In Memory: Dr. Jane Ballinger
Forever Remembered
For over 25 years, Dr. B shaped, challenged, and inspired students, leaving an enduring legacy on our department and the many who knew her.
Professor · Advisor · Mentor · Friend
The Cal Poly Pomona Communication Department mourns the passing of Dr. Jane Ballinger, who devoted more than 25 years of her career to this university before retiring in 2023. For everyone who had the privilege of knowing her, either as a student, a colleague, or a friend, the loss is profound and deeply personal.
And if you knew her, you know exactly what that means.
You know because she was the reason you changed your major. Or the reason you didn't quit. Or the reason you walked across that stage feeling like you actually knew who you were and where you were going. She called out your best work and called out your excuses (sometimes in the same breath), and you loved and appreciated her for it.
To understand what she meant to so many, it helps to understand what she built.
Her Legacy at CPP
When Dr. Ballinger arrived at CPP in 1997, the early years of a faculty career looked very different than they do today. She finished her dissertation while carrying nine unique course preps in her first year, spent long hours on campus, and did it without the formal onboarding and support structures that exist now. Those were the realities of academic life at the time, and Dr. Ballinger met them the way she met everything else: with cheerfulness and the type of tongue-in-cheek humor that is uniquely Jane. She finished her dissertation that first year, served on the Academic Senate early in her career, and became a central figure who went on to shape the Communication Department. She didn't just find her footing. She helped lay the foundation.
Dr. Ballinger earned her Ph.D. from The University of Texas at Austin and brought that rigor to everything she did at CPP. She taught journalism and public relations, championed The Poly Post and students' First Amendment rights, and was a 2006 recipient of the CLASS Outstanding Advisor Award. She was a stickler for AP Style and a tough grader, but students often said those are two of the best things she ever did for them.
Her contributions and impact went well beyond the classroom. Dr. Ballinger chaired the college curriculum committee, playing a central role during the semester conversion. It was complex, painstaking work that required both deep institutional knowledge and the patience to work with colleagues across the college and the university.
She was the kind of colleague who steadied a room. Candid when you needed honesty. Steady when things felt uncertain. She was always the first to slow you down and the first to correct you when you replied to “How are you?” with “I'm doing good.” No. You are doing well.
Dr. Sara Garver, former Dean and Associate Dean of the College of Letters, Arts, and Social Sciences, who began her own career at CPP alongside Dr. Ballinger in 1997, reflected on what made Dr. Ballinger singular from the very beginning. “Jane and I started at CPP together, and from day one, she created something special. She built a culture of community, belonging, and collegiality that defined the Communication Department for the entirety of her career. Jane didn't just love what she built here. She helped build what she loved."
Dr. B
To many students, she was simply Dr. B. And one class with Dr. B had a way of turning into years. Students who only had her for a single semester found themselves back in her office for career advice, life advice, a reality check, or just to be reminded that they were capable of more than they thought. She had an eye for potential that people didn’t yet see in themselves, and she always refused to let them settle.
Her influence didn’t end at graduation. She continued her mentorship to alumni who were in newsrooms, classrooms, and across various organizations and industries. She shaped careers and often stayed in touch long after their degree was completed. She showed up to the moments that mattered. She was proud of her students, and she made sure they knew it.
Before There Was a Student Success Center, There Was Dr. B
Long before there were dedicated advisors or formal student success programs, there was Dr. Ballinger, and a line of students stretching down the third floor hallway of Building 1.
Students would sit on the floor, catch up on homework, or chat with each other while they waited. Nobody minded. Because everyone knew that when it was your turn, she would give you everything. She would sit with you, look you in the eye, and make sure you left with more than an answer to a scheduling question. She guided students not just through their academics, but through uncertainty, through setbacks, through the moments that had nothing to do with course requirements and everything to do with who you were becoming.
She listened just as hard and spoke just as intentionally to every single person who walked through her door regardless of their GPA, their background, or where they were starting from. She had no patience for excuses, but infinite patience for people. She knew exactly how to be hard on you, but in a way that never felt anything less than endearing. That was her gift, her superpower. Tough love, delivered with such genuine care that you couldn't be anything but grateful for it.
Always an Angel
Dr. Ballinger carried that same fierce, unwavering loyalty into everything she loved, and she loved women’s sports, especially soccer. She followed the U.S. Women’s National Team across the world, traveling to Canda in 2015 and France in 2019 to watch them support the team in the World Cup. Although she could not make it to the 2023 World Cup in Australia and New Zealand (she really wanted to), she followed every game and was there in spirit.
Angel City FC gave her a team to love close to home, and she was there from the very start. She became season pass holder who rarely missed a game. The club knew it too. The tribute displayed at Angel City Stadium read: “In Memory of Jane Ballinger — ACFC fan from the start. Always an Angel w/ a hint of Devil.” That was Dr. B. Fully committed and impossible to forget.
What She Leaves Behind
So much of what the Communication Department has built, including the standards, the culture, the expectation that students will be both challenged and championed, carries her fingerprints. She changed lives. As she did for so many others. We are better teachers, better advisors, better colleagues, and better people because of her.
The Cal Poly Pomona Communication Department will honor Dr. Ballinger’s legacy at Alumni Night on Saturday, May 2. We hope you'll join us.
The Lives She Shaped
Dr. Ballinger impacted so many lives across many years as a professor, an advisor, a mentor, or a friend. Whether it is a memory, a lesson she taught you, or simply what she meant to you—we would love to hear it. We will be sharing the tributes with her family and friends.
Memory Wall
Dr. B was one of those rare people who left a lasting impression not just because of what she taught, but because of who she was.
She had a remarkable way of blending intelligence, creativity, and wit in everything she did. And the way she shared her knowledge was a way that made you curious, engaged, and inspired.
What stood out most to me was how much she believed in her students. She saw possibility in everyone, and because of that, many of us became more than we thought we could.
Whether it was encouragement in class, thoughtful feedback, or simply taking an interest in where life took you after graduation, she genuinely cared about the journeys of the students she taught.
The impact she had on so many of us extends far beyond the classroom, and I know I’m not alone in feeling grateful to have had her influence.
She will be deeply missed, but the belief she instilled in me and the kindness she showed will continue to live on.
For Dr. B.
- Shane Philipps, 2012
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I’m so sad to hear about the passing of Dr. Ballinger. My memories of attending CPP are surrounded by memories of attending her classes, laughing with her, and bringing her chocolates before class to keep Elyse McKinstry, Diana Garcia and I out of trouble for talking during class. Any day I had class with Dr B was always going to be a good day.
- Britney Hernandez, 2012
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It saddens me to hear the news of the passing of Dr. Ballinger. I had her for ONE class but turned to her for much more after and the remainder of my duration at Cal Poly. I think that speaks volumes and a testament to who she was. I still speak of her, as well as others, to this day as she was so much more than a professor to me. I hope you find your peace because you provided so much peace to me. You will be truly missed 🕊️
- Melinda Gonzalez, 2019
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To those who didn’t know her, she was a brilliant scholar with a Ph.D. from the University of Texas who dedicated her career to deconstructing mass media and the political economy. She was a pillar of the university who didn't just teach journalism; she taught us how to scrutinize the power structures behind the news. To me, and to so many of her students, she was the backbone of our education and the fiercest advocate we ever had.
From 2012 to 2016, Dr. Ballinger was my advisor, my mentor, and my toughest critic — in the best way possible. I went from an uncertain reporter to "Most Improved" at our campus newspaper, “The Poly Post,” because she refused to let me settle for anything less than excellence. She gave her students the gift of media literacy, teaching us to think critically about power and the language we use.
The most beautiful gift she gave me was in the weeks leading to graduation. Dr. Ballinger secretly arranged for my family to attend our department’s award ceremony where she presented me with the "Outstanding Graduating Senior" award. Dr. Ballinger knew my work and growth best, so to have her speak about me was the ultimate validation.
On graduation day, I was given the honor of carrying the department flag surrounded by many mentors, including Dr. B. To this day, I am filled with immense gratitude. I didn’t just leave CPP with a degree; I left with a community that has never let me go.
Long after I left the classroom, Dr. Ballinger and I stayed in touch. As my career took me across the country — when I landed a fellowship at The Intercept and later joined CBS News in New York City — she was there with her trademark blend of encouragement and realism. She told me she was proud of me, and said the East Coast would give me the "tough skin" I’d need for this industry. From those early days to the present, any courage I have found in a newsroom started in her office. She didn't just teach us how to report; she taught us how to be human in a complicated world. I am so lucky to have been shaped by her brilliance and her heart.
Rest in peace, Dr. Ballinger. Thank you for the foundation, the honesty, and for believing in me when it mattered most.
- Malak Habbak, 2016
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Dr. B had such an impact on her students. Almost 20 years post-graduation, and my CPP '07 crew still talks about Ballinger. So many of our college memories came from her classes. Her loss is immeasurable. We will miss you, Dr. Ballinger.
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Jane was an incredible, passionate, deeply engaged educator. My early days at CPP were marked by my interactions with her in faculty meetings and jovial hallway hellos. She was often described to me by her students as a source of great inspiration.
- Lorena Turner