Giving it their all
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Deirdre Newman
IN THE IVY LEAGUE
SOCRATES CRUZ
Costa Mesa High School senior Socrates Cruz lives up to his namesake
-- the sage, Greek philosopher whose ideas were ahead of his time.
Cruz, 17, who will attend Harvard in the fall, helped to realize his
parents’ dreams of having their children be the first generation to
attend college. His older brother, Edson, attends UC Irvine.
His insatiable curiosity about life inspired him to immerse himself in
the high school experience, earning accolades from his teachers and the
community.
Chemistry teacher Joe Havens, also a Harvard alum, describes Cruz as
the quintessential Renaissance man.
“I always think of him as a great math and science student,” Havens
said. “But then I’ll read one of his essays, and I’ll realize, ‘I can’t
write near what he can write.’ . . . He has a breadth of knowledge that
is outstanding.”
Cruz, whose family immigrated from Mexico when he was 2, started Costa
Mesa High School -- a seventh- through 12th-grade school -- when he was
in the seventh grade.
His parents motivated him to constantly seek out new challenges.
“It’s been set out by my parents that [I] need to get an education,
not underachieve,” Cruz said. “[I] need to take advantages of
opportunities -- both social and educational.”
Although he experienced a bout of shyness when he was younger, Cruz
said he was buoyed by the confident projection of his first-grade teacher
at College Park Elementary School in Costa Mesa.
“She would always tell my mom I would grow out of being shy and make
my parents proud,” Cruz recalled.
And grow out of it he did.
In high school, he dove into such activities as playing soccer,
participating in the academic decathlon, reporting and writing poetry for
the school paper, editing a section of the yearbook, dressing up as the
school’s “Marty the Mustang” mascot, and founding a “junto” club, modeled
on a society of the same name once led by Benjamin Franklin.
An experience participating in Boys State -- a model government
program -- the summer before his junior year, when he gave up running for
governor because he didn’t think he would win and ran for superintendent
instead, taught him a valuable lesson.
“When I came back, I decided I never wanted to regret anything,” Cruz
said.
So in addition to applying to his first-choice school -- UC Berkeley
-- Cruz decided to follow a friend’s lead and apply to Harvard as well.
He got into Harvard and not Berkeley.
Cruz spoke to students at Rea Elementary School last week to motivate
them to set their sights high.
“Since they are mostly Hispanic and since [Hispanics] are
underrepresented in college, I felt similar to them,” Cruz said. “[I told
them] they should not use their ethnicity as an excuse for failure, but
use it as an advantage.’
Cruz received a $1,000 scholarship from the Ronald McDonald House
Charities for contributions to his school and community.
In addition to his versatility, Cruz also earns praise for his
character.
“Socrates has a character that I have not seen in probably any high
school student in my 16 years of teaching,” Havens said. “He has a really
kind, warm sense of humor and a smile that makes everybody comfortable.”
Although Cruz is not sure what he will study at Harvard, he said he is
thinking about a career in medicine eventually.
***
ON HIS OWN TERMS
CHRIS CANDELARIA
Since he was a young child, Chris Candelaria has struggled with
debilitating allergies that have forced him to miss school for weeks at a
time.
While some of his previous schools had expressed suspicions about his
extended absences, at Monte Vista High School in Costa Mesa he found a
supportive environment where he could work at his own pace.
Candelaria, 18, who will graduate today, found such success at the
alternative high school that he was honored for his excellence in science
and computers with a Les Miller Outstanding Student Award.
Because of a weak immune system, Candelaria suffers from frequent
sinus infections. He started home schooling in Irvine when he was in the
fifth grade.
When it was time for high school, Candelaria said he was intimidated
by the prospect.
“My previous teacher had a very rigorous curriculum and was always
telling me how high school was 20 billion times harder,” Candelaria said.
“I originally didn’t want to come here.”
But meeting the teachers on campus assuaged his fears, and he quickly
grew to appreciate the intimate nature of the campus. The school enables
students to work independently on their class material at home and come
in a few times a week to meet with their teachers.
“This school has allowed me -- when I disappeared for a little bit --
they work with you,” Candelaria said. “They’re very understanding. They
find some way to work around it.”
Likewise, teachers at the school have been impressed with his
diagnostic skills.
“He’s come in my room, and if there’s a kid who’s stuck Chris will sit
and figure out with that kid exactly what’s causing the problem,” Lynn
Blanton said. “He’s very good.”
Candelaria also said the practical focus of the curriculum enabled him
to see subjects such as math and history in a different perspective.
“I was always questioning [my history teacher] -- ‘Why are we learning
this?”’ Candelaria said. “His ways of explaining were interesting and
adequate.”
Candelaria said he was “blown away” when he received the honor for
academic excellence.
In the fall, Candelaria will attend the DeVry Institute, where he will
continue to pursue his interest in electronics.
***
PURE DETERMINATION
TIFFANY JOHNSON
Tiffany Johnson did not let a snowboarding accident derail her plans
to finish high school.
Johnson, 17, who broke some of her ribs on the slopes during her
junior year, missed too much school to finish her course work at the
traditional district school she attended.
So she opted to switch to Monte Vista High School in January of her
junior year, harboring some reservations about the change.
“I was a little scared before I came here because I thought it was the
easy way out,” Johnson said.
But Johnson’s misgivings soon gave way to an affinity for the school
that enabled her to work full time while completing her studies.
The motivated student became an expert in time management, putting her
procrastinating days behind her.
“It’s just about managing my time,” she said. “I got my black book out
and finally used it. I made appointments with myself, saying I will do
some homework on my lunch hour.”
Johnson, who moved out of her parents’ house two years ago, said she
realized Monte Vista was not the easy way out, because there are still
tests and homework.
Johnson, who wants to be a cardiovascular surgeon, said she didn’t
miss the social interaction of her old high school.
“[It] was so clique-y,” she said. “People were so concerned with their
clothes and superficial things.”
Johnson has already started Orange Coast College while continuing to
work full time.
Her teachers at Monte Vista know she has the grit and determination to
accomplish anything she sets her mind to.
“Tiffany has a wonderful work ethic,” Blanton said. “She just
prioritizes what she needs to get done and gets it done.”
* Deirdre Newman covers education. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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