A monumental step for West Rowan grad at ECU
Published 12:00 am Monday, May 9, 2011
By Mary Schulken
ECU Director of Public Affairs
GREENVILLE ó When Tremayne Smith left Salisbury five years ago to attend East Carolina University, he carried with him a challenge.
No one on either side of his immediate family had a college degree. None of the men in his family, period, went to college.
Now, thatís history.
Smith, 23, president of ECUís Student Government Association, drum major in its marching band and homecoming king in 2009, received two bachelorís degrees in commencement exercises Friday. He majored in music education and stayed an extra year to get a second degree in political science.
Reaching that milestone is significant to the Rowan County native and 2006 graduate of West Rowan High School.
ěI wanted to take away any excuses and doubts for subsequent generations,î Smith said. ěThe bar has really been raised for my younger cousins. This is very significant because they canít say it canít be done.î
A family project
About 10 members of his family traveled from Salisbury to Greenville to share the moment, including his mother, Patricia Watkins, his twin brother, Dewayne, his grandmothers, ěGrannieî Shirley Smith and ěGrannieî Libby Blackwell and his aunts. Tremayne bought extra copies of his diploma and is having them framed to present to each member of his family.
He is making that gesture because completing his college education was a family project, Smith said. His great-great-grandmother was a slave and his mother, his grandmothers and his aunts have stressed education as the path to a life of success.
ěA lot of them did not have the opportunity to do this, and every step I took, they held their breath,î Smith said. ěThey have been beside me all the way.î
The latest tracking numbers from the U.S. Department of Education show that nationwide, 36 percent of African-American men who enroll in college in NCAA Division 1 schools complete a degree in six years.
The low rank of that completion rate helped feed Smithís determination at West Rowan High School and at ECU, he said
ěOn a very personal note, being an African-American, and especially a male, thereís a lot of ëIím a victimí attitude out there and I think thatís the wrong point of view,î Smith said. ěThe attitude should be ěI am succeeding in spite ofí Ö fill in the blank: numbers, attitudes, whatever.î
ěI approached college in this way,î he said.
Smith said he has also taken advantage of opportunities when they arose.
ěI was not afraid to go outside of my comfort zone and do things Iíve never done; join the band, get involved in student government,î he said.
ëTomorrowís leaderí
Smith offers three pieces of advice for students struggling, as he has, to reach a milestone.
The first, he said, is trust in God. The second: Surround yourself with people you want to be like. The third: ěJust know you can do it and get to working and do it,î he said.
Smith has been visible as SGA president for ECUís 28,000 students, urging students to involve themselves in diverse aspects of campus life. His next stop is Capitol Hill, where he will work for the office of Sen. Kay Hagan, N.C.-D) as an intern. He plans to give law school a hard look.
Smithís strong core values, his hard work and his undergraduate education have positioned him for success, said Steve Ballard, ECUís chancellor.
ěECU prides itself in being the leadership university and training tomorrowís leaders,î said Ballard. ěTremayne Smith is the best example I know of tomorrowís leader.î
Meanwhile, Smith is enjoying his familyís moment of pride.
ěThey are beside themselves,î he said. ěItís been a long journey.î