Book Reviews
Issue 28(2)
Assisting
Bereaved College Students.
(2008). Heather L. Servaty-Seib
and Deborah J. Taub, Eds . San Francisco: Jossey-Bass,
95 pp. $29.00. ISBN 978-0-470-29539-7
Review
by: Betty J. Sanford
Office
of Supportive Services
Michigan
State
University
Experiences
garnered from my advising caseload at a Big Ten University led
me to believe that only 10% of the student body has bereavement
needs. Thus, assertion that 30% of college students are in their
first year of bereavement was counterintuitive to my experiences.
Service providers with limited bereavement knowledge who seek
a holistic approach to address student needs will value the authors’
comprehensive coverage that ranges from discussing students’ developmental
responses to bereavement to calling for colleges to establish
a Death Response Team.
The
editors frame bereavement within psychosocial and cognitive development
theory. Psychosocial theory highlights students’ responses within
the context of their intellectual and interpersonal competence
and their emotional independence. Cognitive theory ties students’
responses to their thinking. Students are more adaptable who have
progressed from dualistic thinking in which they believe there
is only one correct way to grieve, to relativism where they validate
multiple responses.
We
also gain a contextual perspective of bereavement through various
examples of how campus ecology and student characteristics influence
bereavement adjustment. Students’ development and the campus environment
will determine how well they handle prolonged grief, and how they
feel about institutional and peer support.
Peer
support can play a crucial role in helping students brace themselves
against a loss. I advise a diverse group of students who are largely
African American and who report that they rely heavily on their
peers for bereavement support. Thus, research findings that bereaved
students do not find their peers supportive was incongruent with
my experience. Later authors inform readers that 90% of the research
respondents were Caucasian students and African American students
reported experiencing peer support (p. 35). When reporting varying
statistics, it would be less jolting if readers were alerted to
any additional data that would qualify or expand on what was reported
earlier. Some reference was made to ethnic groups, but an in-depth
discussion on gender differences in bereavement was noticeably
absent.
Readers
will gain some insight into bereavement with regards to students’
developmental and ecological circumstances. Roth reveals the flood
of emotions from the natural anesthetic affect and fluctuation
of feelings between guilt and anger to physical responses including
the loss of appetite and restlessness (p. 17). Convincingly, contributing
authors and Roth agree that working through death requires establishing
a new state of normalcy.
Information
for training faculty and other service providers is useful as
is knowing that FERPA (Federal Educational Rights Privacy Act)
does not apply to the deceased. Readers learn the importance of
steering students away from romanticizing and glamorizing suicidal
death, and that it is important to help students through disenfranchised,
undisclosed, grief.
Lastly,
the authors assert that each campus needs a Death Response Team
and they leave readers with a Death Response Team Check List which
dictates how to handle a myriad of sensitive details. Readers
will find the outline of protocol useful regardless of whether
we are responding to a student’s death or that of a student’s
loved one, and whether a death occurred on or off campus. This
resourceful guide arms providers with information necessary to
support students or the institution under delicate circumstances.
Reference
Roth,
D. (1988). Stepping Stones to Grief Recovery. ISB Press,
Santa Monica.