NCES: Time to move on

NORTH CANAAN — They strode down the long aisle between the gym entrance and the stage, the boys tall and proud in suits that fit them well, the girls in glamorous gowns and statuesque heels and professionally styled hairdos. The class of 2009 from North Canaan Elementary school was remarkable for its apparent maturity, and the confidence which with the 41 students carried themselves at graduation on Tuesday, June 16.

As is often the case, this notably adult class spent much of the graduation ceremony speaking nostalgically, even wistfully, about their years in elementary school. Katherine Funkhouser summed up the theme of the evening in her essay when she said she had spent most of the last nine years looking eagerly forward to the day when she would graduate. “Now that I’ve reached the point where I’m supposed to move forward, I find myself longing to go back.�

A similar theme infused essays and poems by the other student speakers, who were Laurel Montoya, Kelly Monty, Joshua MacDonald, Cassidy Considine, Jordan Long and Somer Brown. Kelly’s essay was delivered in an upbeat tone yet she spoke frankly of learning that life can be harsh, unfair, disappointing.

“Life is only simple in a perfect world,�she said, “but there is no such thing as a perfect world.�

But the tone of the evening was, in fact, upbeat and though the youngsters were looking over their shoulders at the past, their feet seemed to be planted firmly in the direction of the future — when they weren’t tapping to one of several musical presentations.

The eighth-grade chorus assembled on risers in front of the stage and sang, “100 Years,�a popular contemporary song by the band Five for Fighting.

The traditional slide show of photos from the past nine years flickered across the screen with live accompaniment on acoustic guitar by Spanish teacher Geoffrey Merrill.

Bailey Brissett belted out a song by American Idol star Kelly Clarkson, called “Break Away.�

And a trio of young ladies (accompanied by Zach Labshere on drums) performed a lively version of the song “Lean on Me� that had everyone in the audience clapping enthusiastically along. The singers were Somer Brown and Laurel Montoya, accompanied (on a pink guitar) by Hannah Arel.

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