May 17, 2025
On Campus

Congrats, Class of 2025!

Wittenberg Celebrates During 175th Commencement Exercises

SPRINGFIELD, OH  - A weeklong celebration of the Class of 2025 culminated with Wittenberg’s 175th Commencement Exercises today, Saturday, May 17, in picturesque Commencement Hollow. On a sunny, yet windy day, speakers shared with the 323 students who crossed the stage that although they have reached the finish line, today is actually the starting point – a new beginning for the next chapter in their lives.

“I didn’t yet understand that I wasn’t actually ‘at a finish line,’” explained keynote speaker, successful business leader, author, and visionary entrepreneur Gina Schaefer, Wittenberg class of 1993 and founder of 13 ACE Hardware stores. “I didn’t understand that it was merely the ‘STARTing point.’ Not the start of a race, but the start of a life that would be well lived and loved – a life perhaps born from the hopes, dreams, and goals I made on this very campus.

“My graduation speaker was Marian Wright Edelman, founder of The Children’s Defense Fund, and a woman who had been a long-time idol of mine,” Schaefer said. “And Marian, this force of change, offered us all a challenge, ‘If you don't like the way the world is, you change it. You have an obligation to change it.’ My starting point, the day where you all are now, was my decision to take that one step and move to Washington, D.C. I’d simply follow in Marian’s footsteps with all the tools Wittenberg gave me the tools to succeed.”

Referencing this new ‘starting point,’ the importance of ‘being you,’ embracing change during uncertain times, and remembering to keep passing the light, served as the main themes during the many celebratory events leading up to today’s ceremony.

“I feel uneasy about what's to come, and I know a lot of you feel that way, too,” said Grace A. Hehman, Class of 2025 co-president and a nursing major from Cincinnati, Ohio, in her remarks to her classmates. “Some of us are moving to exciting new cities, living alone or with friends, and some of us are moving back to our hometowns, living with our parents, in our childhood bedrooms, with three dogs, and our 18-year-old brother. Regardless, this is a time of uncertainty. But, throughout this uncertainty, I want you all to remember how much we got through these past years. If we can pass that critical care final exam, pass intermediate accounting, and certainly if you can pass the ED-TPA, we can CERTAINLY handle anything the real world hands us. I mean it can't POSSIBLY be that bad... right?! Please take care of yourselves because I really don't want the next time I see some of you to be in the hospital.”

Victoria G. Pipinich, senior co-president and chemistry major with a math minor from Fort Worth, Texas, also addressed the class.

“As I gaze out onto this crowd today, I cannot help but think of how proud I am to be a part of this class,” she added “I see future doctors, lawyers, scientists, coaches, teachers, nurses….and then, some of us have also figured out how to avoid the real world altogether: graduate school. But ultimately whatever your next step is in life, and wherever you all go after today, I challenge each of you to become the very best at whatever it is you choose.”

Kicking off the ceremony, David P. and Carol Matevia Endowed University Pastor Tracy Paschke-Johannes offered a special invocation and graduation litany. Wittenberg President Michael L. Frandsen then followed, congratulating the class of 2025 in his opening remarks and thanking them for making him an honorary member of the class.

“To everything, there is a season. Today marks the end of a season for the Class of 2025, and, almost, for Sharon and me,” he said. “Yes, we are ‘graduating’ today, too, and looking forward to stomping the Seal. I hope our graduates share with me the feeling that your time at Wittenberg has been a wonderful season. Sure, there have been bad weather days, but there have been many, many more terrific days.

“As you leave Wittenberg, know that your life will have many more seasons,” he continued. “Throughout those seasons, there will be joys and sorrows, times of moving forward, and of moving backward, and of moving sideways. There will be times when everything clicks, and others where nothing seems to work. Your Wittenberg education has been an important part of your preparation for the changing seasons.  You’ve learned in classrooms, in dorm rooms, on stages, on courts and fields, and, I hope, everywhere, really. You’ve learned from each other, from faculty and staff, from people in the community, and from observing the events in our world. All of that learning was building on the foundation you brought with you from your families.”

Frandsen, who will conclude his service as president on June 30, 2025, also reminded graduates that today is not only an ending, but also a beginning, a commencement.

“We are here today to mark the ending, and the beginning, and to celebrate our graduates and all their accomplishments,” he said. “As you celebrate this life milestone, leave here confident in your abilities, but with the humility to know that there is always more to learn and that the unexpected will happen. Know the importance of passing your light and working to make your communities better. In the face of life’s challenges, remember that you know how to Tiger Up! Remember, too, that you are Wittenberg Tigers for life, and that means you do not have to go it alone. Keep in touch with each other and with this place.  As you leave here to do great things, use your head and listen to your heart. Keep making us proud.”

Chair of the Wittenberg Board of Directors William “Bill” Edwards, class of 1989, also shared remarks with the graduates.

“Wittenberg is an institution rooted in a mission that speaks to helping students discover their respective callings, being responsible global citizens, and leaving this place to lead personal, professional, and civic lives of creativity, service, compassion, and integrity,” he said. “Wittenberg has helped inform the ways you engage the world and challenged you to dig deep and think big. I know Wittenberg helped shape my life, and I hope that it has shaped yours, so today we celebrate with you – the amazing Class of 2025.”

Edwards then introduced the honorary degree presentation.

“Honorary degrees from Wittenberg are bestowed on those who have passed their light on in extraordinary ways,” he said. “Gina Schaefer has empowered communities and used business ownership as a tool to combat inequality. In the process, she has changed lives forever. I wish to thank Gina for being with us today and for showing our soon-to-be alumni the power of a Wittenberg education in the world.”

Schaefer was then presented with an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters following a reading of a citation by Heather Wright, professor of political science and director of women’s studies at Wittenberg.

“Over the course of your 22 years in business, you transformed a single Ace Hardware store in a neglected neighborhood into the thriving enterprise lovingly referred to as A Few Cool Hardware Stores with 13 locations across Washington, D.C., Maryland, and Virginia,” Wright read.

“Your business not only provides essential services, but it daily empowers the community, including the recovery community, all while ensuring supportive and inclusive workplaces. Your passion for business ownership as a tool to combat inequality recently led you to sell your $50-million business to your employees, creating more than 130 co-owners. Your incredible journey is chronicled in your book Recovery Hardware, which highlights the power of second chances and community revitalization.”

Honored by several organizations for her leadership and contributions to business and community development, Schaefer has routinely delivered a message that resonates strongly with those who defy the odds in the pursuit of entrepreneurial endeavors, especially women.

In her address, she also provided graduates with her ‘top five ways to build your life’ – “be curious, do hard things, be the CEO of your life, experience a four to understand a 10, and remember you’re not JUST anything,” she said.

“As you get ready to enjoy your last moments on this beautiful campus, I encourage you to think of my list and each opportunity as a new starting line—with crowds cheering, blue skies above, maybe some butterflies in your stomach. You’ve got this. I encourage you to think of the lives you are about to embark on. The struggles you may have, the days or jobs or experiences that will occasionally fall short of a 10 or a nine or an eight. Nothing’s ever perfect. And as you embark on this journey, I want to remind you that you are a college graduate from an incredible institution that has given you the tools to pass your own light on in whatever way or ways your heart desires. Inhale the future. Exhale the past.”
Gina Schaefer, Class of 1993

 

The conferring of degrees then followed. A total of 125 graduates earned Latin honors in recognition of their exceptional academic pursuits, including 57 graduating summa cum laude, 12 graduating magna cum laude, and 56 cum laude. Ten students were recognized for having a 4.0 grade point average: Erin Baldwin, Mechanicsburg, Ohio; Kendall Black, Defiance, Ohio; Macy DeHart, Springfield, Ohio; Kelsey Ellis, Springfield, Ohio; Mackenzie Hessick, Hilliard, Ohio; Hillary Humbaugh, Haubstadt, Indiana; Alexa Kraska, Franklin, Ohio; Emma Lindsey, Powell, Ohio; Sydney Striker, Toledo, Ohio; and Jessica Young, Springfield, Ohio.

Lastly, the graduates were welcomed into Wittenberg’s vibrant alumni community by Kelly Sumption, class of 2001, and current president of the Wittenberg University Alumni Association.

Sumption encouraged the class to stay connected to Wittenberg by participating in regional alumni chapters and by returning to campus often to remember the past and remain a part of the University’s future.

“Congratulations, class of 2025!  You did it, you Tigered up!  I am so thankful that I had the opportunity to attend Wittenberg and sit where you are today 21 years ago,” she said. “It was one of the best choices I could have ever made.

“You have worked hard, and Wittenberg has prepared you, sparked your imagination, taught you how to think critically while illuminating your understanding, and prepared you for the world,” she added. “Now it’s time to take the light that was sparked on your first day on this campus and use the skills you gained to help light the future for Wittenberg. Today you become part of something bigger than your classmates seated around you. You now join the ranks of more than 26,000 individuals worldwide who are proud Wittenberg alumni.  Our alumni base not only pursues its passion but lives out our motto of ‘Having Light We Pass It On to Others.’ It’s a special club, and not everyone is lucky enough to have a Wittenberg story like us. This club, this bond of the light, the Wittenberg experience, truly transcends class years. You will discover this for years to come as you travel around the world and run into fellow Tigers – it’s family!”

Pipinich and Naevon Boykin, from Bowie, Maryland, Alma Mater and Alma Lux for the class of 2025, respectively, gave a quick congratulatory message to their classmates before leading them in the singing of the University’s Alma Mater.

The class of 2025 included students from Arizona, California, Colorado, Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Michigan, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, and Wisconsin, as well as international students from Japan, Rwanda, and Taiwan.

Degrees awarded included a Bachelor of Arts, Bachelor of Fine Arts, Bachelor of Music Education, Bachelor of Science, Bachelor of Science in Nursing, Master of Arts in Sport Administration, Master of Arts in Education, and Master of Science in Analytics. Twenty-four students earned departmental honors and 20 University honors. Three students earned two degrees, 43 were double majors, and the most popular majors include biology, business management, communication and digital media, education, exercise science, marketing, nursing, and sports management.

Today’s ceremony also included Emma Reeder, from Sunbury, Ohio, who became the first Wittenberg student to earn a minor in health humanities while Chamberlain Browning from Troy, Ohio, and Kahleel Trent from Springboro, Ohio, were the first two Wittenberg students to earn a degree in Public Health.

Each student who crossed the stage was also presented with two marbles, which serve as symbols of the light they leave behind at Wittenberg and the light they will take into the world. In a symbolic gesture, each student was to present one marble to President Frandsen as they received their diploma and keep the other one as they prepare to lead with light as distinguished Wittenberg alumni.

The event was streamed live, a recording of which will be available online at www.wittenberg.edu/live later today. For that link and additional Commencement information, click here. Full Flickr gallery of photos coming soon, as well.

Cindy Holbrook
Cindy Holbrook
Senior Communications Assistant

About Wittenberg

Wittenberg's curriculum has centered on the liberal arts as an education that develops the individual's capacity to think, read, and communicate with precision, understanding, and imagination. We are dedicated to active, engaged learning in the core disciplines of the arts and sciences and in pre-professional education grounded in the liberal arts. Known for the quality of our faculty and their teaching, Wittenberg has more Ohio Professors of the Year than any four-year institution in the state. The university has also been recognized nationally for excellence in community service, sustainability, and intercollegiate athletics. Located among the beautiful rolling hills and hollows of Springfield, Ohio, Wittenberg offers more than 100 majors, minors and special programs, enviable student-faculty research opportunities, a unique student success center, service and study options close to home and abroad, a stellar athletics tradition, and successful career preparation.

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