By Linda Dahlstrom / Starbucks Newsroom

TEMPE, ARIZ. - Ten-year-old Aeris Baggett focused on each letter as she carefully placed it on the sign she was making. Slowly, the message unfolded: 'Mommy Congradulations!'

Sitting beside her was her mom, Brandy McIntosh, one of the more than 260 people graduating today from Arizona State University through the Starbucks College Achievement Plan. Also with her were her 4-year-old sister and her grandmother.

Getting her psychology degree 'means the world to me,' said McInstosh, 31. 'It's a destiny moment. I can show my kids that no matter what obstacles are put up, you can still succeed.'

For McIntosh, it's the completion of a degree she began when she was 18. She was attending the University of Arizona on a scholarship when she ran into challenges at home and quit school to work. Then after Aeris was born she didn't have time to go to back to college and also worried about accumulating debt to pay for college. When McIntosh, a Starbucks barista, heard about the College Achievement Plan she applied immediately. She is completing her degree with a 4.0.

'It was a long time coming, but it will make such a difference,' she told Aeris, who had moved on to adding butterflies and tiny pom poms to her sign.

Tonight, McIntosh will sit with other Starbucks graduates in a section of ASU's Sun Devils Stadium and hear Starbucks executive chairman Howard Schultz give his first commencement address before more than 30,000 people. Before then, graduates and their families will have a chance to tour the campus, attend a partner and family forum to ask Schultz questions, and more.

'I'm so proud of her'

A few tables away from McIntosh at the cap decorating event sat Rebecca England, a barista from Richmond, Va. She gets emotional as she tries to explain what the day means to her. Not too many years ago, she didn't think it'd be possible for her to get a bachelor's degree. She had earned a two-year degree, but then couldn't afford to keep going to school.

When she got her associate's degree, she told her mom she didn't want to walk in graduation until she was able to finish her bachelor's. Years later, that day has arrived.

As she decorated the Starbucks logo that she'll apply to her cap, she recalled the phone call in which she learned she'd been accepted into the college program. 'I was at church and I got the call and I just started crying,' she said. 'People were asking if I was OK.'

Her mom, Shearin England, saved up money so the two could fly to Tempe and attend commencement. 'She's worked so hard and she deserves all good things,' she said. 'She's struggled to get to this place.'

Rebecca England, who describes herself, as 'a huge book nerd' is getting a degree in library sciences. There were days along the way that she was exhausted from working full time and going to school, but quitting was never an option.

That kind of opportunity is exactly what drives the Starbucks College Achievement Plan, said Schultz.

'Most of the partners I've met either didn't go to college because they couldn't afford it or had to leave school because of indebtedness that did not allow them to move forward. The question was: How do we solve it?'

'There is no quit'

Bailey Ingegniero, a store manager in River Ridge, La., said she felt the same way. During her last semester while she was earning her sociology degree, she and her partner, Mandela Redmond, bought their first home, she was working full time, going to school and getting their 4-year-old son, Makeen, settled in a new school.

'One of my goals was to help her complete her school career,' Redmond says. 'There is no quit. We're so proud of her.'

At Arizona State University's spring graduation exercises May 8 in Tempe, Arizona, Starbucks executive chairman Howard Schultz will give his first-ever commencement address. More than 260 partners are graduating from ASU, the biggest-yet partner graduating class. Starbucks College Achievement Plan graduates will be in the audience. Commencement will be streamed live at 7:30 p.m. Mountain Standard Time (7:30 p.m. Pacific Time) at http://www.ustream.tv/asutv.

More on graduation:

Finding Home: Childhood Hardships Strengthen Starbucks ASU Graduate, Sirikwan O'Gorman.

Alexander Nunes, an immigrant from Jamaica, is the first in his family to graduate from college - and he's ready to change the world.

Tragedy derailed Laura Fobes' first shot at a college degree; now the 42-year-old mother of three will walk across the stage in Tempe.

For more information on this news release, contact the Starbucks Newsroom

Starbucks Corporation published this content on 08 May 2017 and is solely responsible for the information contained herein.
Distributed by Public, unedited and unaltered, on 08 May 2017 21:47:01 UTC.

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