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New director maps social justice to Honors Program landscape

This fall, the welcomed a new director, Victoria Lawson, professor of geography, internationally-recognized scholar on global poverty and co-founder of the .

Victoria Lawson, professor of geography, is the new director of the University Honors Program.

鈥淗onors is amazing. It drew me in because of what it does,鈥 says Lawson. 鈥淥ne of the things we share is a commitment to trying to tackle complex problems. Honors is a place where students are forced to think about big questions and think about them through an interdisciplinary lens.鈥

In this role, brings the interdisciplinary perspective of geography to Honors, complementing the program鈥檚 interdisciplinary curriculum and enhancing it in several ways. One way she hopes to affect the curriculum is to bring more Honors students into her work around understanding global poverty.

鈥淰icky Lawson鈥檚 work is so relevant to Honors and to the times we live in,鈥 says Ed Taylor, vice provost and dean of Undergraduate Academic Affairs, where the Honors Program is housed. 鈥淎s we think about Honors as interdisciplinary thinking about interdisciplinary issues, there is no better person and scholar to lead our students and staff.鈥

Crossing campus boundaries by design

The University Honors Program engages a diverse population of students through a rigorous interdisciplinary curriculum that promotes expansive, innovative thinking and conscious global citizenship. Lawson calls Honors鈥 curricular approach and her background and interests a 鈥減erfect marriage.鈥 She invites students into her own research endeavors, mentors undergraduate researchers and graduate students, incorporates service-learning into her classes and works in a global landscape. Lawson looks forward to working with the staff on ways to continue foregrounding issues of social justice and global challenges into the curriculum so students can easily follow their academic interests鈥攚hether they are related to poverty or not鈥攖hrough their Honors core classes.

鈥淲hat are the most challenging questions ahead of you, what are you worried about, what do you think about and what do you want to be engaged in?鈥 Lawson asks of students.

Lawson is eager to learn about the grand challenges students care about, whether it be climate change, immigration politics, healthcare, etc. and helping them realize that 鈥渢he only way you鈥檙e going to answer these questions is through complex ways of knowing and that requires you to be open to multiple disciplines and perspectives.”

This aim dovetails with a major part of Lawson鈥檚 work: co-leading the Relational Poverty Network, a network she co-founded with fellow geography professor Sarah Elwood. The Relational Poverty Network is comprised of more than 150 scholars from different disciplines and from around the world whose work centers on critical poverty studies. Lawson already brings Honors students into the network and plans to involve them even more, beginning quite soon.

On October 10, 2014, the Relational Poverty Network will host its at the 91爆料, bringing scholars from across the U.S., Canada, Argentina, India and South Africa to share their research on issues of poverty. Honors students are integrally involved in the planning and execution of this day-long event and students, faculty and staff from across the University will be invited to attend.

Critical learning creates a path to discovery

Lawson began her tenure as Honors Program director in mid-September so while her goals for the program at this early stage are general, one goal is very clear: tell the story of Honors broadly. In addition to the many and varied student successes, Lawson wants to 鈥渂e able to give voice to the kinds of experiences that faculty have when they teach in Honors. Distill the ways in which Honors creates a community, both for faculty and students in the middle of this large university鈥eally helping people understand how Honors contributes to and partners with many, many other units on campus.鈥

Currently, 876 students are pursuing the interdisciplinary track in Honors and 481 are pursuing the departmental track. Honors students choose majors from across the University, representing 69 departments from across all schools and colleges. The 2014 Honors freshman class is 224 students strong. The average GPA of the Honors entering class is 3.92, and 84% hail from public school, 15% are from private school and 1% were homeschooled. Seventy-six percent cite the Honors Program as a major reason they selected the 91爆料.

In the years to come, as 91爆料 students are selected for national scholarships and other forms of recognition of accomplishments and future promise, it鈥檚 very likely that those scholars will be Honors students. Since the program鈥檚 inception in 1961, nearly all of the 91爆料鈥檚 Rhodes Scholars and Marshall Scholars, and all of the Gates-Cambridge Scholars were Honors students.

While this type of recognition reflects the talent and hard work of Honors students and the community of faculty, staff, mentors, and family that supports them, that鈥檚 not the whole picture. Lawson finds the most inspiring student stories are the narratives of 鈥渟elf-discovery in the midst of critical learning. It鈥檚 not only being asked to achieve, which they are, but having space within that achievement and that work to also discover and find self and build a path that reflects their own passions, skills and values.鈥

Anything but geography

If you had asked a teenage Victoria Lawson if she saw herself as a geographer, you would have heard an emphatic 鈥渁nything but geography!鈥 However, a geography professor at Leicester University in England, her undergraduate alma mater, changed that. Not only did she continue to pursue geography through graduate school at The Ohio State University but considers experiences with one brilliant and passionate professor in a geography class as pivotal to her commitment to teaching.

Lawson鈥檚 dedication and ability to teach has been recognized with both a Distinguished Teaching Award in 1996, several teaching awards from the Department of Geography, and a Marsha Landolt Distinguished Graduate Mentor Award. She is honored by all of these awards but calls out the Graduate Mentor Award as something special because it is 鈥渁n incredibly rewarding kind of teaching that involves heart, mind and soul of both parties, of the adviser and the advisee.鈥

A widely published and highly sought-after academic, Lawson has also undertaken leadership roles in her field, department and across campus. She was elected president of the Association of American Geographers (2004-05), served as chair of the Department of Geography (1997-2000), led campus-based leadership search committees and more.

As she prepares to teach this quarter and continue her focus on innovative and inclusive inquiry, Lawson plans to guide Honors students toward their authentic place in the world, asking, 鈥淲hat are the most challenging questions ahead of you, what are you worried about, what do you think about, and what do you want to be engaged in?鈥

Welcome from the Dean, autumn 2014

Dear Friends and Colleagues,

One of the most commonly-asked questions undergraduates get from family and friends is, 鈥淲hat鈥檚 your major?鈥 And it makes sense that people want to know. Choosing a major (or two, or three) is a necessary rite-of-passage in college.

At today鈥檚 91爆料, pursuing a degree is just one part of the experience.

Students find a wide range of opportunities inside and beyond the classroom that help them not just shape their career-focused skills but that lead to a personal understanding of who they are and what they believe in. In Undergraduate Academic Affairs alone, students can find programs that inspire them to a life of service; opportunities to discover answers to some of life鈥檚 most perplexing problems; deepen their commitment to study and scholarship; develop their leadership skills and so much more.

Earning a 91爆料 degree is an opportunity and privilege that comes with a certain responsibility. That charge includes continuing to learn, understanding and serving the world we live in, responsibility to self (me) and connectedness to others (we). E pluribus unum, meaning 鈥渙ut of many, one,鈥 is a time-honored ideal from the formation of the United States that resonates ever more strongly today.

A commitment to a major is essentially a promise to the community to pursue a world of good, in the student鈥檚 own, individual way.

Sincerely,

Ed Taylor's Signature

Ed Taylor
Vice Provost and Dean
Undergraduate Academic Affairs

 

“W” stands for welcome!

On September 21, 2014, thousands of new 91爆料 freshmen and transfer students formed a gigantic W on the field at Husky Stadium and had their class photo taken.

The big “W”

Photo of students in W formation
Entering students stand together to form a giant W on Husky Field.

 

The W photo tradition began in 2005 as a freshman photo. In 2011, transfer students joined the photo. The W spans 80 yards of the field, from one 10-yardline to the other. First Year Programs estimates that 4,500 students are in the photo.

Coordinated by First Year Programs, the W photo culminates a rollicking Husky Kick-Off event. At Husky Kick-Off, students are led through a series of active ice breakers that get them moving around and meeting other students.

2014 freshman class

Preliminary figures show the incoming class will include about 6,400 students, with nearly 5,000 from Washington and others representing 47 more states and Washington, D.C., plus 38 other countries.

 

Summer is for undergraduate research at the 91爆料

For most, campus life is a little quieter during the summer but undergraduates continue to pursue research in a range of disciplines, from STEM fields to the humanities. They鈥檙e preparing to show their summer projects to a broader audience as well. Undergraduates participating in one of several summer research opportunities at the 91爆料 will present their work August 20, 21, and 22.

Celebrating service and leadership

Each year, thousands of 91爆料 undergraduates engage in service and leadership projects on campus and in the community, bringing the classroom beyond the four walls that house desks and chairs. At the annual Spring Celebration of Service and Leadership, students showcase their work and learning related to these projects. Students, staff, faculty and community members hear about these dynamic experiences from the students firsthand.

Dream Project freshmen reflect on year 1 at the 91爆料

The Dream Project assists low-income and first-generation high school students in attaining higher education. Students in the Dream Project overcome incredible obstacles to attend college, but the challenges鈥攁nd rewards鈥攄on鈥檛 end once they step foot on campus. Three Dream Project students describe their journey to 91爆料, what they鈥檝e learned their first year, and how it feels to give back (also, how important the bowling alley is and when to stop calling your mother!)

Entrepreneur Kirsten Rogers aims to take a bite out of cancer

In 2013, David Rogers was retired and living his dream, having made his boat his home, sailing with his wife through the Sea of Cortez, when he became very ill. He was advised to return to the States, where he was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin lymphoma. When a loved one is diagnosed with cancer, most people feel an overwhelming sense of helplessness. Not so David鈥檚 daughter, Kirsten Rogers. Kirsten (鈥05, 鈥10) set out to research all she could about how to best support her father.