Notre Dame de Namur University Confers Degrees on Highest Number of Tracy Graduates
Students finishing degrees at San Joaquin County campus doubled from last year
For Immediate Release (5/4/2019)
Tracy, CA.—Notre Dame de Namur University (NDNU), the third oldest college in California, celebratedits 167th Commencement ceremony on May 4, conferring degrees and credentials on 22 Tracy graduates out of a total of 481 students in the class of 2019. The number of graduates from Notre Dame’s campus in Tracy, California, has doubled over the past year. This year’s cohort of Tracy grads is the first to include students receiving a bachelor’s degree in Human Services, as well as teaching credentials.
NDNU President Judith Maxwell Greig said, “We’re extremely excited that all the good work our faculty, students, and staff have done in Tracy is bearing fruit now. We started the satellite campus in the Central Valley just four years ago, and already it is having an impact in so many ways.”
Commencement speaker Stedman Graham, a New York Times bestselling author, speaker, educator, and entrepreneur, spoke about his concept of Identity Leadership: “When you transform from a follower to a leader, it’s a beautiful thing,” he said. “You take control of your own narrative.” Graham, who also received an honorary doctoral degree, underlined for the graduates the importance of persistence: “You’re not a failure when you fall down, you’re only a failure when you don’t get back up.”
One example of a student taking leadership in the community is Stefanie Bourque of Livermore, who is receiving a bachelor’s degree in business administration this year. Stefanie works as a contract analyst at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. “I’ve applied what I learned at Notre Dame in my day-to-day activities at work,” she commented. She is also planning to start an organization where wounded warriors will help rescue or rehabilitate injured horses. “My goal is to create a full-circle rehabilitation facility where veterans and first responders with physical or emotional trauma will work with hurt horses in mutually beneficial healing relationships.”
Notre Dame de Namur University
Notre Dame de Namur University (NDNU) is a Catholic, not-for-profit, coeducational institution serving approximately 1,500 students from diverse backgrounds. Established in 1851 by the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur, NDNU is the third-oldest college in California and the first authorized to grant the baccalaureate degree to women. NDNU maintains a strong commitment to academic excellence, social justice, and community engagement. The university is fully accredited and offers a rich variety of undergraduate, graduate, doctoral, and teacher credential programs. NDNU has a historic campus on the San Francisco Peninsula in Silicon Valley, a satellite campus in Tracy in the Central Valley, and online programs. For more information, visit www.ndnu.edu.