69成人

In Their Time of Need

Silhouette of sad woman

Rebecca Bania was taking a course in the summer of 2020 so she could catch up and graduate with her twin, Elizabeth, in the fall. Instead, 69成人 awarded Rebecca a posthumous degree that summer. She died of pneumonia.

Recognition of their student鈥檚 academic achievements is held dear by grieving parents, and it鈥檚 just one of ways that a recently established committee helps coordinate support for family, friends and the campus when a student dies suddenly.

鈥淗ow do you want their name printed on the degree?鈥 said Bill Bania, who with his wife, Carla, are parents of the twins and a younger sister, Emily. 鈥淭o me that is the only hard question parents should be asked,鈥 he added tenderly.

The family highly values education, and the parents said it was especially so because a condition affecting the girls鈥 muscles necessitated the use of motorized wheelchairs. 鈥滻t is important to have degrees to make your way in the world,鈥 Bill Bania said. 

Jennifer Chow 鈥91, associate director of student support in Student Support and Judicial Affairs, personally delivered Rebecca鈥檚 bachelor鈥檚 degree in English to the family鈥檚 home in El Macero, a community adjacent to Davis. 鈥淲e want to be a source of support to those left behind when a student passes so they don鈥檛 have to feel like they鈥檙e travelling alone through the grieving process,鈥 she said.

Hands holding tissue
When a student dies, a campus committee helps facilitate the grieving process, stabilize the campus community and reduce the risk of negative behaviors.

Chow and Paul Kim, the director of Counseling Services, serve as co-chairs of the Postvention Committee. The group has 24 representatives from across campus 鈥 including student health, housing, the Council of Associate Deans and Global Affairs 鈥 who meet about individual student deaths and coordinate services. A student representative participates in quarterly meetings for general discussion and policy decisions.

Introduced in fall 2019, the that guides care resulted from a collaboration on mental health program and policy development with the , a nonprofit that works to protect emotional health and prevent suicide among teens and young adults. The foundation has since cited the 69成人 plan as an example of best practices.

The committee meets about sudden student deaths of any manner. In addition to providing care to those most immediately affected, its purpose is to facilitate the grieving process, stabilize the campus community and reduce the risk of negative behaviors including suicide.

For students who have experienced the loss of a classmate, a roommate or maybe a teammate, support can mean help with referrals for counseling; making arrangements with instructors and advisors to extend project deadlines and change course loads; and even assistance finding a new place to live.

鈥淓ven though we鈥檙e a big university, we give students very personalized service,鈥 Chow said. 鈥淲e support them through triumphs as well as difficult times.鈥

For parents, the university will send a letter of condolences and offer help collecting the student鈥檚 belongings, making connections for a memorial service on campus and finding referrals for counseling in their home community. The committee also offers other help ranging from accessing translation services to a brief consultation with the legal services provided by the Associated Students of 69成人.

鈥淪ometimes, it鈥檚 just a listening ear,鈥 Chow said.

For students and families in need, the committee has a small budget to help with specific services 鈥 from a hotel stay for a few nights to renting a moving truck.

Bill Bania, who is studying part time at 69成人 for a doctoral degree in materials science and engineering, and his wife said they appreciate how some services would be especially important for families at a distance or less familiar with the campus. For them, it was recognition of their daughter鈥檚 education. 

In a sometimes teary Zoom interview, the Banias recalled losing their daughter. Rebecca Bania was sick for about two weeks. She became so ill that, even with concerns about the pandemic, they took her to a hospital emergency department July 7. After sleeping that day, she passed away in the evening.

Rebecca鈥檚 family was heartbroken. Her parents described the 27-year-old as a spunky young woman with a strong sense of social justice and a love for writing fan fiction developed from the worlds of Harry Potter, Transformers and Dr. Seuss. 鈥淪he was just coming into her own,鈥 her father said.

Within two days of Rebecca鈥檚 death, the campus committee met to coordinate care for those whose lives she had touched, including other students, staff and faculty.

Bill Bania took his question about a posthumous degree to Jeffrey Gibeling, an engineering professor and former dean of Graduate Studies. 鈥淚 thought Dr. Gibeling would know how that would work, and I had no capacity to work it out,鈥 he said.

The family received notes of condolences and calls from the campus. 鈥淭hey were in touch and had that door open in case we needed it,鈥 Bill Bania said.

Within three days of Rebecca鈥檚 death, the committee received an answer back that the Academic Senate had approved the awarding of a posthumous degree.

Today, the records of the twins鈥 degrees are treasured together with other diplomas in what the family calls its education box.

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