Schafer wins alumni award, shifts to full-time community work

A boy shows Zach Schafer (right) his favorite photos at a Grief through the Lens event at the Kiewit Luminarium in Omaha in August 2018.
A boy shows Zach Schafer (right) his favorite photos at a Grief through the Lens event at the Kiewit Luminarium in Omaha in August 2018.

By Ronica Stromberg

Zach Schafer, winner of the 2026 Early Career Excellence Alumni Award in the School of Natural Resources, completed his one-year contract as a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln at the end of May. He is now applying research skills gained at the university to aid the wider community with grief.

The co-founder of the Band of the Strong organization in Lincoln and Omaha, Schafer began working full-time with it July 1.

"The nonprofit that I created is a grief-related program, but it was inspired by and founded on my experiences in the School of Natural Resources, which seemed like two completely different worlds," he said. "In some ways, they are, but these experiences in the School of Natural Resources gave me this foundation to help a community that was close to my heart."

Schafer lost his father at 8 years old in a shooting. He did not come across resources to help him deal with grief as a child and became angry in high school, turning to sports as an outlet and supportive friends.

At the University of Nebraska–Lincoln as a major in wildlife ecology and management, he began to see how time outdoors with nature could help in dealing with grief.

"Because of the major that I was in, I truly believe that looking at the world from an ecological perspective freed me up from looking at the world in a black-and-white perspective and gave me what I needed to see an interesting way through healing," Schafer said.

He also began playing guitar and writing music, which helped him make sense of his grief. He learned his father had played guitar, too, giving him a further connection to him.

He and a friend, Zak Courtney, founded Band of the Strong in 2016 while still in college and have run it the past 10 years while carrying out other careers. During that decade, Schafer also lost a brother to brain cancer and a grandmother to ovarian cancer, which affected his career choices and work with Band of the Strong.

Since graduating with his bachelor's degree, Schafer returned to Nebraska to earn his master's in education, taught high school biology in Kearney, worked with suspended students at the Lighthouse nonprofit in Lincoln, returned to Nebraska for his doctoral degree in education and took postdoctoral work with Jenny Dauer, a School of Natural Resources professor. He and others helped Dauer design and teach SCIL 101: Science and Decision-Making for a Complex World.

The class strives to help students develop the ability to engage diverse perspectives, solve problems and impact communities and the world. To do this, students work with community members on a project of personal interest, conduct research on how to gain more impact with the project and present findings in a showcase.

"In the spring semester, I started to infuse my own experiences to show students that science is much more than being in a lab coat and taking samples and processing things," Schafer said.

He had long been frustrated with the common lag between conducting research and having findings get out to where they could help people but said Band of the Strong allowed him to use current research to help the grieving.

Follow the rest of Zach's story and see more photos at https://snr.unl.edu/aboutus/what/newstory.aspx?fid=1349