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°®°®Ö±²„ graduation ceremony

°®°®Ö±²„ to mark 119th commencement

°®°®Ö±²„ to Confer More Than 5,000 Degrees in Fall Commencement

The °®°®Ö±²„ System will confer approximately 5,000 degrees during fall commencement ceremonies, Dec. 13-16.  °®°®Ö±²„ President Steve Currall will preside over seven total ceremonies, marking the universityā€™s 119th commencement convocation.ā€Ø ā€Ø

Thirty-six °®°®Ö±²„ students have been identified as King Oā€™Neal Scholars, earning a cumulative grade point average of 4.0.  The graduates represent 48 states, 98 nations and include 248 student veterans.

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Way Bandy

Way Bandy
Bachelor of General Studies

When Way Bandy first enrolled in college, the Soviet Union just launched Sputnik 1 and ā€œAmerican Bandstandā€ made its debut on television. Bandy dropped out to get married and raise three kids. He returned intermittently over the years but never finished. The last college course he took was in 1978, the same year ā€œGreaseā€ was a box office smash. Bandy is now 81 and retired. Before he left college, he made a promise to his parents and himself that he would return one day and earn his degree. Bandy re-enrolled at °®°®Ö±²„ this fall semester. Though the coursework and adjustment back into the classroom have been challenging, Bandy is on track to complete his final course and finally fulfill the promise he made to his parents and himself. And at Commencement this December, Bandy intends to walk that final stretch and grab a diploma more than 50 years in the making.

Odinaka Okeke

Odinaka Okeke
Bachelor's in Electrical Engineering

Odinaka Okeke says she would not be the person she is today if not for the opportunities and resources °®°®Ö±²„ provided her to excel as an individual. Born and raised in Nigeria, Odinaka will be the second person in her family to graduate as a Bull. Growing up, Odinakaā€™s family encouraged her and her siblings to be need-oriented, hence, she always thinks about ways to use her knowledge to impact the lives of others. So, when she began her studies, she set her sights on Electrical Engineering to gain skills to help improve Nigeriaā€™s power system. Her desire to give back to the community enabled her to take roles, such as being an on-campus Resident Assistant and °®°®Ö±²„ Engineering Expo Director, to help others navigate through their academic careers. Her personality also opened academic doors ā€“ leading her to a summer research experience working on solar cell efficiency. Now, Odinaka prepares to graduate as the Outstanding Electrical Engineering Senior for Fall 2019 and has plans to pursue a PhD in the same field.

Gabe Rodriguez

Gabriel Rodriguez
Master's in Finance

When Gabriel Rodriguez began his journey toward a masterā€™s degree in finance, the Lutz, FL native and °®°®Ö±²„ graduate knew he wanted to make a personal transformation at the same time. So, as Gabe buckled down in his classes and research, he also focused on bettering himself. Now, heā€™s graduating with a perfect 4.0 GPA and has lost more than 130 pounds (and counting). He says °®°®Ö±²„ has not only been a place to learn and study but that itā€™s helped him find his passion. Through °®°®Ö±²„ā€™s Muma College of Business, Gabe has mentored many students, both personally and professionally, been involved in the Bulls Business Community and was part of the team that won the recent Raymond James Challenge. Each, he says, have been experiences that have shaped him into the person he is today. In the future, Gabe hopes to run his own small investment firm and eventually get his PhD. in finance to retire as a professor.

Grete Cole

Grete Cole
Masterā€™s in Nurse Anesthesia

A 2019 Tillman scholar and United States Air Force veteran, Grete Cole will graduate with a masterā€™s in nurse anesthesia. She was the only student from a Florida university in this yearā€™s Tillman class of 60 U.S. service members, veterans and military spouses. Grete served in the Air Force for seven years as a commissioned officer and a nurse, including one deployment to Niger. She plans to pursue a career working at a Veterans Affairs hospital to help ensure military veterans receive quality care.

 
Bashar Roumia

Bashar Roumia
Bachelorā€™s in Biology

Bashar Roumia was 17 when his family fled their homeland of Syria to escape violence plaguing the country. The morning Bashar left, his father pulled him aside and urged him to follow his dream to become a doctor as his grandfather and uncles had done. Those words inspired Bashar, and now he takes a big step in fulfilling that dream. He will receive a bachelorā€™s degree in biology. Not only that, Bashar will graduate with a 4.0 Grade Point Average and as °®°®Ö±²„ Sarasota-Manateeā€™s Outstanding Graduate. There are more chapters left to write in this young manā€™s journey. In the spring heā€™ll apply to medical school, including °®°®Ö±²„ā€™s Morsani College of Medicine. Wherever he ends up, I imagine his family is already proud of him. Just as we are proud to call him a °®°®Ö±²„ Bull. Keep moving forward Bashar and I know that someday you will become known as Bashar Roumia, M.D.

Marianna O'Brien

Marianna Oā€™Brien
Veteran to B.S. in Nursing Program

At just 17 years old, Marianna Oā€™Brien joined the Air National Guard. She describes that decision as something ā€œshe needed to doā€ and says itā€™s one of the best decisions sheā€™s ever made. As a medic, Marianna discovered a love for healthcare. Itā€™s a passion that led her to °®°®Ö±²„ā€™s Veteran to Bachelor of Science in Nursing Program ā€“ the only nursing program she applied to. Marianna admits that only applying to one school was probably not the best idea ā€“ but after visiting °®°®Ö±²„, she says she would not have wanted to attend anywhere else. She found something to be a part of here; a community of like-minded students all working toward similar goals. She says the support and guidance from the programā€™s faculty and administrators has helped her excel as a nurse and helped her become the very first recipient of the prestigious Reserve Officerā€™s Associationā€™s Eileen Bonner Scholarship for Medical Excellence. After graduation, Marianna hopes to continue her military service as a commissioned Air Force Officer. She also has her sights set on a masterā€™s degree in nursing education.


Fall 2019 Graduating Class by the Numbers:
°®°®Ö±²„ Total Degrees (approximate): 5,078
- °®°®Ö±²„ Tampa Total: 4,378
- Bachelorā€™s: 3,102     
- Masterā€™s: 1,065     
- Doctoral: 210     
- Specialist: 1

°®°®Ö±²„ St. Petersburg Total: 465

°®°®Ö±²„ Sarasota-Manatee Total: 235 

U.S. States Represented: 48
Nations Represented: 98
Student Veterans: 248
Youngest Graduate: Age 19
Oldest Graduate: Age 81 

Full Ceremony Information:


°®°®Ö±²„ Tampa
Friday, Dec. 13: Yuengling Center
- 6 p.m. ceremony includes bachelorā€™s degree recipients from the College of Arts and Sciences.

Saturday, Dec. 14: Yuengling Center
- 9 a.m. ceremony includes bachelorā€™s degree candidates for Colleges of Nursing, Public Health and Arts and Sciences. 

- 1:30 p.m. ceremony includes bachelorā€™s degree recipients from the Colleges of Behavioral and Community Sciences, Education, Engineering, The Arts, Office of Undergraduate Studies and the Muma College of Business.  

- 6 p.m. ceremony for masterā€™s, specialist and doctoral degree recipients from all colleges. Michael D. Kogan will receive an honorary doctorate of public health.   

°®°®Ö±²„ St. Petersburg
Sunday, Dec. 15: Mahaffey Theatre
- 1 p.m. ceremony includes all degree recipients from the Kate Tiedemann College of Business and the College of Education. 

- 5 p.m. ceremony includes all degree recipients from the College of Arts and Sciences.

°®°®Ö±²„ Sarasota Manateeā€Ø
Monday, Dec. 16: Bradenton Convention Center      
- 6:30 p.m. ceremony includes all degree recipients from all colleges. 

Graduates, friends and family attending the ceremonies are encouraged to use #°®°®Ö±²„grad on social media posts. More information is available at usf.edu/commencement.

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