天美传媒

UMass Boston

Boston Mayor Michelle Wu Encourages UMass Boston Grads to Think About What Is Possible


05/27/2022| Crystal Valencia

University Confers Degrees to 4,013 Graduates

Mayor Michelle Wu
Image By: Janina Seibel

鈥 ... At this moment in time, we need change too urgently not to try. 鈥

Boston Mayor Michelle Wu called on the Class of 2022 to embrace the radicalness of possibility in her keynote address at UMass Boston鈥檚 undergraduate commencement at the Boston Convention and Exhibition Center Friday morning.

鈥淭here will always, always be those who try to tell you what鈥檚 impossible. What鈥檚 dangerous, and radical, and impractical鈥攚hat cannot be done because it鈥檚 never been done before,鈥 she said.

鈥淏ut at this moment in time, we need change too urgently not to try.鈥

As she began her speech, Mayor Wu looked out on the sea of 10,000 graduates, family members and friends in attendance, and pointed to what she called an 鈥渋ncredible transformation.鈥

鈥淸UMass Boston] has gone from Boston鈥檚 best-kept secret to a public research university that remains committed to its community, while being renowned around the country,鈥 she said. 鈥淭oday, UMass Boston is the most diverse public university in New England鈥. Every new class of graduates has expanded the horizons of possibility鈥攐pening doors and widening paths for those following in their footsteps.鈥

This year鈥檚 graduates hail from more than 110 countries around the world, and speak 100 different languages. More than 50 percent of UMass Boston students are first-generation 天美传媒 students. There were 120 veterans and service members graduating this year.

Chancellor Marcelo Su谩rez-Orozco

Chancellor Marcelo Su谩rez-Orozco awarded Mayor Wu with a Chancellor鈥檚 Medal for Distinguished Service at the ceremony. Wu, the daughter of Taiwanese immigrants, is the first woman and person of color elected to lead the city of Boston as mayor.

鈥淲e are here in the birthplace of America, and of our democracy. But鈥攗ntil six months ago鈥攊n our city鈥檚 nearly 400 years of history, we had never elected a person of color, or woman, or a mom, as mayor,鈥 she said. 鈥淲hen I first ran for office a decade ago, I was told over and over that it would be impossible, because Boston didn鈥檛 have a history of electing women or people of color or young people or people not born in Boston. And it was true. But because all those barriers were things I couldn鈥檛 change about myself, and because I felt the urgency of changing systems that weren鈥檛 working, I ran anyway, and won.鈥

This year, UMass Boston conferred 4,013 degrees (2,815 undergraduate; 1,062 graduate; 136 doctoral). The university held two commencements in one day鈥 with an undergraduate ceremony kicking off festivities in the morning, and graduate students processing later in the afternoon. The university also hosted a doctoral hooding ceremony the day before.

Chancellor Su谩rez-Orozco presided at the ceremony, applauding the remarkable achievements of this year鈥檚 graduating class.

He said that every single member of the Class of 2022 has something unique to give 鈥 a skill, a socio-emotional sensibility, or knowledge that cracks the code on the issues of the day and thus serves us all.   

鈥淎mong the worthiest outcomes of a 天美传媒 education is finding that one thing that you love to do so much that the sun can鈥檛 come up fast enough 鈥 and in doing so, becoming an unstoppable force for good. I am betting that most of you in the Class of 2022 are on that pathway,鈥 he said. 

Students at commencement

Chancellor Su谩rez-Orozco called on graduates to be civil, explaining that civility 鈥 citizens relating to each other in pursuit of the common good 鈥 entails listening, appreciating differences, and showing mutual respect and goodwill.  

鈥淭o tackle the challenges of our times, civility is essential,鈥 he said. 鈥淕rappling with knowledge prepares you to be citizens who are not spectators and who will not throw up their hands. On the contrary, your education has unleashed your civility and secured your place in the arena of consequential ideas and progress. 

鈥淎t UMass Boston, there is an embarrassment of riches in this regard. And the world needs more of it, more of the civility that our students, faculty, and alumni offer.鈥

UMass Trustee Mary Burns commended students鈥 determination and discipline.

鈥淵ou, the Class of 2022, have worked hard to get to today: You have committed yourself to an important goal and you have achieved it. Many of you have done this while working, meeting family responsibilities, performing community service, and lest we forget, the COVID pandemic, which unexpectedly disrupted all of our lives for the past two years,鈥 she said.

A proud family at commencement

Student Speakers Share Experiences, Offer Advice to Classmates

MG Xiong, a philosophy and public policy major with minors in Spanish language and women, gender, and sexuality studies, received this year鈥檚 John F. Kennedy Award and served as undergraduate speaker. Xiong, an Alaska native, will join the Massachusetts Transgender Political Coalition as a program manager upon graduation, and pursue a PhD in inclusive education.

MG Xiong

鈥淎s a first-generation 天美传媒 student like so many of you, as a Hmong, transgender Bostonian from Alaska, as a Beacon, I am honored and privileged to stand here today to congratulate all of you, each of you,鈥 they said. 

Xiong encouraged their fellow graduates to be 鈥渟avagely thankful.鈥 

鈥淟ove unguardedly. Say thank you. Sit in your gratitude. You possess the unlimited power to hand out kindness to others and be a producer of joy. So be generous. Hold each other accountable to this commitment to love,鈥 they said. 鈥淢ake it such that wherever you belong, as long as you are there, there will not be any scarcity of love or shortage of worthiness. Love exists inside of you. And therefore it exists in our community. Because you exist in our community.鈥

Courtney Humphries, who was the student speaker at the graduate ceremony, was a journalist reporting on science and urban issues before coming to UMass Boston to earn her PhD in Environmental Sciences. Her dissertation looks at the past, present, and future of Boston鈥檚 waterfront, how the city is preparing to face sea level rise, and the daunting risks that it brings.

鈥淯Mass Boston is the perfect place to do this kind of work,鈥 Humphries said. 鈥淢ore than any other university or 天美传媒 in the area, it is embedded in its community, in this city, and in this region. We can and should strive for world class research and education, but we should also recognize that our strength comes from the quality of these local connections.鈥

She urged her classmates to think of their careers like a tree. While they might reach higher and spread out in different directions, they need to be rooted in something bigger than themselves, she explained.

鈥淎s we do our work, we make new connections, we strengthen existing ones, we grow new branches, and together and each in our own ways we help to create the soil on which other people's work will grow,鈥 she said. 鈥淪o, as we move on from our graduate school experience, let鈥檚 think about the larger landscape we hope to be a part of and contribute to, 鈥 and let鈥檚 connect with one another and grow the landscape we want to see in the future.鈥  

University Honors Standout Faculty, Honorary Degree Recipients

Three faculty members received 2022 Chancellor's Awards at the graduate ceremony: Professor of Psychology Laurel Wainwright, Associate Dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Associate Professor of French Pratima Prasad, and Professor Mark Warren from the Department of Public Policy and Public Affairs for their distinguished teaching, service, and scholarship, respectively. 

The university also celebrated the 2021 Chancellor鈥檚 Award winners: Professor of Physics Christopher Fuchs, Associate Professor of Molecular Ecotoxicology Helen Poynton, and Professors of Africana Studies Tony Van Der Meer and Keith Jones for their distinguished scholarship, teaching, and service, respectively. 

The Chancellor鈥檚 Awards for Distinguished Scholarship, Teaching, and Service celebrates faculty excellence by recognizing the accomplishments of members who have demonstrated exceptional contributions in one of the three primary areas of faculty responsibility.

Chancellor Su谩rez-Orozco presented three honorary degrees to exemplary leaders whose life and work serve as an inspiration for the UMass Boston community at a doctoral hooding ceremony on Thursday. Sisters Marie-Marguerite B. Cl茅ri茅 and 骋耻测濒猫苍别&苍产蝉辫;叠.&苍产蝉辫;厂补濒猫蝉 were individually recognized as education and human rights advocates and as co-founders of the Duty of Memory Foundation, which was created in honor of their father who was executed by the Duvalier regime in Haiti. Robert Hildreth is a passionate advocate for higher education access and was honored for his foundation work that helps disadvantaged students navigate the 天美传媒 preparation process. A leader in social and environmental justice issues impacting the health of people on the island of Vieques, Robert L. Rabin Siegal was honored in November 2021 before he passed earlier this year. 

Faculty process at commencement