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Photo by Dan Addison |
| Bobbi VanHuss |
May
19, 2005
By
Jane Meade-Dean
Bobbi VanHuss was never expected to graduate from college.
In fact, the young woman who was born with spina bifida
was never expected to live beyond childhood.
But when VanHuss crosses the stage on May 21 to receive
a bachelor’s degree in business administration from the
University
of Virginia’s College at Wise, she’ll
be doing what she does best — overcoming obstacles.
“I
know I’m going to be setting the stage for others
to come after me,” VanHuss said. “If I can do
it, then other disabled students can do it, too. That was
very important to me, to show people it can be done.”
When VanHuss arrived at U.Va.-Wise in 2001, she was
the only student in a wheelchair. The hilly campus
presented
daily
challenges, as did a few of the older classroom buildings,
which lacked full handicap accessibility.
VanHuss never let difficulties navigating the campus
deter her. In fact, she used her experiences to
help administrators
find solutions to accessibility problems. She also
worked as an advocate for disabled students in
her job as a
mentor and tutor in U.Va.-Wise’s Office of Student Support
Services.
Narda Porter, a counselor in Student Support Services,
describes VanHuss as “a rolling miracle.”
“She’s positive, dependable, joyful, efficient, dedicated — I
can go on and on.”
“It will be incredibly difficult to find someone to replace
Bobbi,” Porter said.
“Within
disability support, sometimes you have to be very discreet,
and you have to learn to work with students who
learn in very different ways. Bobbi has helped
coordinate testing and notetaking for students with physical
and learning
disabilities. She’s a wonderful advocate for students.”
VanHuss also has excelled in her studies
at U.Va.-Wise. During convocation on May
20, she
will receive
the first David W.
Roane Award in Business Ethics, which recognizes
a graduating senior who has exhibited the
highest level
of integrity
and honesty in interactions with the business
faculty, staff
and students, and who displays a deep understanding
of what it means to be ethical. A music
minor, VanHuss has
been a
member of the college’s concert choir for two years.
Her mezzo soprano will be part of the commencement choir
performance during the graduation ceremony.
Graduation day will be bittersweet for
VanHuss, who lives with her parents in
the nearby
town of Pound.
After she
works through the summer in Student Support
Services, VanHuss will
leave her surrogate family of faculty,
staff and students. “It’s
going to be hard to leave the people at the college,” said
VanHuss, who plans to remain in Southwest Virginia and perhaps
work as a paralegal.
She says her family, her friends and
her Christian faith give her strength
to keep
going, to keep
conquering new
obstacles. “My
parents always reassured me that God made me this way for
a purpose, and that I just had to find what that purpose
is,” VanHuss said.
Many would contend that is a purpose
VanHuss is already fulfilling.
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