Kildonan graduates 2010

AMENIA — Sixteen seniors donned green graduation caps and gowns at The Kildonan School last Friday, June 4. The boarding school in Amenia is for students with dyslexia and other learning-based differences.

Kildonan is in its 40th year, but as school co-founder Diana King said at the beginning of the ceremony, “it’s really the 40th year of [co-founder Kurt Goldman’s] extraordinary achievements and devotion that have launched and enriched such a huge number of lives.�

The graduation address was given by Benjamin Foss, director of access technology for the Intel Digital Health Group. Foss, who is dyslexic himself, presented to the audience the new Intel Reader. The device can take a digital photograph of a block of text and read it back out loud, a significant tool for many people, including  those with dyslexia. It allows me to learn “on my terms,â€� according to Foss.

“You have received the single best training you can get,� Foss told the graduating students, urging them to turn their perceived disadvantages into strengths. “You should be successful and you will be successful.�

Foss was presented with an honorary degree from the school following his address.

Senior Kristina Hobbs delivered the student address.

“We all have had different journeys,� she told her 15 classmates. “But we all have one thing in common: our dyslexia.�

Hobbs credited Kildonan for transforming its students into “unique, strong and confident individuals.�

Each senior, upon receiving his or her diploma, took the opportunity to ring one of the kitchen bells that signals the commencement of dinner for the school. It’s a school tradition to take the bell to the location of graduation for seniors to ring one last time.

The graduating class of 2010 is Marken Aboitiz, Nicholas Agosta, John Brazil Jr., Daniel Cortez, Molly Day, Jonathan Doncker, Robert Harrington, Devon Henry, Kristina Hobbs, Caitlin LaSota, Matthew Lieberman, Elizabeth Lyons, Kevin Rapp, Jamal Scott, Matthew Striplin and Alex Zimmermann.

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