Jinette Galarza of Lawrence is a full-time Northern Essex Community College student who works 40-hours a week as a sterile processing technician at Holy Family Hospital and is a campus and community leader. On Friday, May 4, Governor Charlie Baker recognized her for her extraordinary accomplishments at a ceremony at the State House.
Galarza has been selected as one of the “29 Who Shine”, an honor which is given to a top graduate from each of the state’s community colleges and public colleges and universities. Also recognized at the ceremony was Galarza’s mentor, Sarah Courchesne, chemistry professor.
A liberal arts major, Galarza graduated with high honors and plans to enroll in the Commonwealth Honors College at UMass Lowell in the fall, majoring in history with a minor in Arabic studies, and then earn her master’s. Her goal is to be a high school history teacher and teach in her city. “The necessity is great and there is great potential in our Lawrence youth,” she says.
Originally from Puerto Rico, Galarza, now 32, moved to Lawrence when she was 10 years old. She attended middle school in the city and went on to graduate from Essex Agricultural School in Danvers.
After high school, she joined the workforce to help support her family which included her mother and her stepfather, who recently passed away.
Galarza is active in her church serving as a youth leader for the past 10 years and participating in seven missionary trips to poverty-stricken areas in Panama, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, China, and Western Sahara. It was through her work as a youth leader that Galarza discovered she had a talent and passion for teaching, and through her missionary trips that she found she loved learning about other cultures. “Community service led me to my calling,” she says.
Most people would find juggling full-time college and full-time work enough of a challenge but not Galarza. She has served on the Student Senate, as a presidential ambassador, and as a student orientation leader; is campus life editor for the “Observer”, the college’s student newspaper; and recently organized Northern Essex’s first Renaissance Fair, which brought hundreds of people to campus.
In May 2011, the Massachusetts Department of Higher Education launched “29 Who Shine,” a program to recognize outstanding students representing each of the 29 public campuses. The honorees, chosen because of their academic achievements and record of student leadership and community service, stand poised to contribute greatly to the civic life and economic well-being of the state.
Northern Essex faculty and staff nominate students for this honor and President Lane Glenn chooses a candidate. Galarza was nominated by Sarah Courchesne, chemistry professor; Kristen Arnold, director of the NECC PACE Program; and Ariel Chicklis, NECC coordinator of orientation and student involvement.
`Galarza selected Courchesne as her mentor and she was also honored at the “29 Who Shine” event.