Janaesa Macasaet || ARTS EDITOR
While many seniors plan to attend college immediately after high school, others choose a different route: taking a gap year. For seniors Sophia Call and Joe Desmarais, this opportunity provides growth and experience.
Desmarais decided to take a gap year to further pursue performance arts. A longtime member of the Theater Guild, he will attend a postgraduate program at Idyllwild Arts Academy next year.
“It was mostly the prospect of an additional year of intensive training and experience,” Desmarais said. “I’m going into performance, so I feel like I’m going to need as much additional training and experience as I can get.”
Desmarais acknowledged the challenges of taking a nontraditional path.
“It’ll be by far the longest living away from home I have ever done,” he said. “I don’t know if I’ll be able to handle it.”
Call’s gap year will look vastly different, extending beyond a calendar year. She plans to spend 18 months in the Dominican Republic on a mission for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
“I knew it was perfect for me because I really wasn’t sure what I wanted to do in college and what to study,” Call said. “It gives me time to figure that out and set goals for my college career.”
During her mission, Sophia will complete service projects, while speaking primarily Spanish. Though nervous about living alone in a foreign country, she is excited to help others and gain new opportunities.
“I hope that with this gap year I can learn more about what I want to do in college, learn more about myself by helping others, and most of all grow closer to my Savior, Jesus Christ,” she said.
Both students highlighted the stigma surrounding gap years. Call noted that students are led to think “there is one path after high school.” Desmarais encouraged students to not feel ashamed for taking time before college.
“Don’t let society fool you: there is no shame in a gap year,” Desmarais said.
Likewise, Call encouraged students to “consider what is really best for you, not just what others are influencing you to do.”
Guidance counselor Mary Testa even concluded that while not typical for Andover High School seniors, gap years can be “restorative and helpful” for students.
As graduation approaches, students like Desmarais and Call demonstrate the numerous ways students may achieve success.



