Commencement: Special Issue
May 15, 2015
MEDICAL UNIVERSITY of SOUTH CAROLINA
Vol. 33, No. 37
photo by Sarah Pack, Public Relations
Having overcome many obstacles, from poverty to single-motherhood, Georgina Dukes will graduate May 15 with a master’s degree in health administration. Today, she celebrates with her son, Romeo, age 3.
MHA grad defies odds to achieve her dreams By J. Ryne Danielson Public Relations
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hen Georgina Dukes was 11 years old, her world crumbled. “Our house burned down and my dad left a month later,” she said. “I think that was my turning point. That was when I really started focusing on school. I felt like school was my safe place. It was something I could be good at.” From Monetta, South Carolina, a small town in rural Aiken County, Dukes’ path to MUSC has been uphill, but this week she will graduate with a master’s in health administration from the College of Health Professions. “We cleared the debris from where the house was and put a trailer on the land,”
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I want people to know I didn’t give up, and I want to inspire others not to give up either.
Nurse Superstar Graduate is a speaker, motivator and new health care provider. LIKE US
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Georgina Dukes
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she said. “And that’s where we lived.” Growing up, Dukes was very close to her father. She never realized he was abusive, until he left. “I just thought that was the way things were supposed to be. If mama made him mad, he’d get physical with her. I became numb to it. I still don’t understand why he chose to leave then, but he did. We didn’t hear from him for months. He tried to come back once we got back on our feet, but my mom was through. She wasn’t going to put her kids through that. She is an amazing woman, and she decided she could make it on her own.” After losing her house and her father within a month of each other, Dukes devoted herself almost entirely to school. “I never missed a day,” she said. “I was a
nerdy little kid.” When schoolwork began to fill less and less of her time, she picked up extracurricular activities. “I played softball in the spring. I was in band in the summer and in the fall. And during the winter season, I was the scorekeeper for basketball. I tried to do as much as I could.” Not surprisingly, Dukes graduated as class valedictorian and received a scholarship to Clemson University, where she decided to study microbiology. “College was a rude awakening,” Dukes said, “but I guess it’s like that for everyone. My first semester was horrible. I needed to maintain a 3.0 to keep my
See Graduate on page 12
Transitions
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Meet Emory
Former NFL player trades helmet for otoscope.
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Graduate Excellence
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