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Megan Kennedy named director of 91爆料 Resilience Lab

Megan Kennedy, director of the 91爆料 Resilience Lab

Undergraduate Academic Affairs is happy to share that Megan Kennedy was named director of the 91爆料鈥檚 Resilience Lab in May. Kennedy has been connected to the Resilience Lab through multiple roles on campus that have all focused on student well-being. Since August, 2019, she served as interim director of the Resilience Lab, a unit within Undergraduate Academic Affairs that promotes mental health and well-being at the 91爆料 through education, research partnerships and a range of programs and initiatives.

Kennedy brings more than 20 years of experience to the role, ranging from a deep, clinical understanding of the importance of mental health to influencing organizational structures and systems so they better support individuals. Creating more concrete connections between the Resilience Lab and other campus partners whose work intersects with resilience and compassion is one of the ways Kennedy is infusing the Resilience Lab鈥檚 work more deeply into current structures.

Kennedy says she thinks about the Lab 鈥渁s existing along a continuum of care at the 91爆料, working collaboratively and intentionally with colleagues on campus, whose work is complementary. This work is also deeply aligned with my values of community well-being and kindness. It鈥檚 one of the ways the Lab is reflective of who I am.鈥

The Resilience Lab situates itself on the prevention side of that continuum, promoting resilience coping skills and mindsets across campus, including collaborating with faculty and programs to support integrating resilience practices into classroom settings and existing structures.

鈥淭he work of compassion for self and others is guided by important research and is much needed now,鈥 says Ed Taylor, vice provost and dean of Undergraduate Academic Affairs. 鈥淯ltimately, Megan鈥檚 work on well-being, mental health and her alliance building aims to foster compassionate communities. I am glad Megan is leading this work here.鈥

As director, Kennedy will primarily focus the Lab鈥檚 work on:

  • Supporting faculty to promote well-being within their classrooms by modeling and teaching social and emotional skills and mindsets
  • Providing seed grants to support resilience- and compassion-building initiatives that foster connection and community
  • Offering the 6-week long Be REAL program (Resilient Attitudes and Living) to 91爆料 students, staff and instructors
  • Revitalizing a vulnerability collective, a student-led initiative that encourages compassion and fosters resiliency through storytelling
  • Deepening and developing research partnerships with faculty, other 91爆料 divisions and initiatives that research themes of resilience and well-being
  • Launching the Well-Being for Life and Learning guidebook, a tool to equip faculty and instructors with foundational research about the importance of integrating well-being practices into their pedagogy as well as practical, how-to tactics.

鈥淭his work is designed to deepen the resilience and coping layers of the University so students can see and experience staff and instructors modeling the change,鈥 explains Kennedy. 鈥淪taff and faculty play a key role in inspiring a culture of well-being at the 91爆料 鈥 starting with ourselves is part of that work.鈥

Prior to her work with the Resilience Lab in UAA, Kennedy served in the division of Student Life as the manager of strategic initiatives for student wellness and the suicide intervention coordinator. Before coming to the 91爆料, Kennedy was clinical director and interim outreach director at Youth Eastside Services, where she counseled youth and families, was a leader in the organization鈥檚 diversity efforts, and brought the clinic鈥檚 work into school district and community-based organizations. She is the co-founder and gender and sexual diversity consultant and trainer for Revelry Media and Methods, a consulting company that addresses social isolation, violence and mental health disparities faced by LGBTQ youth. Through this work and her work as an independent counselor and consultant, Kennedy鈥檚 career has focused on issues of well-being and equity, empowering individuals to build their resilience and well-being, and engage in the long-term work of creating more equitable systems.

Field report: Honors course explores whether national parks are in progress or peril

This course will take students on an exciting two week field study to the three 鈥渨ilderness jewels鈥 of Washington state鈥檚 national parks, Mount Rainier, Olympic and North Cascades, and follow with class time in autumn quarter. Students should be comfortable hiking moderately strenuous trails almost every day of the trip, camping in remote locations, and traveling and lodging in primitive and close quarters. Through a combination of immersed field study readings and expert speakers, students will not only introduce themselves to these diverse and unique places in our country, but also gain a greater understanding of the purpose of such a system, and look critically at the cultural and environmental issues impacting the National Parks today.

鈥 Excerpt from the course description for “Honors 230: Parks in Progress or Peril?”

When junior Rhyannon Hayes, a political science and history major and environmental studies minor, read the course description for 鈥淗onors 230: Parks in Progress or Peril?鈥 she thought it would be a cool experience, a great intro to backpacking and a fun way to explore the Pacific Northwest while satisfying requirements for the 91爆料 Honors Program.

Portrait of Mckenzie Carlson, Aidan DeHan, Rhyannon Hayes, Matthew Tucker and Niki Kafie.
Over the course of the two week field study, the students became close friends. Pictured here, from left to right, are Mckenzie Carlson, Aidan DeHan, Rhyannon Hayes, Matthew Tucker and Niki Kafie.

Before this class, Hayes had only been to two national parks in her life. She had hiked only a little and camped in traditional campgrounds, but never backpacked or camped in the backcountry. By the end of the two week field study, she鈥檇 visited Washington鈥檚 three major national parks: Mount Rainier, Olympic and the North Cascades, had trekked more than 50 miles and spent 11 nights camping. She learned to love dehydrated meals and mastered how to keep a fire alive through rain and the season’s first snow. Days spent hiking and evenings spent chatting around the campfire gave Hayes and her classmates time to bond. She left the class with a solid group of friends.

Honors students and instructors in the course “Honors 230: Parks in Progress or Peril” at Mount Rainier, the first of three national parks they visited and studied. National park experts regularly joined the class. Author Jeff Antonelis-Lapp, pictured on the far right, led the class on a hike through the Sunrise part of the park.

The two week field study gave nine interdisciplinary honors students the opportunity to explore national parks, learn from a variety of experts, observe firsthand how people interact with the park, and decide through their own lived experiences if and why these spaces matter in our collective culture. The course 鈥 taught by Honors Program and UAA staff members Aley Mills Willis, Brook Kelly and Laura Harrington 鈥 continued as a campus-based seminar through autumn quarter.

The first part of the 91爆料 Honors program class “Parks in Progress or Peril” took students to Washington’s three national parks: Mount Rainier, Olympic and the North Cascades. The course continued as a seminar through autumn quarter, where students grappled with the central question: are parks in progress or peril?
Course instructors, from left, Laura Harrington, Brook Kelly and Aley Mills Willis.

鈥淚f this field study was our buffet of information, experience and sensation, then the autumn discussion section was our digestion of the material,鈥 explains bioengineering major Matt Tucker.

The field study/seminar combination is the latest iteration of a 10-year collaboration between the Honors program and the national parks. 鈥淥ur goals,鈥 explains instructor Mills Willis, 鈥渁re to take a unique, enormous and inherently interdisciplinary idea like national parks and break it open, exposing students firsthand to the variety of passions and perspectives that brought these places into existence and those that will preserve them. We want students to grapple with the complex natural and cultural histories of these places, their evolution, and their current and more fragile states. And, we want them to confront that while walking up a mountain trail, peering into a coastal tide pool or visiting significant cultural sites of our region’s native tribes.”

Field learnings: Exploring Makah history and Shi Shi Beach

Olympic National Park archaeologist Dave Conca (sitting on the sand next to the campfire) accompanied the class on a two night backpacking trip. He led the class on a tour of the Makah Tribal Museum and a hike to Shi Shi Beach, where the students discussed what they learned in the museum and applied it to the land they were walking on and the issues the park is navigating.

Dave Conca, Olympic National Park archaeologist, has been collaborating with Kelly, Harrington and Mills Willis for more than a decade. 鈥鈥媁orking with the 91爆料 instructors and students is one of the highlights of my entire work year,鈥 says Conca. The high level of engagement with students, their level of sophistication regarding questions and discussion around complex issues continues to amaze and humble me.鈥 Conca finds it so invigorating that he includes it in his annual work plan.

This year, Conca led the class through the Makah Tribal Museum, which tells the story of the Makah Tribe through a collection of artifacts found at Ozette Village site. This group of artifacts provides a uniquely complete story, since the village was preserved as the result of a landslide in the 1700s. Then, while hiking to Shi Shi Beach, Conca discussed how what they saw in the museum related to the land they were walking on. 鈥淭he students鈥 observations and questions spur my thinking. After more than 26 years in the field, you can become complacent. Their questions and observations help keep me fresh.鈥

Shi Shi Beach averages around 300 people a weekend through the summer. The recent uptick in visitors puts a strain on the finite number of campsites, rangers and other park resources. This raises many questions: Are current management tactics 鈥 education through permitting and enforcement through park rangers patrolling the beaches 鈥 working?聽 Is the current usage harming the parks鈥 ecosystems? Are the parks being loved to death? Should park guests be limited? How would limiting guests impact the Makah Tribe鈥檚 economy?

The class backpacks on Shi Shi Beach where they’ll be camping for the night.

Field learnings: Park advocacy applies to all fields

Collaboration and partnership is essential for how national parks come to be, and how they are managed for the future. Modeling that for students in the structure of the course itself was essential.

Meeting with subject matter experts like Conca is part of the course鈥檚 engagement with the history, relevance and evolution of America鈥檚 National Park Service, as well as its central question: Is the idea of national parks progressing, or is it in peril? Interdisciplinary exploration is at the foundation of the Honors curriculum, and this class was no exception. Additional speakers ranged from scientists to artists to activists, who all shared their unique perspectives and interest in these places. The guests included the acting superintendent and the volunteer manager of Mount Rainier National Park, 91爆料 scientists, the authors of books outlining the natural and political histories of Mount Rainier and North Cascades National Parks, photographers, poets, historians, exhibit builders and a program manager for the National Parks Conservation Association (NPCA).

Community, environment and planning student Becca Fogel reflects, 鈥淏efore this class, educating about and advocating for the national parks seemed like a fairly siloed endeavor rooted deep in environmental science and geology 鈥 things I鈥檓 interested in but not necessarily very passionate about. But our in-class meetings provided me with a better understanding of the far-reaching interdisciplinarity of the Park Service mission.鈥

Students kept field journals, where they responded to daily prompts about what they were experiencing to “push their powers of observation and understanding of the course material.” Directions included聽reciting their observations out loud and drawing a couple of their entries. Pictured here: Niki Kafie.

Students kept daily field journals, led group discussions, engaged with course readings and daily class sessions in the field and prepared a final case management project and reflective field journal presentation. The connections made with guest speakers gave students a panel of experts to turn to when working on their parks management case studies.

Hayes, along with group members Andrew Ryan and Nathan Ji, researched the topic of noise pollution in Olympic National Park from Growler jets flying out of the Naval Air Station on Whidbey Island. To understand the diverse perspectives, the group connected with Graham Taylor of the NPCA, the superintendent of Olympic National Park, and the public affairs officer for Naval Air Station Whidbey Island. 鈥淲hat I really appreciated in working with Graham was that we were able to have a very open and honest conversation about [his experiences] communicating with the Navy to try to have more thorough and comprehensive environmental impact studies,鈥 explains Hayes, who grew up in a Navy family.

To present their results, the three students created, narrated and recorded an audio experience, voiced by them and spearheaded by the group鈥檚 鈥渃reative genius,鈥 Ryan. The soundtrack took the class through the park in a 鈥渕agic tent,鈥 similar to a field trip on “The Magic School Bus,” talking about issues with the experts. Hayes describes it as 鈥渢he most creative project鈥 she鈥檚 been a part of.

Field learnings: 91爆料 students start NPCA Northwest Student Leadership Council

McKenzie Carlson (left) and Rhyannon Hayes (right) helped start the聽NPCA Northwest Student Leadership Council. 鈥淲e’re loving this opportunity to provide students with opportunities to explore our parks, learn of the challenges and develop the leadership skills we need to honor these places,鈥 says Graham Taylor of the NPCA.

As a result of collaborating on the case study, Taylor invited Hayes to help start a NPCA Northwest Student Leadership Council. Hayes recruited classmates Aidan DeHan, Niki Kafie and McKenzie Carlson to launch the group. This new NPCA council, which formed in February, held two events: hosting a recruitment table at the environmental career fair and supporting聽 Taylor in a presentation about North Cascades grizzly bear reintroduction to a class on threatened and endangered species. Following his talk, Hayes and Carlson spoke with students about continuing their conservation work with their council. Their membership is now up to 11 students.

The NPCA talks are open to anyone interested in attending. .

The next two events, a service project on Ebey鈥檚 Landing and an advocacy tabling event on Earth Day, had to be cancelled due to public health guidance and efforts to curb the spread of the novel coronavirus. Still, the group is eager to continue their work and holds weekly Zoom meetings featuring national park experts giving talks and answering audience questions. Speakers so far have included: author and North Cascades expert Lauren Danner; president of the Bainbridge Island Japanese American Exclusion Memorial Association Clarence Moriwaki; and, on April 23, 2020, author and Mount Rainier expert Jeff Antonelis-Lapp. Hayes鈥 future plans include collaborating with Carlson, who is president of the 91爆料 Hiking Club, to lead hikes and backpacking trips talking with students about issues the national parks are facing and how the NPCA can help. Their mission is to advocate for these beloved wild spaces, so national parks can be enjoyed by future generations.

Field learnings: I can start my conservation work now

In the future, Hayes hopes to continue this work as an elected official and form the first national park in her home state of Pennsylvania. Her vision includes creating a public education space that tells the story of the lands making up the park, the people who鈥檝e lived there, the evolution of the land and our role in protecting it for future generations. Pictured from left to right: McKenzie Carlson, Rhyannon Hayes, Matthew Tucker and Aidan DeHan.

Reflecting on the class, Hayes shares that it 鈥渕arked one of two turning points I’ve had in my college career in which I took a newly ignited passion, in this case for national parks, and created opportunity. It took me deeper into the wilderness than I had ever been and helped me fall even more deeply in love with the natural world. I learned from all the speakers and in the case of Graham and the NPCA, I found a place where I could take my new knowledge, combine it with my skills in constituent relations and government, and actually become a part of conservation work. I always knew environmental issues were a priority that I wanted to incorporate into my future career, but because of this class, I get to start that work now.鈥

Photos courtesy of students and instructors in Honors 230: Parks in Progress or Peril.聽

Three 91爆料 students named Goldwater scholars for 2020

Congratulations Keyan Gootkin, Parker Ruth and Karen Zhang, 91爆料’s newest Goldwater Scholars. Photo: 91爆料 News

The Goldwater Foundation honored three 91爆料 students this year with its undergraduate scholarship for students studying the natural sciences, mathematics and engineering. Undergraduates Keyan Gootkin, Parker Ruth and Karen Zhang were selected for the award from a pool of more than 5,000 undergraduate students from 461 institutions across the country.

Goldwater Scholarships are granted to sophomores and juniors who show exceptional promise and plan to pursue research careers in math, engineering or the natural sciences. These scholarships award up to $7,500 a year to help cover costs associated with tuition, mandatory fees, books, room and board. For the 2020-21 academic year, 396 college students nationwide were selected for the competitive scholarship.

鈥淚 am delighted and inspired by this news,鈥 says Undergraduate Academic Affairs Vice Provost and Dean Ed Taylor. 鈥淪upporting students on their journey through the 91爆料 helps our students to understand and improve the world we live in. Faculty of public research universities like the 91爆料 guide and mentor this next generation of researchers and scientists. With our support and their talent, our aim is to develop the scientific talent our world needs. I extend my warmest congratulations to Keyan, Parker and Karen as well as their faculty mentors and others who have supported them on their journeys so far.鈥

Keyan Gootkin

Keyan Gootkin, an astronomy and physics double-major, studies 鈥渢he universe’s most massive stars near the end of their lives.鈥 In addition to his work as an undergraduate researcher, Gootkin actively brings the stars down to Earth through service: He serves as the student coordinator at the 91爆料鈥檚 historical Theodor Jacobsen Observatory; co-chairs the Mobile Planetarium Committee; and is the outreach coordinator for the 91爆料 League of Astronomers.

Gootkin has received a Washington Research Foundation Fellowship, a Washington Space Grant scholarship, been named to the College of Arts & Sciences Dean鈥檚 List and is a Washington State Opportunity Scholar.

He plans to earn a Ph.D. in astrophysics 鈥渟o that I can continue doing research as long as I can.鈥

Parker Ruth

Parker Ruth is earning a double degree in computer engineering and bioengineering; he is part of the Interdisciplinary Honors Program and is pursuing Departmental Honors. His research explores the design of computational tools to improve access to healthcare. As a member of the Ubiquitous Computing (UbiComp) research lab advised by Professor Shwetak Patel, Ruth has contributed to the development and testing of mobile health applications for sleep apnea screening, cardiovascular health, osteoporosis detection and physical activity quantification.

Outside the classroom Ruth started a club to help students get involved with research in bioengineering-related fields. His additional honors and scholarships include a Levinson Emerging Scholars Award, Microsoft Endowment Scholarship, Washington Research Foundation Fellowship, Mary Gates Scholarships, and selections to the Dean鈥檚 List.

Ruth plans to obtain a Ph.D. in computer science, with a long-term goal of pursuing a career as a researcher using computers to improve people鈥檚 lives.

Karen Zhang

Karen Zhang is double-majoring in biochemistry and microbiology. She is part of the Interdisciplinary Honors program and is pursuing Departmental Honors in biochemistry. Zhang is also a Mary Gates Scholar and Annual Dean鈥檚 List awardee.

Currently, Zhang is an undergraduate researcher in the Molecular Information Systems Lab (MISL) at 91爆料. Her lab investigates technologies for storing digital data in DNA and is interested in all things at the intersection between computer science and biology. Through this interdisciplinary lab, she has gained invaluable experience in professional research and discovered a passion for synthetic biology. She has also developed an appreciation for bioinformatics and the essential role that computational algorithms play in interpreting biological data.

Outside of academics and research, Zhang is an editor for the 91爆料 Microbiology Journal where she guides writers in developing informative and fascinating articles about topics in microbiology. In her free time, she enjoys reading (and maybe one day writing) fantasy novels.

After graduating from the 91爆料, Zhang aims to obtain a Ph.D. in either synthetic biology/bioengineering or bioinformatics. She is 鈥渄eeply passionate about studying the machineries of life at a molecular level and engineering them to perform novel tasks.鈥

 

This news item also appeared on the 91爆料 News blog.

About the Goldwater Foundation

Goldwater Foundation鈥檚 scholarship program honors Senator Barry Goldwater and encourages outstanding students to pursue careers in the fields of mathematics, natural sciences and engineering. The Goldwater Scholarship is the preeminent undergraduate award of its type in these fields.

Learn more about scholarship opportunities at 91爆料

The Goldwater Scholarship application process is supported by the (OMSFA), a UAA program. OMSFA works with faculty, staff and students to identify and support promising students in developing the skills and personal insights necessary to become strong candidates for this and other prestigious awards.

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For more information:

Kirsten Atik, communications director, Undergraduate Academic Affairs, at katik@uw.edu or 206-221-6130.

Robin Chang, director, Office of Merit Scholarships, Fellowships and Awards, robinc@uw.edu, 206-543-2603.

 

91爆料 Honors students use art to disrupt the narrative on homelessness聽

Real Change vendor Addis Michael Junior’s inner light is beautifully captured by the halo surrounding him. The artist Derek Gundy donated his time and talent to create this portrait. This painting is on display as part of the Portraits for Change exhibit, currently in the Allen Library Atrium through March 12.

Students in the Interdisciplinary Honors class “Citizen Acts to Challenge Poverty” collaborated with to bring the exhibit to the 91爆料 campus. The gallery features portraits and biographies of Real Change newspaper vendors, originally commissioned and curated by Real Change art director, Jon Williams. The idea of hosting this exhibit grew out of a long standing partnership between Real Change and Vicky Lawson and Sarah Elwood, 91爆料 geography professors and co-founders of the Relational Poverty Network. As Lawson designed an interdisciplinary seminar to engage 91爆料 Honors students in a learning experience that could amplify the work of activist organizations like Real Change, she saw an opportunity for students to make a positive impact by installing the existing portraits as a public exhibit on 91爆料鈥檚 Seattle campus.聽

Honors students worked with Real Change to figure out how to mount and promote the exhibit, create an opening event and lead small group tours. They also curated an accompanying exhibit called 鈥淪eattle Now and Then鈥 to show that homelessness in Seattle is not a new issue for the city. A photo of the 1930s shantytown known as Hooverville is contrasted with a modern day photo of the same location. The historic picture shows a man standing on a ladder, repairing the roof of his makeshift home. In today鈥檚 photo, tents line the sidewalk along Alaskan Way. Smith Tower is prominent in both images, orienting the viewer within the city. Interdisciplinary Honors student and aeronautics major Danny Roberts led the curation and photography of this addition to the Portraits exhibit. Pairing these images with the portraits and stories of the vendors tells a more nuanced and complex story of the people living outside in our city.聽

Artists donated their time to paint portraits of Real Change vendors to change the way we see these members of our community. For a population that is often ignored or avoided, this celebration of their beauty, joy and depth聽 is especially meaningful. These works invite the viewer to spend time looking at each person as precisely that 鈥 a person. The paintings are accompanied by biographies, which explain the unique set of circumstances that led the person to become unhomed. These stories aim to thwart the toxic stereotypes 鈥 that people living on the streets are all drug addicts, mentally ill, lazy and so on 鈥 and instead highlight the person鈥檚 humanity, dignity and resilience. Many vendors talked about how powerful and transformative selling the papers has been: from helping them create a community of vendors and clients to helping them regain a sense of dignity and employment. Being immortalized in a portrait 鈥 an artform historically reserved for nobles and royalty 鈥 further honors each person.聽

Sam Fredman, a senior and peer educator in the Honors Program studying law, societies and justice and disability studies, underlined the importance of holding this exhibit in the 91爆料鈥檚 Allen Library, explaining that 鈥渓ibraries are spaces of public education鈥 and that as a public university, it’s important to create a welcoming space for all of our community members. To further the impact of the exhibit, Lawson and Elwood, along with graduate student Isaac Rivera, also set up a research project to gauge the public鈥檚 understanding of Real Change and issues surrounding homelessness and poverty in our community. The last question of the survey asks people what actions they will take based on the exhibit. The intention is to inspire people to imagine making a difference, sparking everyday citizens into action.聽

When asked how he feels about the experience of partnering with 91爆料 students and faculty on Portraits for Change, Williams was very positive. 鈥淚t meant a lot to have students taking care of all the details to share these portraits and get the word out,鈥 he explained. 鈥淣ow a lot more people will see them.鈥

The exhibit is on display at the Allen Library Atrium through Thursday, March 12.

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Video by Sovechea Sophanna.

About Honors

The brings together students and faculty from all across campus to learn through cross-disciplinary curriculum, experiential learning, research and critical reflection. Honors鈥 curriculum offers a rigorous, interdisciplinary education, while Departmental Honors programs provide deep disciplinary education.

About Real Change

is an award-winning newspaper. It’s written by professional journalists and provides people experiencing homelessness or who are low income with immediate employment.

2018鈥19 President鈥檚 Medalists announced

The President鈥檚 Medalist Award celebrates the top student in each undergraduate class. Selected by a committee for their high GPA, rigor of their classes and number of Honors courses, the recipients for the 2018鈥19 academic year come from a broad range of disciplines.

Junior medalist Renee Zhang is preparing for a career in medicine with dual degrees in biology and violin performance, while also serving as concertmaster for the 91爆料 Symphony. Sophomore medalist Louis Patsawee Maliyam puts his problem-solving skills to work as a computer science major and celebrates his love for dance, which is his minor. Freshman medalist Piper Coyner is studying Persian and Near Eastern studies and actively exploring other interests, including cinema studies.

These exceptional students will be recognized at a reception with University President Ana Mari Cauce, and this award will be added to the students鈥 permanent academic record.

Meet this year鈥檚 medalists:

Renee Zhang, junior medalist

Majors:聽Biology and Violin Performance
Expected graduation: 2021
贬辞尘别迟辞飞苍:听Portland, OR

Music and medicine have always been Renee Zhang鈥檚 twin passions.

At the 91爆料, she鈥檚 exploring the ways these subjects complement one another by pursuing dual degrees in biology and violin performance. Zhang is getting hands-on research experience under Olivia Bermingham-McDonogh, a professor in the department of biological structure.

Outside of her academic pursuits, Zhang serves as the concertmaster of the 91爆料 Symphony Orchestra and president of the Chamber Music Club. One of her goals is to make music more accessible to students on campus by expanding performance opportunities for both music and non-music majors. She also plays the violin for residents at local assisted-living and memory-care facilities.

After graduating, Zhang hopes to embark on a career in medicine. She believes that having a creative outlet is instrumental to her well-being, and she will continue to share her love of music with those around her.

 

Louis Patsawee Maliyam, sophomore medalist

惭补箩辞谤:听Computer Science
Minor:听顿补苍肠别
Expected graduation: 2020
贬辞尘别迟辞飞苍:听Samutprakarn, Thailand

 

 

Louis Patsawee Maliyam鈥檚 interest in technology began when he helped his family run an internet caf茅 in Thailand.

A Royal Thai Scholarship recipient, he arrived at the 91爆料 excited to challenge his problem-solving skills as a computer science major. Maliyam is a teaching assistant at the Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering, because he wants to help people realize their dreams through education. He also recently interned as a software developer at Indeed.com.

Maliyam balances his love of computer science with his passion for dance, which is his minor. He sees dance as a tool for self-exploration and better understanding the world. He believes his well-rounded education in the arts and sciences has widened his world and prepared him for the future.

The support from people in his life has helped Maliyam thrive, and he hopes to bring that culture of caring to the tech industry, where he plans to work.

Piper Coyner, freshman medalist

惭补箩辞谤:听Near Eastern Studies
Intended major: Cinema and Media Studies
Expected graduation: 2022
贬辞尘别迟辞飞苍:听Olalla, WA

 

 

Piper Coyner is an avid reader whose lifelong fascination with other cultures and foreign languages has shaped her path at the 91爆料.

Coyner is majoring in Near Eastern studies and studying Persian. She鈥檚 particularly interested in literature, which she sees as a gateway to understanding the essence of a culture.

Inspired by her love of books and movies, Coyner is also exploring other majors, including cinema and media studies. When she鈥檚 not in class, you can find Coyner at a film screening or classical music concert. She also writes reviews for the 91爆料 Film Club.

Coyner plans to continue exploring her intellectual interests by taking a variety of classes and studying abroad. She hopes to combine her many passions into a career 鈥 whether in law, film production or literature.

Student-athletes are golden on and off the field

Student-athletes work hard to be top competitors in their respective sport. They also take the “student” part of student-athlete seriously and work hard in the classroom.

In autumn quarter 2019, the overall department GPA was 3.27. This is a new all-time high since tracking began in autumn of 2003.

Congratulations to 91爆料 student athletes and their networks of support for a terrific autumn quarter in the classroom!

Resilience Lab announces 2019 seed grant recipients

The 91爆料 Resilience Lab and the Campus Sustainability Fund have joined together to award 20 grants to 91爆料 projects designed to cultivate sustainability, compassion and resiliency; to engage hardships, setbacks and failures with empathy and vulnerability; to foster connectedness, belonging and community; and to embrace both common humanity and diversity within the human experience. Students, staff and faculty from all three campuses applied for seed grants to fund research, workshops, retreats, activities, faculty-invited speakers and other events tailored for students, faculty and staff in support of these aims. Together the Resilience Lab and the Campus Sustainability Fund awarded a total of $38,575 to individuals and groups.

The range of proposals demonstrate the need and collective interest to realize sustainability and compassion-building work. In all, students, faculty and staff submitted 42 proposals from 31 different departments/programs across all three 91爆料 campuses. From that group, 20 grants were made to fund the ideas of faculty, staff, graduate and undergraduate students representing 18 departments. Funded projects are intended to benefit the broad 91爆料 community at all three campuses.

鈥淭he creative ideas people had to build connection and support well-being was just inspiring,鈥 said Anne Browning, director of the Resilience Lab. Projects range from cultivating mindful leadership in faculty, a podcast series focused on indigenous well-being in Urban Seattle, the creation of sustainability-centered curriculum, all with the intent of creating more sustainable and resilient communities.

For his project, 鈥淐reating a Climate Heat Map: Finding Equitable and Inclusive Spaces on Campus,鈥 School of Education Ph.D. candidate Kaleb Germinaro said, 鈥淎 SEED grant provides me the space to explore a creative passion while creating a useful tool for my peers and community.鈥 Associate professors in the College of Built Environments Julie Johnson and Brooke Sullivan highlighted this year鈥檚 theme in their project 鈥淩aising Resilience,” saying, 鈥淎s resilience and well-being are central to our built environments, we look forward to engaging with College of Built Environments (CBE) faculty to develop pedagogy that supports students鈥 own resilience, well-being and compassion through their studies.鈥

A list of funded projects and the project leads is below. For more information about the projects, . Funding for these seed grants is provided by the Campus Sustainability Fund and the 91爆料 Resilience Lab.

Funded projects and project leads are:

Creating a Climate Heat Map: Finding Equitable and Inclusive Spaces on Campus
Project lead: Kaleb Germinaro, Ph.D. Candidate, College of Education, Seattle

A Retreat to Build Faculty Capacity for Mindful Leadership
Project lead: Anthony Back, Professor, School of Medicine, Oncology, Seattle

Many Voices: A Storytelling Toolkit for Community-Based Oral History Projects
Project lead: Dillion Connelly, Masters Student, Art of Museology, Seattle

Resilience and Compassion @ Odegaard Pop up Events
Project lead: Emilie Vrbancic, Undergraduate Experience Library, Odegaard Library, Seattle

Making Space in Higher Education- Diversity, Inclusion, and More
Project Lead: Erica Mallet, Ph.D. Candidate, Educational Policy, Organizations, and Leadership

Telling Our Stories at Neah Bay Elementary
Project lead: Christine Stickler, Director, 91爆料 Pipeline Project, Undergraduate Academic Affairs, Center for Experiential Learning, Seattle

Darn it! A mobile clothing repair and experience across 91爆料 Campuses
Project lead: Coreen Callister, Graduate student, Interaction Design< Division of Design, School of Art, Art History + Design, Seattle

Raising Resilience: Connecting compassion and well-being with systems-based pedagogy in the College of the Built Environment
Project lead: Julie Johnson, Associate Professor, Landscape Architecture, Seattle

Diversity Includes Disability
Project lead: Sheryl Burgstahler, Director, Accessible Technology Services- Accessible Technology Services, Seattle

Building Resilience for Teaching at 91爆料
Project lead: Christine Sugatan, Program Administrator, Center for Teaching and Learning, Seattle

Women in Applied Math Mentoring Program
Project lead: The Diversity Committee, The Department of Applied Mathematics, Seattle

Resilience and Urban in Public Writing Partnerships
Project lead: Candace Rai, Associate Professor and Director of the Expository Writing Program, Department of English, Seattle

Fostering Self-Compassion in the Transition to College: Developing Resources for Parents
Project lead: Emily Kroshus, Assistant Professor, Department of Pediatrics, School of Public Health, Department of Health Services, Seattle

Queer and Trans People of Color: Healing in the Outdoors
Project lead: Reb Zhou, Student, Q Center, Community Environment and Planning, Seattle

Health and Wellness at the Q Center
Project lead: Jen Self, Director, Q Center, Seattle

Trauma Informed Mindfulness Training
Project Lead: Megan Kennedy, Interim Student Assistant to the Vice President of Student Life-Student Life, Seattle

Women of Color in Global Health: Building Resilience and Community
Project Lead: Diem Nguyen, MPH Candidate, Department of Global Health, Seattle

Capillaries: The Journal of Narrative Medicine
Project Lead: Alice Ranjan, Student, Health Sciences Learning and Advocacy Group, Seattle

Indigenizing Urban Seattle Podcast
Project Lead: Jessica Hernandez, Ph.D. Candidate, School of Environmental and Forest Services, Seattle

Sustaining Fierce Compassion
Project Lead: Lauren Litchy, Assistant Professor, School of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences, Bothell

About the 91爆料 Resilience Lab

The Resilience Lab promotes resilience development while normalizing failure and acknowledging the wide range of hardships our community members have faced and continue to face. As a laboratory space, the Resilience Lab tries new and creative methods for rethinking the 91爆料 experience in and out of the classroom.

Academic Support Programs makes Rome its classroom

This fall, 11 91爆料 students piloted a unique 91爆料 study abroad program during early fall start. With Rome as its classroom, the course explored questions of identity and immigration in post-colonial Italy and the U.S. This curriculum was designed to help students return to the 91爆料 with an even stronger set of skills, helping them succeed at the 91爆料 and beyond.