Never Give Up

Adult schools offer students a second chance to earn their high school diplomas

Rich Ishimaru, an older Asian man in a blue collared shirt and striped tie, smiles for the camera.

Kings Canyon Adult School Learning Director Rich Ishimaru has seen hundreds of students earn their high school diplomas or equivalent. Gabriela Ponce, below, is one of those graduates. Photo courtesy of Rich Ishimaru.

Gabriela Ponce of Reedley remembers the tough days she experienced as a teenager after her parents separated and her mother was left to care for the family alone.

At times, her family was homeless as well.

“We were living at family members’ houses about an hour away from my high school, and it was really hard for us to stay in school,” she says.

Consequently, Ponce dropped out during her sophomore year.

For the next couple of years, she tried taking independent study courses on her own, but it did not work out, she says. Eventually, Ponce accepted a job as a sales associate at a dollar store in 2011.

“That’s when I decided, ‘I need to get my diploma. I can’t do this my whole life,’ ” she recalls.

“Just keep going until you get that diploma.”

Gabriela Ponce, Kings Canyon Adult School graduate

Ponce enrolled in Kings Canyon Adult School’s free high school diploma program.

“I didn’t have to pay anything,” Ponce says. “Even if we needed things like notebooks and binders, the teachers would offer them to us.”

Rich Ishimaru, Learning Director at Kings Canyon Adult School, says the school normally serves about 650 students.

“We offer high school diploma, ESL, and career technical education classes,” he says.

Currently, students meet with their teacher once a week, in person, to get their assignments and get answers to questions.

“But we’re pretty flexible,” Ishimaru says. “So if a student needs more help, the teachers are allowed to put in more time.”

Math, says Ponce, was always her toughest subject.

“I struggled with math,” she says, “But the teachers would show me online video tutorials that had examples and that was helpful.”

Her teachers also encouraged her stay in school, she says.

“I had always wanted to be an elementary school teacher,” says Ponce. “So they would tell me, ‘You’ve got to finish adult school. You need that diploma to get into college.’”

Ponce completed the program in a year and graduated in May 2012, she says.

She eventually earned her teaching credential from Fresno Pacific University in June 2021.

But when her mother became ill, she put her dream of working as a full-time elementary school teacher on hold to be a caregiver. She accepted a part-time teaching position at Mountain View School in Reedley which offers independent study for K-12 students.

“I really like what I do there because I feel like I can relate to these students,” she says.

And while some may hesitate to turn to an adult school to get their high school diploma, Ponce says, “If that’s your only way to get your diploma, it doesn’t matter where it’s from. Just keep going until you get that diploma.”

For more information, visit https://statecenteraec.org.

Written by Gail Allyn Short.

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Central California High School

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