By: Cassidy Delamarter, University Communications and Marketing
After a journey marked by pandemic disruptions and challenges, many students in the class of 2024 finally had their moment. Friends and families filled USF’s Yuengling Center to proudly watch as graduates shook hands with ƵPresident Rhea Law and turn their tassels – fulfilling a long-awaited dream for many after the pandemic canceled their high school graduation ceremonies.
“My family and friends flew in from all over the country to help me celebrate,” said Audrey Filling, a ƵGreen & Gold Scholar who majored in environmental science and policy. Like many of her peers, Filling missed traditional high school experiences, including prom, and never had the chance to walk across the stage to graduate high school and celebrate her successes. So this ceremony, as she said, was extra special.
Antonio Molina was the first in his family to graduate from college. The finance major said he waited eight years to celebrate his education. “My high school sent us home for spring break, and then two weeks at home, turned into the rest of the year. So, how I got my diploma, was I drove through the student drop-off area of the school, and then they just handed me my diploma. That was my final goodbye from high school.”
The Hausman family said they were incredibly thankful for the opportunity to finally see their daughter and granddaughter, Grace Hausman, cross the stage and receive her bachelor’s degree in.
“As her father, it was difficult to watch as she lost so many special events at the end of her senior year of high school, including her graduation, in 2020,” Blake Hausman said. “She began college at Ƶunder unusual conditions, but Grace always made the best of it with a smile of her face. She deserves this day and so much more, and we are so happy to share it with her.”
Among the 7,063 degrees conferred, 168 were awarded to veterans, such as Kendrick Williams Jr., who served in the U.S. Army before enrolling at USF.
“I’ve faced many challenges, along with a very tough transition from the military and throughout life being raised by a single mother,” he said. “My family has played an instrumental role in assisting my mother and helping to raise and support me. For them, it was a blessing to see me graduate.”
That’s why 32 of his relatives flew in from the Bahamas, Turks & Caicos and Canada to see him graduate – the first in his family to do so – including his grandma who recently suffered a stroke.
Looking ahead, Williams and the graduates are excited for what the future holds.
“I am forever grateful for my Ƶfamily, go Bulls,” Filling said.
Learn more about some of our other recent graduates here.