Fall Commencement Ceremonies Prepare Embry-Riddle Grads for Liftoff

Prescott valedictorian speaks
Chancellor’s Award winner Jaqueline Peterson, who earned her bachelor’s in Aeronautics, served as the Prescott Campus graduating class speaker.
More than 900 Embry-Riddle students from the Fall 2024 class celebrated earning their degrees at commencement ceremonies held across the university’s two residential campuses this past week.

“Commencement is such a meaningful time for our graduates, their families and everyone here at our university,” said Dr. Ken Witcher, chancellor of the Prescott, Arizona, campus. “It’s the moment when all the hard work, determination and personal growth over the years come together.”

At the Prescott Campus ceremony Dec. 14, a total of 192 graduates were awarded their diplomas, including six who received master’s degrees. At undergraduate and graduate ceremonies held Dec. 12 for the Daytona Beach, Florida, campus, 721 students received their degrees, including 122 earning master’s degrees and 16 doctorates.

Eighteen undergraduates and 12 graduate students from the Worldwide Campus participated in the Prescott and Daytona Beach ceremonies.  Since August, the Worldwide Campus has graduated nearly 700 Eagles at ceremonies in San Diego, Seattle, Dallas, Norfolk, Frankfurt, Tokyo and Singapore.

The Fall 2024 class also included 24 ROTC students at Embry-Riddle who were commissioned as officers: 8 Navy midshipmen, 10 Air Force cadets, and 6 Army cadets.

Student veteran Vincent Alexander Becerra, who earned his bachelor’s in Industrial/Organizational Psychology in the Department of Behavioral and Social Sciences at Prescott, said he was feeling mixed emotions.

“After the military, coming here, I felt so uneasy,” he said, “but the school welcomed me and I’m just so excited to be here, finally walking across that stage.”

Prescott commencement speaker
Kathleen Jolivette, vice president and general manager of Boeing Vertical Lift, served as the keynote speaker for the Prescott Campus ceremony. (Photo: Embry-Riddle/Wilson Van Ness)

Prescott Campus Speaker: ‘Your Potential is Limitless’

Kathleen Jolivette — a former Army sergeant who is head of Boeing’s military rotary aircraft division — told Prescott Campus graduates to “embrace the limitless possibilities that lie ahead.”

In her keynote address, she reflected on her life’s journey. It began on the Rosebud Reservation in South Dakota, where 60 percent of the population lives in poverty, she said, “education is not properly funded,” and unemployment is around 80 percent.

“I tell you this because the path was not always clear, and I certainly didn’t envision myself standing here today as the vice president and general manager of Boeing Vertical Lift,” Jolivette said. “I had to take risks, be flexible, be resilient, and follow my passion.”

Jolivette offered lessons from her career path, which included eight years in the Army, followed by a bachelor’s degree in accounting. During her 20-plus years at Boeing, where she began as an intern in 2002, Jolivette has taken on assignments across the company, including all core areas of the company’s financial operations.  Her leadership roles have included director of the United States Army Services for Boeing Global Services, director for V-22 Domestic Programs, chief of staff for the Office of President and CEO, and director of investor relations for Boeing Defense, Space & Security.

In 2019, Jolivette was appointed vice president of Attack Helicopters and the senior site executive in Mesa, Arizona, where she was responsible for the Army’s AH-64 Apache and AH-6 Little Bird helicopters. In 2022, she became vice president and general manager of the Boeing Vertical Lift division, where she oversees the AH-6 Little Bird, AH-64 Apache, H-47 Chinook, MH-139 Grey Wolf and V-22 Osprey aircraft platforms, as well as future vertical lift solutions. In addition to her accounting degree, she holds an MBA from Washington University in St. Louis.

She encouraged Embry-Riddle graduates to “stay curious, be resilient and flexible, just say yes,” and to surround themselves with “people who inspire you, challenge you and support you.”

“Explore new avenues, collaborate with others and allow your dreams to guide you,” she said. “The possibilities are endless, and your potential is limitless.”

The ceremony’s featured student speaker was Chancellor’s Award winner Jaqueline Peterson, who earned her bachelor’s in Aeronautics. Peterson played on the women’s soccer team, served as an academic mentor in the College of Aviation and was a member of several campus organizations, including the Chi Alpha Christian Organization. Vice president of the Airline Pilots Association Aviation Collegiate Education Club (ALPA ACE), Peterson is the first member of her family to become a pilot.

“As you go forward into your careers, further studies, or whatever path you may take, remember the beautiful potential you carry,” she told her fellow graduates. “Remember the beauty in working towards things greater than yourself, living with humility and being a light in every corner of the world you enter.”

Jared Isaacman at ERAU graduation
Astronaut and alumnus Jared Isaacman gave the keynote address at the Fall 2024 undergraduate ceremony for the Daytona Beach Campus.

Alumnus Jared Isaacman Encourages Grads to Pursue ‘Moonshots’

The Ocean Center in Daytona Beach was packed with Eagles, their families and friends for the Fall 2024 undergraduate commencement ceremony, whose featured speaker was alumnus and astronaut Jared Isaacman. Nominated by President-elect Donald Trump to be the next head of NASA, Isaacman told the graduating class that they stand at the precipice of their own “moonshots.”

“We are stepping into a new era, one that demands the best talent, motivation, perseverance in the face of adversity, and vision for a brighter and more interesting future — the qualities you have undoubtedly begun to develop here at Embry-Riddle,” he told graduates.

Isaacman, who graduated from Embry-Riddle in 2011 and has commanded two historic private space missions, was presented with an honorary doctorate at the ceremony.

“You have earned this degree for exceptional contributions in pushing the boundaries of aviation and space exploration that will benefit all humankind,” Embry-Riddle President P. Barry Butler, Ph.D., said upon conferring the Doctorate of Humane Letters.

“What’s more, all of us here at Embry-Riddle thank you for inspiring the next generation of explorers, some of whom are here today, to take their own giant leap into the future.”

Read more about the Daytona Beach Campus ceremonies and see a video of Isaacman’s speech.

Posted In: Aviation | Institutional News | Space