When Doug Kirchner Jr., BA ā17, crossed the stage in December to receive his degree in applied conflict management with a minor in criminal justiceāthe first in his family to graduate from collegeāhis wife, Katie, and three sons were there to cheer him on.
But three other important people in his life were missing: his friend and mentor, Scott, a state policeman who had died in 2016; his mother, who had died in 2015; and his daughter, Skyler, who had died in 2011 at age 12.
Skyler had started him on this pathābefore she died of brain cancer, she had made him promise to get his GED. āOne day she asked me what I was going to be when I grew up,ā he recalls. āI laughed and said, āWell, Iām kind of grown up. Iām in my thirties, I have three kids and one on the way, and thereās not much I can do because I never graduated from high school.āā
Dropping out of school in ninth gradeāafter years of struggling with ADHD, dyslexia and a learning disability that hadnāt been diagnosed until after heād failed several gradesāhe started managing bands and promoting concerts in and around Cleveland. He married his first wife in 1997, had his daughter in 1999 and was divorced in 2001.
He had remarried, had a son and was working at a cellphone company when his daughter was first diagnosed with brain cancer at age 6. After several years of remission, the cancer returned, and by age 12, she was terminal.
Work went by the wayside as he helped take care of her, and after she died in November 2011, he had to file for bankruptcy. He began attending GED education classes with and earned his General Equivalency Diploma in June 2012.
Heād kept his promise to his daughter, and thatās where he thought his education would end. But at his GED commencement, heād met some recruiters from the , located on the Ā鶹ӰŌŗ Campus, which helps GED graduates transition to college by offering academic, financial and social support. āThey called me up and invited me to sit with them for a weekābefore I knew it, I had signed up to enroll for a semester, just to try it.ā
āI got my GED for my daughter, but to complete college, I had to start doing it for myself.ā
āDoug Kirchner, BA ā17
It took him about four and a half years to complete his coursework, while working as a security specialist/investigator to help pay the bills. He credits his wife, caring professors and his āLunch Bunchāāa small group of fellow studentsāfor helping him make it through. āI got my GED for my daughter, but to complete college I had to start doing it for myself.ā
āMy heart is to change lives,ā he says, āand to show juveniles who donāt have a voice that there is hope.ā
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