CIU holds commencements on each side of the Broad River
December 13, 2022
By Bob Holmes
As Matt McCord posed outside Shortess Chapel for family photos, he held his two-year-old daughter Tatum who was playing with the traditional blue and gold tassel dangling from his graduation cap.听听听
McCord, the father of six (including two sets of twins) and lives in St Augustine Florida, made the trip to Columbia for the December 小猪视频 commencement to walk the stage as one of the first to earn CIU鈥檚 new online Master of Public Administration degree (MPA). He serves as the director of transportation for the Council on Aging in St. Johns County in Florida and 鈥渉ighly recommends鈥 the MPA calling the camaraderie with fellow online students and the professors 鈥渁 family environment.鈥
鈥淔or anybody looking for a university, CIU is it,鈥 McCord said. 鈥淭he foundation of Christ, (and it鈥檚) family-oriented. From the professors who are engaged and so loving, to the students in the class. We ended up being one giant family.鈥
Making an even longer trip to receive her Master of Education degree was Guojing Zhang, a first-grade teacher from China who also studied online. It was her first time in the United States. Through a translator she called her CIU professors her example.
鈥淚 really want to learn from them to help influence my students,鈥 Zhang said. 听
She is hoping to now earn a Master of听 Arts in Teaching (MAT) while studying on the CIU campus.
Degrees were conferred on 325 graduates during the morning ceremony, earning associate of arts degrees, bachelor degrees, master鈥檚 degrees and doctoral degrees. The commencement speaker was W. Tobin Cassels III, a CIU board member and president of headquartered in Lexington, South Carolina.
Behind the Prison Fence
Meanwhile, that afternoon on the other side of the Broad River from CIU鈥檚 main campus, 14 more CIU students had a separate commencement 鈥 behind the razor-wire fences of the Kirkland Correctional Institution. They are graduates of the CIU Prison Initiative.
The mission of the CIU Prison Initiative is to train inmates to live in accordance with biblical principles and to equip them for the unique ministry opportunities afforded by their incarceration. After graduation, they are assigned as chaplain assistants to prisons throughout South Carolina. Since its inception in 2007, 182 men and women have graduated from the program and serve in over 21 South Carolina institutions and one in Alabama. The recidivism rate among CIU Prison Initiative graduates is only 5%.
Among those in attendance was Director Bryan Stirling who calls the 5% recidivism rate, 鈥渁stonishing.鈥
鈥淚t means prison safety, it means South Carolina safety, it means safety for our communities,鈥 Stirling told reporters attending the commencement. 鈥淲hen these folks get out, what we hope they鈥檙e going to do is work in communities and use these degrees to turn other people鈥檚 lives around.鈥
Inmates enrolled in the Prison Initiative earn an Associate of Arts degree, but at this commencement, Wolfgang (last names are withheld), earned a bachelor鈥檚 degree.
鈥淚鈥檝e spent much of my life doing bad things, now to turn over a new leaf, and to receive praise for doing good is awesome,鈥 said Wolfgang after the ceremony.
Since its inception in 2007, the CIU Prison Initiative has been funded by donors to CIU. For more information on the program and how you can support it visit 听听听
WIS TV in Columbia was at the commencement to share the Prison Initiative story with sister stations statewide.听
CIU is celebrating 100 years of its mission to 鈥渆ducate people from a biblical worldview to impact the nations with the message of Christ." The university consistently ranks among the Top Regional Universities in the South by U.S. News & World Report, as well as a Best Value Regional University in the South.听听or request information on enrollment by contacting Admissions at (803) 807-5024 or听admissions@ciu.edu.听听听听听听听听听听