Home

#StudentFirst: Jordan Juceam '21 Inspires in Honor of his Family

VXIIIMMVI.

These Roman numerals are tattooed across the chest of Sierra Canyon senior Jordan Juceam, marking the date his younger sister Hannah was taken from this world.
 
“I got that tattoo, so I always have her on my heart,” Juceam said. The Juceam family’s world changed forever on May 13, 2006, when the family nanny was accused of shaking 17-month-old Hannah to death. It was an incident that garnered international news coverage. Yet after two mistrials, the nanny’s deportation to Mexico was the only true consequence. “I feel that the justice system really let my family down,” Juceam said.
 
Yet, Juceam channels this ever-present grief into a positivity that shines on a daily basis.
He is an outspoken and engaged student, someone willing to help his classmates and who draws their respect.
 
Juceam is a model athlete who elevates his Sierra Canyon soccer and cross country teammates. Ultimately, he is an exemplary choice for Sierra Canyon’s #StudentFirst award that honors excellence in academics and athletics.
 
“Jordan has a heart of gold,” says Sergio Ribiero, a long-time family friend who served as Juceam’s Spanish teacher for three years and also his academic advisor. “He is so compassionate toward others. He’s a loving son, a loving brother, an amazing kid, and his parents are wonderful people. The kids love him. I love him. He’s unique, special, incredibly smart, and I love the fact that he’s got an active voice and is willing to speak his mind.”
 
Juceam credits his father Scott and his mother Lorena with building a strong foundation for himself and his twin nine-year-old siblings, Emma and Ben. Scott has given hundreds of speeches to police chaplains, military academies, and police academies advocating for victims’ rights.
 
Even with Hannah’s death and Ben being diagnosed with Down Syndrome, Juceam said he and his family have aspired to be an inspiration for others. He ultimately wants to become a lawyer.
“I never want anyone to experience what my family went through. “I want to honor my sister and brother. I carry this on my shoulders. I want to continue to fight and be able to persevere. I want to defend someone with the highest honor, because I feel people deserve it. I want to take care of people who can’t take care of themselves.”
 
Juceam’s academic credentials sparkle. He maintains a 4.39 grade-point average amid a schedule loaded with advanced-placement and honors courses. His dream school is the University of Pennsylvania, and he also has applied to other Ivy League and UC schools.
He hopes to major in sociology. “I’m a nerd for people,” Juceam says. “Human interaction is very interesting to me, and sociology seems like an apt pre-major for going into law.”
 
Juceam made the Head of School list as a first-year student and the Dean’s List the past three years. His advanced-placement classes have included AP World History, AP Language and Culture, AP U.S. History, AP Government and Politics, AP Spanish 5, and AP Literature. His honors classes have included geometry, Spanish 2, 3, and 4, biology, English, chemistry, colloquium, and physics.
 
“I had him in Spanish three years in a row, and from day one to the last day, he never changed. He was always focused,” Ribiero says. “He never missed a homework assignment despite his sports schedule, and he never asked for an extension or favors, even though I had been a family friend for a long time.”
 
Ribiero recalls that Juceam would animatedly call him “Señor” and that he had a Pied Piper quality with his classmates due to his contagious energy. “During our Week of Giving in November, Jordan was one of the first ones to bring in canned goods, and he was the voice that encouraged others to bring in canned goods. He wanted to give something bigger than himself and help others in need. I was honored to be his educator. I know he is going to do good things for those around him and for himself.” 
 
This mentality carries into athletics for Juceam, a two-sport standout at Sierra Canyon in soccer and cross country, and Sierra Canyon’s Co-Athlete of the Year in eighth grade. Participating in cross country was a way for Juceam and his teammates to condition for soccer season. Yet Juceam helped Sierra Canyon earn its first trip to the CIF Southern Section finals.
 
“Jordan was, without a doubt, the ringleader,” Sierra Canyon cross country coach Troy Samuels said. “His soccer teammates were there because he was there. They showed up to 6:00 a.m. workouts because he did. And there was never any quit in Jordan. Almost every meet, you could see the anguish in his eyes around the two-mile mark, but he kept going.”
 
Juceam has earned an even more-heralded soccer career, helping Sierra Canyon’s soccer team make the CIF Southern Section playoffs as a freshman and becoming the team’s Offensive Player of the Year as a sophomore.“My confidence comes from the fact that I might not be the best player on the field, but I am going to outwork everyone out there,” says Juceam “I had a club coach tell me one time that I was not going to be good enough to start on his team. It was painful. I never wanted to hear that from a coach again. So I worked my [butt] off at the start of high school. I got a netted cage, goals, and cones. I was training eight days a week.”
 
Juceam had two defining goals in his high school career. Trailing Campbell Hall 1-0 late in the match, Juceam drew a foul in the penalty box. “None of the seniors wanted to take the shot, so I stepped up to take it,” Juceam said. “I put the ball down, did my signature run-up, the keeper went one way, and I went the other. Usually, you don’t get super excited about a tie, but we had never beaten Campbell Hall, so it was a historical moment.”
 
Juceam also scored a decisive goal against Viewpoint, seconds before the final whistle blew.
“That was crazy,” Juceam said. “When you do something like that for your school and the colors on your back, there is no other feeling.”
 
Juceam says everything he does is with his sister and brother in mind. Therefore, he does not take anything for granted.
 
“If I sit back and complain, I am not honoring the people that mean the most to me.”

Click here to view Jordan's #StudentFirst video.
Lower School: 11052 Independence Avenue
Middle and Upper School: 20801 Rinaldi Street
Chatsworth, CA 91311  | 818.882.8121
Sierra Canyon School is a private, independent, non-sectarian, co-educational, college preparatory school for students in grades Pre-Kindergarten through 12 located in Chatsworth, California. The highly cosmopolitan campus community is reflective of the Greater Los Angeles area and the world at large. Students are empowered to realize their greatest creative, ethical, intellectual and physical promise through small class sizes, a diverse student-teacher culture and a family-like environment.