Commencement
- Commencement
- Graduation Ceremonies
- College of Health and Human Services
College of Health and Human Services Commencement Ceremony
Saturday, May 18, 2024 • 10:30 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. • Save Mart Center
Recorded Ceremony
College of Health and Human Services Commencement PDF
Dear Graduates,
Commencement represents the culmination of hard work and years of endless dedication and sacrifice. You each accomplished something so incredible and now you’re sitting here as members of Fresno State’s 113th graduating class. Congratulations!
Today, we have the honor and privilege of recognizing over 1,000 graduates from each of our seven extraordinary departments and the Air Force and Army ROTC programs. These graduates are proudly earning their well-earned bachelor’s, master’s or doctoral degrees. As alumni, you represent the next generation of health and human service leaders, practitioners, educators, researchers and advocates - and I have no doubt you will make a difference in our world in ways that are both inspiring and empowering.
As you pursue your well-earned careers or further your academic pursuits, I encourage you to serve with humility and act with kindness along the way. Your patients, clients, students and community are counting on you.
On behalf of the faculty and staff in the College of Health and Human Services, we wish you continued success in your professional endeavors and thank you for the contributions you will make in our greater community.
Sincerely,
Kara Zografos
Interim Dean, College of Health and Human Services
Ceremony
National Anthem and Alma Matter Vocalist
Alexandra Cota
Mace Bearer
Dr. Frances Pomaville, Professor, Department of Communicative Sciences and Deaf Studies
Dean’s Comments
Dr. Kara Zografos, Interim Dean
ASI President’s Address
Karen Carrillo, ASI President
President’s Address
Dr. Saúl Jiménez-Sandoval, President, California State University, Fresno
Recognition of Honorary Doctorate Recipients
Dr. Robert Davila and Nancy Hinds
Students of Distinction Recognition
Dean's Medalists, Outstanding Project and Thesis Recipients, Honors Program
Hooding Ceremony and Presentation of Graduating Class
Conferral of Degrees
President Saúl Jiménez-Sandoval and Interim Dean Kara Zografos
Presentation of Graduating Class
School of Nursing
Doctoral Hooding
Department of Physical Therapy
Doctoral Hooding
Department of Communicative Sciences and Deaf Studies
Master’s Hooding and Bachelor’s Degrees
Department of Kinesiology
Master’s Hooding and Bachelor’s Degrees
School of Nursing
Master’s Hooding and Bachelor’s Degrees
Department of Public Health
Master’s Hooding and Bachelor’s Degrees
Department of Recreation Administration
Bachelor’s Degrees
Department of Social Work Education
Master’s Hooding and Bachelor’s Degrees
College of Health and Human Services Outstanding Graduates
Dean's Medalists:
Graduate Dean’s Medalist
Jennifer Duran
Department of Communicative Sciences and Deaf Studies
M.A., Speech-Language Pathology
Undergraduate Dean’s Medalist
Logan Mouawangyee
Department of Kinesiology
B.S., Physical Education
Dean’s Medalist Nominees
Graduate:
Richard Garcia
Department of Social Work Education
M.S.W., Master of Social Work
Chloe Sharp
Department of Kinesiology
M.A., Exercise Science
Dean’s Medalist Nominees
Undergraduate:
Deanne Angeles
Department of Communicative Sciences and Deaf Studies
B.A., Speech-Language Pathology
Melanie Gage
Department of Kinesiology
B.S., Community Recreation, Youth Development, and Senior Services
Outstanding Master’s Degree Project and Thesis
Outstanding Master’s Degree Project
Monica Solis
Department Social Work Education
M.S.W., Master of Social Work
“Exploring the Integration of Gut-Brain Axis Insights Within Clinical Social Work
Practice”.
Outstanding Master’s Degree Thesis
Richard Garcia
Department of Social Work Education
M.S.W., Master of Social Work
“Cultural Impacts on Traumatic Grief: An Exploratory Study on Machismo, Marianismo
and
Suicide Bereaved Latinx”
College of Health and Human Services Honors Program in Collaborative Leadership
- Esmeralda Xitlali Alanis
- Abraham Barrera-Varela
- Aubrey Charis Beck
- Charles Bittle
- Jakob Henry Brueggemann
- Riley Isabel Christen
- Amber Hailey Dancil
- Taylor DaSilva
- Christa Eritzian
- Melanie Joy Gage
- Lane Haile
- Leilani Jurena
- Noeleen Zoe Perez
- Kitongan
- Valerie Kurylo
- Ashley Chantal Lopez-Guerrero
- Morgan Musser
- Jasmine Christine Navarrete
- Caitlin O'Neill
- Smriti Poudyal
- Ruben Ramirez
- Christian Alexis Ramirez-Maldonado
- Iqbal Singh Sidhu
- Alyssa D. Stevens
- Daisy Yulia Thao
- Deanna Trieu
- Sofia Zubacz
- Diana Zuniga
Honors
***Summa Cum Laude:
With highest praise (3.90 - 4.00 GPA)
**Magna Cum Laude:
With great praise (3.70 - 3.89 GPA)
*Cum Laude:
With praise (3.50 - 3.69 GPA)
Honorary Doctorates
Honorary doctorates are awarded on behalf of the California State University system and Fresno State in recognition of excellence and extraordinary achievement in significant areas of human endeavor that embody the CSU system’s objectives and ideals.
Robert R. Davila, Ph.D.
Honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters
Robert R. Davila was born in Southern California to Mexican parents who worked in the fields and orchards. At age 8, he contracted spinal meningitis and became deaf. His mother sent him to the California School for the Deaf, initially located in Berkeley, where he excelled.
Davila learned American Sign Language and English. After graduating with honors from the California School for the Deaf, he became the first Latino student to enroll at Gallaudet University in Washington, D.C., where he earned a bachelor’s degree in education in 1953. He later earned a master’s degree in special education at Hunter College and a doctoral degree in educational technology from Syracuse University.
Davila started as a high school teacher and moved into leadership positions in the K-12 educational system. Starting in 1972, he served for 38 years in a variety of positions from professor to college administrator and vice president of Gallaudet University. He was later named the ninth president of Gallaudet University on Jan. 1, 2007.
From 1989-93, Davila served as assistant secretary for the Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services for the U.S. Department of Education under President George H.W. Bush. He was the first Deaf person appointed by a president to a policy position where he managed a nearly $6 billion budget. He was also the first Deaf person to address an official session of the United Nations General Assembly in 1992.
In 2022, Davila established the Robert R. and Donna E. Davila Endowment in the Silent Garden at Fresno State. The $250,000 endowment will support Spanish-language programming for Deaf and Hard of Hearing families in California.
Nancy Hinds
Honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters
Nancy Hinds is nationally and internationally recognized for her work with the terminally ill and as the founder of Hinds Hospice, a non-profit hospice and grief organization serving Fresno, Madera and Merced Counties. A 2021 Business Journal article said Hinds’ “name is synonymous with compassion and quality care.”
Born in Akron, Ohio, Hinds trained at Cleveland Clinic and began her nursing career at age 23 as a missionary nurse in the West Indies. She later met her Irish husband, Dr. Godfrey Hinds, while working in Nigeria during the Biafra War. They also served in Uganda. Godfrey died of cancer in Ireland in 1977, leaving Nancy a widow with three preschool-aged sons. In 1980, she moved to Fresno to be near family, and, in 1981, she began caring for the terminally ill in her own home. This was the beginning of Hinds Hospice.
Today, Hinds Hospice includes a pediatric hospice program to support children and families with terminally ill children, a prison program and global outreach. The Angel Babies Program provides grief support to families who have a pregnancy loss or an infant diagnosed with a life-limiting condition. It is provided through the Center for Grief and Healing.
Fresno State departments and programs — including the Jan and Bud Richter Center for Community Engagement and Service Learning, Social Work Education and others — have placed volunteer, service-learning and internship students in various capacities with Hinds Hospice since 1995.