degree today is six years. I applaud you non-traditional students for your perseverance,鈥 he said.
Cage said his own educational destination took a long and circuitous route, joking that he contemplated such diverse careers as singing cowboy, baseball player and corporate salesman.
Cage added that he developed an interest in Galileo 鈥 the Italian physicist, astronomer and mathematician 鈥 during a high school science class, which was later manifested when he became a high school mathematics teacher himself in Paton, Iowa, in the early 1960s.
That early teaching job provided one of Cage鈥檚 earliest mentoring roles and one of his longest-running friendships with a student: Retired Colonel and NASA Astronaut Loren James Shriver. Shriver and his wife drove over from Houston to be with Cage for the commencement.
Following the audience鈥檚 applause for Shriver, Cage returned to the lessons that Galileo provides to today鈥檚 graduates, using the acronym A-D-A-P-T.
鈥淭he first lesson is A 鈥 Ambition. Galileo was committed to life-long learning,鈥 said Cage. 鈥淓ven though Galileo did not invent the telescope, it was through his ambition to modify and improve the device that it became known and used throughout the centuries. Perhaps one of you will create the next mode of communicating so that 鈥榯exting鈥 and 鈥榯wittering鈥 will be old hat in a year or two.鈥
Cage said the D stood for dedication, meaning that the graduates must dedicate themselves to achieving the goals they have set, just as Galileo dedicated himself to studying the universe, finding planets and defining the law of gravity.
鈥淭oday鈥檚 computers calculate; they do not think or reason. Information systems are hard and deterministic, not soft and adaptive,鈥 said Cage. 鈥淲ith your commitment, your dedication to learning and excellence, you have the opportunity to change all that in the next half century.鈥
The second A in the A-D-A-P-T acronym is for analysis, Cage told the students.
鈥淵ou learn from mistakes. You analyze the process, the outcome; you find how to improve your product, your service, yourself,鈥 he said. 鈥淕alileo鈥檚 first telescope only magnified four times. He viewed Venus 2.5 light minutes away from Earth. The Hubble Telescope takes digital pictures of the universe 13-billion light years away.鈥
Cage said the next step in the A-D-A-P-T model is to plan.
鈥淲hat is your plan? Can you cope with this economy? Can you scale back and live within your budget? Can you contribute to society by helping others, by thinking Green?鈥 Cage asked the students.
Cage pointed to the last step in the A-D-A-P-T model, which is tenacity.
鈥淭here is no better time than during a recession to prove to others, and to yourself, that you can defy the odds and significantly contribute to your community, your family and even to your alma mater,鈥 he said.
Cage summarized by saying that the fittest are those endowed with the knowledge and the qualifications for adaptation.
鈥淐an you adapt? It takes ambition, dedication, the ability to analyze, a plan that is flexible and the tenacity to hang on when things do not go as planned,鈥 he said.
Cage earned his Masters of Science from Drake University in Des Moines and his bachelor鈥檚 degree from Central College in Pella, Iowa. He is the co-author of a proposal that created the Louisiana Education Consortium. There have been over 85 education doctoral graduates of that program since 1997, and many are now superintendents, principals, supervisors, and teachers in schools across Louisiana. Thirty are teaching or holding administrative positions in colleges and universities in five regional states.
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