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Oh the places they鈥檒l go! New grads and their plans

Taking our inspiration from the classic children’s book (and graduation gift), Oh the Places You’ll Go by Dr. Seuss, we asked some new graduates a couple questions. Those questions are:

  • What鈥檚 your most memorable experience with an Undergraduate Academic Affairs program?
  • Dr. Seuss says, 鈥淵ou have brains in your head. / You have feet in your shoes / You can steer yourself / any direction you choose. / You鈥檙e on your own. And you know what you know. / And YOU are the guy who鈥檒l decide where to go.鈥 Where will you go? Where will you be one year after graduation?
  • Dr. Seuss writes, 鈥淵ou鈥檒l join the high fliers / who soar to high heights.鈥 Which high fliers would you most like to join and what high heights will you soar to?
Vanessa Pham with studentBryan DosonoDawn TuasonAndy MarzanoMyra BranchChristopher NelsonDevan BerkleyJennifer NguyenAlex CatchingsMerzamie CagaitanRoman CamardaRachel StubbsAndrew TranHelen OlsenBenjamin Wiselogle
Jump to:
Devan Berkley | Myra Branch | Merzamie Cagaitan | Roman Camarda | Alex Catchings | Bryan Dosono | Andy Marzano | Christopher Nelson | Jennifer Nguyen | Helen Olsen | Vanessa Pham | Rachel Stubbs | Andrew Tran | Dawn Tuason | Benjamin Wiselogle

 

Devan Berkley
“This is probably one of my favorite photos. I was actually taking a photo for an open house for our office and one of my co-workers told me a joke to get me to smile. It’s a very ‘UW’ photo and I absolutely love it for that reason.”

Devan Berkley

  • Major: Political Science
  • Minor: Human Rights and Values in Society
  • Hometown: Tacoma, WA
  • Involved in: Dream Project, First Year Programs, and service learning through the Carlson Leadership & Public Service Center

What’s your most memorable experience with an Undergraduate Academic Affairs program?

My most memorable experience in undergraduate academic affairs has been my time working at the office of First Year Programs. Having worked there for the past two years I have grown a great deal both personally and professionally. I can honestly say it has been a life changing experience that has constantly opened doors for me. Apart from this, my work has been extremely fulfilling. I’ve had the opportunity to help literally thousands of students in making their transition to the 糖心少女 a little bit easier. Even something as small as giving a new student the right office to contact is very rewarding. I have been truly exposed to the diversity of the 糖心少女 and all that it offers and it has been absolutely thrilling.

Where will you be one year after graduation?

One year after graduation I will be finishing up a masters program at Seattle University. Next year I will be part of the inaugural cohort Seattle University’s Bridge Masters of Business Administration Program. After the program I hope to begin a career in local government so that I can continue to serve the people of Seattle and the state of Washington.

To what high heights will you soar?

As nerdy as it sounds, I want to join the high fliers in government. I love this great experiment known as American democracy and I hope to work within state government to make our state a better place for all of us to live in. My dream since I was child has always been to run for elected office and I plan to follow that dream. Even if I am unsuccessful, the journey itself will still have been worth it. Beyond my professional goals, I hope to continue to grow as a person and to constantly challenge myself. At the end of my life’s journey I hope to be a model for others and to inspire them to do great things. I believe everyone needs someone to look up to and I hope to be that person for others.

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“In this picture, I am visiting Junior, the male jaguar at the Woodland Park Zoo, during my animal behavior psychology lab.”

Myra Branch

  • Major: Psychology
  • Minor: Anthropology
  • Hometown: Olympia, WA
  • Involved in: First Year Programs and service learning through the Carlson Leadership & Public Service Center

What’s your most memorable experience with an Undergraduate Academic Affairs program?

I have had nothing but memorable experiences with First Year Programs and UAA. My favorite memory though, was after my first quarter teaching a Freshman Interest Group (FIG). I had just spent the last 2 quarters learning how to plan lessons, facilitate discussions, grade, and do all the other things that go into teaching, then I had to implement all of that to a group of 24 first-year students, some of whom were older than me.聽Needless to say, I was a little relieved to be done.

During finals week, I was finishing my grading and I saw I had an email from a student. The subject said “Thanks.” The student thanked me for helping her feel comfortable talking to a group, even though English was her second language. This small gesture of thanks put all the work I had just done into perspective. I realized that in teaching, a small gesture from student to teacher or vice versa can be immensely powerful. This stuck with me; since then, I celebrate all victories, no matter how 鈥渟mall.鈥

Where will you be one year after graduation?

One year after graduation, I will be finishing up my first year of coursework at Columbia University鈥檚 programs in Occupational Therapy. I will be gearing up to begin my Level II Fieldwork (3 months in a mental health setting).

To what high heights will you soar?

I am excited to first become an alumna of the 糖心少女. I have been working towards this for four amazing, challenging years, and I would not be able to pursue continuing education without the training and challenging coursework I have been exposed to during my time here. I then plan to get my master鈥檚 of science in occupational therapy, practice for a few years, then go back to school to get my doctorate, with my end goal being to teach and continue to practice OT.

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Merzamie Cagaitan
“This photo was taken around the U-District, right before I accompanied my youngest sister, who has autism, to her senior prom. It was a remarkable honor to be her date and chaperon for the evening!”

Merzamie Cagaitan

  • Majors: English Language & Literature, Comparative History of Ideas
  • Minor: Diversity Studies
  • Hometown: Puyallup, WA
  • Involved in: Academic Support Programs, Dream Project, First Year Programs, Global Opportunities, Office of Merit Scholarships, Fellowships and Awards, Pipeline Project, Undergraduate Research Program, and service learning through the Carlson Leadership & Public Service Center

What’s your most memorable experience with an Undergraduate Academic Affairs program?

One of my most memorable experiences as an undergraduate has been serving as a peer instructor for First Year Program’s Freshman Interest Group seminars. I was in a FIG seminar during my freshman year, and鈥攖ogether with my life-long dream of becoming an educator鈥攚as inspired to lead FIG seminars for the next three years. I have been extremely blessed by the students I worked with, learned with, and played with, and by the support the FYP staff lent me all throughout those challenging weeks of navigating what student-leadership really looks like at a university setting. My active involvement in the FIG program has given me the skills, confidence, and courage to then design my own course at the 糖心少女and teach it during my last year as a senior!

Where will you be one year after graduation?

I am accepting a Fulbright Award to teach English in South Korea for the 2013-2014 academic year. My destination within the country is still unknown, but, a year after graduation, I will still be there, in front of a classroom, hopefully building community and relationships much like I have done here.

To what high heights will you soar?

Ever since I was in second grade, I have made make-shift classrooms where I would teach my younger sisters and cousins how to read and write. The spirit to mentor and teach has only strengthened over the years. My ultimate goal is to claim a Ph.D. in English language and literature and to one day research, write, and teach as an English professor at a university.

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Roman Camarda
“In this photo I’m on Capitol Hill in Seattle celebrating my cousin’s wedding.”

Roman Camarda

  • Majors: Biochemistry and Photomedia
  • Hometown: Seattle, WA
  • Involved in: Honors Program, Undergraduate Research Program

What’s your most memorable experience with an Undergraduate Academic Affairs program?

It is hard for me to label a single experience as most memorable when I think about my time in the Honors Program and working on undergraduate research. However, I can’t imagine a more memorable experience than studying abroad with Honors in Rome and Istanbul. Also, the excitement and happiness I felt upon finding out I had been accepted to my top graduate school choices wouldn’t have been the same had I not shared it with my undergraduate research mentor and the rest of the lab members.

Where will you be one year after graduation?

One year after graduation I will be finishing up my first year in the Biomedical Sciences Program at the University of California San Francisco.

To what high heights will you soar?

I am immensely excited about joining the ranks of amazing researchers at UCSF. The goal of my Ph.D. thesis work is to gain a better understanding of the role altered metabolism plays in cancer, which in my mind counts as some pretty high heights.

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“I’m trying to make a compelling case about some piece of African American literature at Rutgers University in summer of 2012.”

Alex Catchings

  • Major: English
  • Hometown: Vancouver, WA
  • Involved in: Honors Program, Undergraduate Research Program

What’s your most memorable experience with an Undergraduate Academic Affairs program?

Being a part of the Undergraduate Research Leaders program in varying capacities has been one of the most delightful parts of my undergraduate experience. Without a doubt, being an Undergraduate Research Leader allowed me to really wield and take pride in my research, and see how far I’ve come since I started here in summer of 2008. The staff have been enduringly supportive through my most anxious moments and euphoric of victories, and the community of Undergraduate Research Leaders has been a treat to know and to watch as they all pursue their own boundless trajectories.

Where will you be one year after graduation?

I will be a graduate student in the English department at U.C. Berkeley. In a year, I will be finishing up my first year of coursework and starting to put my oral examination list together of three or four hundred books so I can start working toward writing my dissertation the following year. I’ll hopefully be active in the Bay Area music scene, as well, playing folk-jazz music.

To what high heights will you soar?

I hope to be like my mentors, who happen to be professors and close friends. Sonnet Retman is my 糖心少女mentor who is without doubt the best educator I have ever known. I hope to be a fraction of the professor she is, and I hope I can develop the sense of currency, family focus, and intellectual power she maintains on a daily basis. My other mentor, Daphne Brooks, is at Princeton University, and I hope to be an accomplished cultural presence like her. She has penned the liner notes for the most recent Aretha Franklin Anthology Box Set, is an active and influential music critic, and keeps an unbelievably busy schedule touching glasses with some of the most powerful figures in pop culture. Finding a sweet spot where my network and my nature are constantly expanding while I maintain a truthful, sturdy center like these powerful professors would make for a perfect career, to me.

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In this photo, Bryan was “getting crowned 糖心少女Homecoming King at CenturyLink Field.” Shelby Handler was 糖心少女Homecoming Queen

Bryan Dosono

  • Major: Honors Informatics: Human-Computer Interaction
  • Minor: Music
  • Hometown: Wapato, WA
  • Involved in: Academic Support Programs, Carlson Leadership and Public Service Center, Center for Learning and Undergraduate Enrichment (CLUE), Dream Project, First Year Programs, Global Opportunities, Honors Program, Office of Merit Scholarships, Fellowships and Awards, Undergraduate Academic Affairs Advising, Undergraduate Research Program

What’s your most memorable experience with an Undergraduate Academic Affairs program?

I found my calling as a scholar when I began conducting research with Dr. Ricardo Gomez of the 糖心少女Information School. Under his tutelage, I investigated fieldwork data he collected in South Africa that assessed the country鈥檚 current challenges in information and communication technologies for development. Presenting my work at the 糖心少女Undergraduate Research Symposium was an intrinsically rewarding experience. Engaging in the exciting talks and poster sessions at these academic conferences allowed me to increase the visibility of my research topic to people outside my specific discipline. Sharing my research developed my expertise in discussing my research in a clear and meaningful way, and the feedback I received from my colleagues shaped further exploration into my research questions. At the conclusion of our research project, Dr. Gomez and I submitted our findings to The Electronic Journal of Information Systems in Developing Countries, which accepted our paper for publication.

Where will you be one year after graduation?

I have been admitted into Syracuse University’s Ph.D. program in information science and technology this fall, and will be spending this summer in the heart of Washington, D.C., as a Google Policy Fellow. Continuing my education through doctoral studies would be the ideal next step to producing meaningful research contributions in my domains of expertise.

I hope to refine my understanding of the interconnectedness between technology and government as agents of social change. With my doctorate degree, I plan to reshape the dialogue about the role of technology in developing regions. Receiving a world-class education will also appropriately instruct me to advise federal agencies and fine-tune the innovative policy solutions of global think tanks. In turn, I hope to refine my understanding of the interconnectedness between technology and government as agents of social change.

To what high heights will you soar?

I am currently aiming to become the next Chief Information Officer for the United States of America so that I can directly influence how information is disseminated to vulnerable populations and create opportunities for these communities through technology. I aspire to bridge the gap between engineers, policy makers, scientists, and other key national stakeholders in transforming the landscape of the nation鈥檚 information infrastructure so that underserved places like my Yakama Reservation back home can benefit from improved technology access.

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“I am the second from the left, and I am in front of Suzzallo Library with three of my orientation leader co-workers and Dubs!”

Andy Marzano

  • Major: History
  • Hometown: Sammamish, WA
  • Involved in: Carlson Leadership and Public Service Center, Dream Project, First Year Programs, Pipeline Project

What’s your most memorable experience with an Undergraduate Academic Affairs program?

It’s difficult to pinpoint one experience as my favorite or most memorable because all of them were very unique and meant a lot to me respectively. I did have a fantastic summer as an orientation leader though. My co-workers were awesome and made the experience hardly feel like work because we all enjoyed each other’s company and had a plethora of good times together on and off the job. We’re still close today as well. The more I look back, the more I realize how lucky and how happy I am that I got to spend a summer working with those people and representing the UW. Also, who wouldn’t like having to hang out on the 糖心少女campus during the spring and summer??

Where will you be one year after graduation?

Upon graduation, I will head to the Midwest to join the Teach For America (TFA) corps in Detroit, MI, where I will be teaching secondary social studies. I have always wanted to be a teacher, so I feel blessed to be given this opportunity. The minimum commitment to TFA is two years as a corps member, but I have a feeling I will remain in education for much, much longer.

To what high heights will you soar?

I believe that the most monumental struggle of our generation is the one currently being waged to end educational inequity. Just like the Civil Rights Movement and the Civil War before it, the fight to close the educational achievement gap is one against oppression and to bring about the promises of freedom and equality upon which our nation is founded. I think those involved in educational reform and who are committed to the quality education of our nation’s youth are doing the things necessary to allow kids to soar to high heights and know no limits to what they can do with their lives. I cannot think of any work I’d rather do than join those already working to make this possible.

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Christopher Nelson
In this photo “I was at the National Student Nurses Association Council of State Presidents in Pittsburgh, PA, representing the nursing students of Washington state.”

Christopher Nelson

  • Major: Nursing
  • Hometown: Key Biscayne, FL
  • Involved in: Mary Gates Endowment for Students, Office of Merit Scholarships, Fellowships and Awards

What’s your most memorable experience with an Undergraduate Academic Affairs program?

Designing the Mary Gates Venture Scholarship proposal to go to Denmark and Greenland to study the expanded nursing scope of practice of registered nurses at isolated Arctic settlements.

Where will you be one year after graduation?

I’ll be on my Fulbright in Nuuk, Greenland, doing research as part of my masters of circumpolar health through the University of the Arctic consortium.

To what high heights will you soar?

I’ll be working towards my Ph.D. in nursing science and public health!

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Jennifer Nguyen
“This photo was taken in summer 2012 in Moore’a an Island of Tahiti where my group and I went to visit and volunteer at a youth camp for children with disadvantage backgrounds. This was a photo taken during our activities.”

Jennifer Nguyen

  • Major: Psychology
  • Minor: Diversity
  • Hometown: Seattle, WA
  • Involved in: Academic Support Programs, Dream Project, First Year Programs, Global Opportunities, Undergraduate Academic Affairs Advising, Undergraduate Research Program, and service learning through Carlson Leadership & Public Service Center

What’s your most memorable experience with an Undergraduate Academic Affairs program?

Growing up I knew I wanted to help people and being a part of the Undergraduate Academic Advising program allowed me to do that. Through Undergraduate Advising, I created many memories with the staff and especially with the students I worked with. My most memorable experience was when I met with a student who was at a crossrsoad in his life, confused and lacking motivation. He was a sophomore and began feeling the pressure of figuring out what to do with his life. As a peer adviser on drop-ins, we only had 15 minutes with the students we meet.

I listened, pondered and guided, sharing my experience as an undergraduate and what I’ve learned from it. After about 20-25 minutes later, he gave me a sigh, placed his hand out and smiled at me. “Thank you for listening. I was not sure who to come to.” He stood up, shook my hand and looked more confident leaving. Nothing beats knowing you can put a smile on someone’s face by simply listening to them and being able to use your experience to help others.

Where will you be one year after graduation?

I love traveling. After my two amazing study abroad trips to Brazil and Tahiti, I hope to take a year off and travel. I hope to travel and experience other cultures, food, meet new people and build a web of knowledge. I would like to travel as a flight attendant. I like to help people and hope that I could do so by being a flight attendant and see the world. I also hope to join an organization and travel to other states or countries and help communities that need a helping hand. They say the best teacher is the experiences you gain and the people to interact with day to day.

After a year I plan to go back to school through a psychology or public administration program to continue to my education and participate in programs where I can give back to my community.

To what high heights will you soar?

I love working with the undergraduate advising program here on campus and I hope that one day I can return and work on campus again to give back to an office that has given me so much more.

I want to continue my pre-med track and apply to medical school, however after working closely with the pre-med advisers, I realized there are so many ways to help others.

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“This is a picture of me outside of my favorite place to study on campus, Molly’s Cafe in the bottom of the Henry Art Gallery.”

Helen Olsen

  • Majors: Geography and Public Health
  • Minor: African Studies
  • Hometown: Newport, OR
  • Involved in: Center for Learning and Undergraduate Enrichment (CLUE), Global Opportunities, Honors Program, Office of Merit Scholarships, Fellowships and Awards, Undergraduate Research Program

What’s your most memorable experience with an Undergraduate Academic Affairs program?

I have had the opportunity to be involved with a number of Undergraduate Academic Affairs programs during my time at the 糖心少女. From running CLUE discussion session for geography classes to participating in an Honors Experiential Spring Break experience, I have tried to take full advantage of the range of learning experiences available to undergraduate students outside of the classroom. Without the support of the Fritz Scholarship, which is facilitated by Global Opportunities, I wouldn鈥檛 have been able to participate in the Honors Study Abroad program in Sierra Leone during the summer of 2011. By studying women鈥檚 maternal and reproductive health access in the region, I had an opportunity to see firsthand the way in which development programs play out on the ground in low-resource settings. Returning to the UW, my research experiences in Sierra Leone have continued to inform my research interests and personal goals.

Where will you be one year after graduation?

After graduating from the 糖心少女, I am planning on moving across the country to New Jersey to begin a graduate program in geography at Rutgers University: New Brunswick. This opportunity is both exciting and terrifying. I know that this will be a new intellectual adventure and one that the Department of Geography, as well as the many programs offered by Undergraduate Academic Affairs, has prepared me for. Wish me luck!

To what high heights will you soar?

At the moment, the high flyers I’d like to join are people who have successfully completed a Ph.D. program in seven years or less! But, in all seriousness, I’m hoping that my time in graduate school will be a space for me to learn more about myself, about my personal motivations and professional goals for the future. I am humbled and inspired by the work of people like Kavita Ramdas, Melinda Gates, and Ananya Roy. Right now, I’m not sure if I want to be an academic or a development professional but I know that whatever path I choose, I want to be an advocate for health equity both at home and abroad.

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“This is me as Jumpstart Corps member, showing off a student’s artwork.”

Vanessa Pham

  • Major: Early Childhood and Family Studies
  • Minor: Education, Learning and Society
  • Hometown: Federal Way, WA
  • Involved in: Dream Project, First Year Programs, Honors Program, Jumpstart, Pipeline Project, Undergraduate Research Program, and service learning through the Carlson Leadership & Public Service Center

What’s your most memorable experience with an Undergraduate Academic Affairs program?

One of the highlights of my undergraduate career has been my involvement with the Pipeline Project鈥檚 Neah Bay “Telling Your Stories” project. This year I spent two weeks in Neah Bay, Washington, doing my favorite type of work (and play) with the most amazing group of people. It just goes to show that you do not have to travel far to meet passionate people and experience and learn from a new community.

Where will you be one year after graduation?

A few weeks after graduation, I will be diving right back into school! Still a Husky, I have been accepted to the the UW’s Elementary Teacher Education Program. By the end of four quarters I will have my masters in teaching and residency certification for teaching. After graduate school, I will teach somewhere in the Puget Sound area.

To what high heights will you soar?

Teaching is not a career I take lightly. The “high fliers” I hope to join are those teachers who think critically about their practice and are on a social justice mission. I also cannot wait to meet my future students, who I also consider “high fliers.” I think of “high heights” in terms of roles I will take on in the future. For instance, I know I am a lifelong learner and will always seek out new ways of understanding the world. The “highest height” I am aiming for right now is to become more of a leader and activist.

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“On the 糖心少女Farm site at the Center for Urban Horticulture, at a work party!”

Rachel Stubbs

  • Major: Biology
  • Minor: Education, Learning, and Societies
  • Hometown: Nashville, TN
  • Involved in: Carlson Leadership and Public Service Center, Honors Program, Office of Merit Scholarships, Fellowships and Awards, Pipeline Project

What’s your most memorable experience with an Undergraduate Academic Affairs program?

Teaching environmental science in Eastern Washington through the Pipeline Project’s Alternative Spring Break program helped me to realize that I get so much joy and energy out of teaching, especially in a hands-on, inquiry-based way. That was freshman year, and the rest of my time at 糖心少女has been shaped by this experience as I’ve continued to seek out science-teaching courses and experience through Pipeline and other venues.

Where will you be one year after graduation?

Living in Seattle and learning at 糖心少女about science, education, and urban food-production (through the 糖心少女Farm!) has opened my eyes to some amazing ideas. After graduation, I aspire to share these insights with school communities in my hometown in Nashville. I want to teach science, inspiring young people with cool student-directed, inquiry-based activities and lessons like those I’ve been privy to here!

To what high heights will you soar?

I want to be the coolest science teacher ever, convincing students that studying the natural world and our relationship to it is the coolest thing. Ever. I also want to grow a lot of food and teach others how to do it, too!

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Andrew Tran
“In this photo, I was actually standing in front of a chalkboard in my classroom, wearing the red Jumpstart shirts that corps members and team leaders wear when we go into the classrooms.”

Andrew Tran

  • Majors: Psychology and Sociology
  • Hometown: Seattle, WA
  • 聽Involved in: Jumpstart, Pipeline Project, service learning through Carlson Leadership & Public Service Center

What’s your most memorable experience with an Undergraduate Academic Affairs program?

My first memorable experience with UAA has to be my 2 years of service with Jumpstart, both as a corps member and team leader. The best feeling was walking into the classrooms of my preschools and being bombarded with hugs and smiles from all the children I helped. I was able to be part of the many lives of underprivileged preschool children in south Seattle鈥攑reparing them for a successful academic future.

Where will you be one year after graduation?

One year after my graduation, I will be taking part in the masters program of social work at the 糖心少女 in Seattle.

To what high heights will you soar?

The high fliers I would most like to join are the individuals who are helping people who are not able to help themselves.

I would like to join the heroes who are helping low-income families, displaced children, the homeless, and other underrepresented populations, each and every day. As long as I put my heart and effort into all that I do, I know it will make me into the high flier I want to be.

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“In this photo, I am sitting at the edge of a dock staring at the beautiful view that is Lake Crescent on my way to Neah Bay to reconnect with the amazing community I first met through the Pipeline Project. I’m enjoying the last few weeks of summer prior to my senior year of undergrad. I’m feeling the breeze and the warmth of the sun in anticipation, excitement and hope for the year ahead.”

Dawn Tuason

  • Major: Early Childhood and Family Studies
  • Minor: Global Health
  • Hometown: Seattle, WA
  • Involved in: Carlson Leadership and Public Service Center, Center for Learning and Undergraduate Enrichment (CLUE), Dream Project, Office of Merit Scholarships, Fellowships and Awards, Pipeline Project, Undergraduate Academic Affairs Advising

What’s your most memorable experience with an Undergraduate Academic Affairs program?

Being a participant through the Pipeline Project has allowed me to partake in a rich experience full of new adventures, new friendships and a new perspective on the meaning of community and the preservation of one鈥檚 culture. The program has given me many opportunities to reach outside my comfort zone, connect with other community members and young students, and truly become interested in education and the equal access we must all advocate for.

Where will you be one year after graduation?

One year from now, I will have completed my first year of my master’s program here at the UW’s College of Education special education program. I will be waiting to see which direction the wind steers me next, in the hopes that it involves studying or traveling abroad or teaching young children during the summer months.

To what high heights will you soar?

I would like to continue my work in the early childhood field, be even more immersed within the deaf community and truly be fluent in American Sign Language, and be a part of the research taking place that fosters programs to support youth in being empowered, inspired, and positively impacted.

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“I’m in Leogane Haiti, improving relations with the locals after an incredibly hard day working with an amazing group of Haitian and international volunteers helping the Leoganese dig out from the 2010 earthquake.”

Benjamin Wiselogle

  • Major: Global Studies
  • Hometown: Bothell, WA
  • Involved in: Academic Support Programs, Carlson Leadership & Public Service Center, Dream Project, Office of Merit Scholarships, Fellowships and Awards, Undergraduate Academic Affairs Advising, Other: Student Veteran’s Association (糖心少女Bothell)

What’s your most memorable experience with an Undergraduate Academic Affairs program?

I’m not sure if this applies, but living and working in Haiti during the 2011-2012 school year, at the same time earning academic credit.

Where will you be one year after graduation?

Well, thanks to the mentorship of Natalia Dyba, I’ll be at the University in Cambridge in the UK, or if I earn the position I’m currently interviewing for, I’ll be working in Afghanistan on a deferment from Cambridge.

To what high heights will you soar?

With a little help from my friends, I’m going to change the world and make it a more equitable place. Like Hilary from Carolina for Kibera says, “Talent is universal, opportunity is not.”

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Football intelligence: 糖心少女athletes squash stereotypes at the 2013 糖心少女Undergraduate Research Symposium

John Timu, left, and Hau’oli Jamora present their research at the 2013 Undergraduate Research Symposium Photo: David Ryder

糖心少女junior John Timu took a noticeably deep breath as he and classmate Hau鈥檕li Jamora prepared to present at the 2013 糖心少女Undergraduate Research Symposium. As Husky football players, they鈥檙e celebrated for accomplishments on the gridiron, but the classroom is a different playing field. Outfitted in letterman jackets, they took position behind the podium, ready to tackle a formidable opponent鈥攖he stereotype that athletes aren鈥檛 academically successful.鈥淚t鈥檚 shocking how (football) players are discredited and not given the respect they deserve for their intelligence,鈥 says Jamora. 鈥淲e want to analyze where this message comes from and how do we change the perception?鈥

Jamora and Timu applied and were chosen to present their research, 鈥淒ecolonizing Education: Translating Football Intelligence Into the Classroom,鈥 in a 10-minute, multimedia lecture at the 16th annual symposium. The event provides a public forum for undergraduates to share scholarly research and is open to students representing all disciplines. Jamora and Timu joined more than 1,000 undergraduates presenting their research this year.

The student-athletes鈥 topic originated from their anthropology studies. Both are minoring in the field and wanted to explore their personal observations and experiences in an academic context. How do societal perceptions of football intelligence compare to 鈥渆lite鈥 extracurriculars such as chess, golf, and tennis? Their work began in January, 2013, and employed methodologies learned in class. They organized peer focus groups, conducted interviews, surveyed photos and evaluated patterns in public discourse and sports broadcasting. They also analyzed formats that particularly appeal to younger audiences such as social media sites and popular video games like Madden NFL.

鈥淟ike most college students, we like to play video games, so we did plenty of research!鈥 laughs Jamora.

The findings also factored in how football players themselves sometimes contribute to the problem. Jamora and Timu examined Facebook and Twitter comments from prominent NFL players. The posts often relied on slang and poor grammar, which perpetuates an impression of ignorance.

鈥淚f you look at media, video games, and even NFL commentators, what they say and the phrases they use focus on the player鈥檚 physical ability rather than their intelligence,鈥 says Timu. 鈥淚t鈥檚 disturbing how often athletes are compared to animals or described as savage or machinelike.鈥

To counter prevailing attitudes, their symposium presentation evidenced how football is a game of the mind as much as the body. Using video footage, they illustrated the complexities of executing just one play. Like chess, football players assess options, strategize and map out possibilities.

鈥淥n the football field, you have seconds to make decisions and everything counts. You can鈥檛 overlook details. We take those skills into the classroom and it helps us perform better academically,鈥 says Timu.

The duo serve as personal examples. Both are the first in their families to attend college. Jamora maintains a 3.5 GPA and sometimes wakes as early as 5:30 a.m. and goes to bed at midnight to accommodate practices, games, and homework. Timu maintains a similar schedule. In April, he became the first 糖心少女student-athlete to win the prestigious Brett E. Baldwin Memorial Scholarship for Anthropology.

Hau’oli Jamora, anthropology professor and research mentor Holly Barker, and John Timu at the 2013 Undergraduate Research Symposium.

鈥淛ohn and Hau鈥檕li, plus some of their teammates, are really changing the culture of the (football) team,鈥 says Dr. Holly Barker, an anthropology department lecturer who mentors both students and nominated Timu for the Baldwin award. 鈥淭hey鈥檝e helped create an expectation that football players should do well in class and be visible, academic leaders.鈥

Barker works extensively with student-athletes and teaches an 鈥淎nthropology in Sport鈥 seminar. She has witnessed a twofold, positive effect from the players鈥 research. Non-athletes offer testimonials that they now realize how smart football players can be. The resulting, more integrated atmosphere has encouraged players鈥攊ncluding Jamora and Timu鈥攖o sit at the front of class, raise their hands, and feel welcome to participate on an equal playing field.

鈥淭hese negative stereotypes can really affect players. It surprised me to find out how much graduation rates and other numbers involved with academic achievement are impacted,鈥 says Jamora. 鈥淚t often goes under the radar, but it impacts society when you limit people in this way.鈥

For Jamora and Timu, their opportunities appear limitless. Both aspire to play in the NFL, but graduate school is also an option. Timu plans to finish his undergraduate work early so he can commence graduate studies before completing his 糖心少女football career.

鈥淭he 糖心少女is a research institution, but so much of that tends to happen at the graduate level. The symposium is important because we need to give undergrads an understanding of what research entails and demystify it if we want to get our best, brightest and most diverse students to consider grad school,鈥 says Barker.

At the conclusion of their symposium presentation, Jamora put on his glasses with a sly smile and they both removed their letterman jackets to reveal professional attire.

鈥淒o we have to take off our (athletic) jackets to be taken seriously?鈥 Jamora asked the audience.

The symposium was a welcome opportunity to present their research and demonstrate that football players are forces to contend with both on and off the field.

Honors student Genevieve Gebhart selected for Luce Scholarship

Genevieve (Gennie) Gebhart is the UW’s most recent Luce Scholar.

Genevieve (Gennie) Gebhart, a senior Honors student majoring in international studies and economics, was recently selected as a 2013-14 Luce Scholar. A graduate of Mercer Island High School, Gebhart is one of 18 students nationwide to receive this scholarship this year.

The 糖心少女 is one of two Pac-12 institutions with a Luce Scholar this year.

The is a major national scholarship awarded to fewer than 20 students each year. More than 160 candidates were nominated by 75 colleges and universities this year. The program is designed to raise awareness of Asia among young American leaders and funds a stipend, language training, and places scholars in professional worksites in Asia. A unique element of the Luce Scholars Program is that the foundation seeks students with little to no experience in and of Asia. Students who have had broad experience in Asia or who are majoring in Asian studies, for example, are ineligible for the scholarship.

Though she isn鈥檛 new to international travel (and was in Rome when she learned about her selection), Gebhart wrote by email that 鈥淎sia is the area of the world about which I know the least. I hope to gain some insight into Asia in general and my country of placement in particular, and [I] feel lucky to be able to do it with the support of the Luce Foundation’s experience, expertise, and infrastructure.鈥

As an undergraduate, Gebhart鈥檚 accomplishments extend well beyond the classroom and include research projects and leadership accomplishments. She has been on the Dean鈥檚 list every quarter since entering the 糖心少女in 2009; earned a Mary Gates Research Scholarship to research eating disorders, family dynamics and film in southern Italy; received Mary Gates Leadership Scholarships for her work developing the women鈥檚 program of the Husky Cycling Club and then serving as the club鈥檚 president; was the youngest-ever recipient of the 糖心少女Libraries Research Award for Undergraduates; and was selected for several additional scholarships. As if that weren鈥檛 enough, Gebhart is also a vocalist on the Grammy-nominated recording of 鈥淭he Shoe Bird鈥 with the Seattle Symphony.

Gebhart鈥檚 interests have led her on a multidisciplinary path culminating in a plan to pursue international librarianship and address issues of information access. She wrote, 鈥淢y multidisciplinary education has been one big string of surprises. I never could have predicted that I would be involved in economics, or film studies, or library sciences鈥攁nd, I never could have predicted that I would be doing those things all at once! My education at 糖心少女has made me more open to different fields and ways of doing things, and it’s made me more perceptive of unexpected connections among all those fields. For something like information sciences, this is invaluable鈥攚hat librarians do is so multidisciplinary and requires so much intellectual flexibility.

鈥淚nformation access takes a different shape in every nation and every community,鈥 writes Gebhart, 鈥渂ut in the end it comes down to a balance between literacy, distribution, and policy. I see my role as figuring out how to optimize these three elements, something that I think is impossible without public engagement and advocacy at every level. So,聽I think I can make the greatest contribution in clarifying and communicating the urgency of information issues to non-academic and non-professional audiences. We’ve got these buzz words like 鈥榦pen access,鈥 鈥榠nformation justice,鈥 and 鈥榠nformation commons鈥 floating around, but the connections between them are new, counterintuitive, and not yet well understood.鈥

Gebhart鈥檚 interest in libraries was inspired in part and wholly supported by her work in UW鈥檚 library system. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the people I get to work with that have really role-modeled for me the many ways in which a librarian can be a force for the greater good,鈥 she notes.

After her term as a Luce Scholar, Gebhart is considering graduate school but also wants to be open to opportunities that may present themselves while in Asia. Ultimately, though, 鈥淚 see myself following a path that sticks to what I think is at the heart of librarianship, regardless of how technology and resources change. It’s about how about how people express, record, and narrate their experiences, and how available information can shape communities and the people in them. I hope to look back one day and be able to say that everything I’ve done has been in service to those greater ideas, to using information for public good.鈥

In addition to her academic pursuits, Gebhart enjoys creative writing, swimming, hiking, and is studying Italian, French, and Latin.

Read a Q & A with Gebhart here.

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Q & A with Luce Scholar Genevieve Gebhart

Learn more about Gennie Gebhart’s experiences at the 糖心少女and what her future plans are in this Q&A, conducted over email while Gennie was on a study abroad experience in Rome.

Why did you apply for the Luce Scholarship?

I knew that I wanted to take time to travel after graduation, and I knew that I wanted to do something with libraries outside the US. I was especially drawn to the聽Luce聽because of the incredible amount of personal attention and support the program offers鈥攖he聽Luce聽Scholars Program works to find individual job placements for every scholar, and continues to support scholars with language training and periodic group meetings throughout the year.

What do you hope to learn through the Luce program?聽

I’ve been fortunate to do a lot of international travel, and Asia is the area of the world about which I know the least. I hope to gain some insight into Asia in general and my country of placement in particular, and feel lucky to be able to do it with the support of the Luce Foundation’s experience, expertise, and infrastructure.

Do you know where you鈥檒l be going? Where do you hope to go and why?

I’m still in the middle of the placement process, so I can’t say for sure yet. This is a great chance, however, to give the Luce Scholars Program huge thanks and praise for their placement process鈥攖heir support has been remarkable.

Your bio for the Luce scholarship says, 鈥淕ennie hopes to enter the global open access debate armed with international experience, a multidisciplinary education, and constant mindfulness of the vital human side of digital information technology.鈥 What do you imagine you鈥檒l do in the 鈥済lobal access debate鈥?

Information access takes a different shape in every nation and every community, but in the end it comes down to a balance between literacy, distribution, and policy. I see my role as figuring out how to optimize these three elements, something that I think is impossible without public engagement and advocacy at every level. So,聽I think I can make the greatest contribution in clarifying and communicating the urgency of information issues to non-academic and non-professional audiences. We’ve got these buzz words like “open access,” “information justice,” and “information commons” floating around, but the connections between them are new, counterintuitive, and not yet well understood.

What is it about a multidisciplinary education that you’ve found valuable? How have your academic experiences shaped who you are as a thinker and doer?

My multidisciplinary education has been one big string of surprises. I never could have predicted that I would be involved in economics, or film studies, or library sciences – and, I never could have predicted that I would be doing those things all at once! My education at 糖心少女has made me more open to different fields and ways of doing things, and it’s made me more perceptive of unexpected connections among all those fields. For something like information sciences, this is invaluable – what librarians do is so multidisciplinary and requires so much intellectual flexibility.

You have a long and varied list of accomplishments and interests. How do you see them relating to one another, and what are you most proud of and why?

Looking back, I can see that the each of the things I have been drawn to do has held the seeds of this interest in information sciences. For example, in journalism and publishing, I got to explore free speech and a professional’s ethical responsibility to making information available to the public; in environmental economics, I have discovered models for the management and distribution of public resources, whether they be tangible ecological resources or digital information resources; and in international studies, I have been pushed to pursue lines of cross-cultural inquiry to surprising conclusions. Somehow, they have all connected to and informed the work I want to do in international librarianship.

How have you grown as a leader in your time at the UW?

I have been a member of the Husky Cycling Club since my first day at UW, and the club has defined my undergraduate experience.聽After having the opportunity to lead the club as president, I have learned that you don’t need to be the most skilled member of the group to be a leader. I am definitely not the fastest bike rider in the bunch, but Husky Cycling has been so special because you don’t need to be a fast or talented or exceptional cyclist in any way to be a valuable part of the group. Instead it is all about initiative and community and creative opportunities for one another. Elite athletes and curious beginners come together on Husky Cycling because we just like riding bikes, and the profound results of that simple feeling–from group cohesion to competitive success to community service–continue to amaze me.

What kind of leadership do you think the world needs and how of you hope to develop as a leader as a result of this scholarship?

We can never have enough of the kind of leaders who thrive in helping others discover and understand what they’re capable of. This scholarship is giving me a chance to get involved in projects that come down to that same leadership principle: using information, and access to information, to enhance people’s and communities’ capacity for self-realization and self-determination.

What was it about your work in聽Odegaard that led to these interests? Was there a particular experience whereby that experienced transformed from work to passion?

I can’t say enough about how my mentors at Odegaard – as well as in other parts of the 糖心少女Libraries like the Media Center, Suzzallo, and administration – have inspired and supported me. Work and projects in different parts of the 糖心少女Libraries have stimulated me and allowed me to learn more about day-to-day operations in such a massive library system, but it’s the people I get to work with that have really role-modeled for me the many ways in which a librarian can be a force for the greater good.

What do you see yourself doing after graduation and after your Luce experience?

Different travel/research fellowships are on my mind, as is grad school – but anything could happen during this next year, so I want to stay open to that, too. Right now, though, all my efforts right now are on selecting where I’m going to go as a Luce Scholar and preparing for that experience.

Project ahead鈥攚ay ahead鈥攁nd imagine you鈥檙e at your retirement party. From what are you retiring and what do you hope people will say about your life鈥檚 work? Is there anything else you’d like to add?

The technology and methods and goals are all changing so fast that it’s hard to predict what my job description will be in 40, 20, or even 5 years. That’s one of the things I like most about this field – how dynamic it is. I see myself following a path, though, that sticks to what I think is at the heart of librarianship, regardless of how technology and resources change. It’s about how people express, record, and narrate their experiences, and how available information can shape communities and the people in them. I hope to look back one day and be able to say that everything I’ve done has been in service to those greater ideas, to using information for public good

From Sputnik to the 21st century: A brief history of the 糖心少女Honors Program

Being a student of the popular TV show 鈥淢ad Men鈥 isn鈥檛 necessary to recognize the significant shifts in American society in the 1960s. The 糖心少女Honors Program was created in the midst of these changes. In this brief history, learn how and why the Honors Program came about and how it鈥檚 different today.

Seventh 糖心少女Common Book explores the meaning and power of respect

Respect: An Exploration by Sara Lawrence-Lightfoot has been selected as the seventh 糖心少女 . The 糖心少女Common Book project welcomes freshmen and transfer students to the University鈥檚 academic community through a shared reading experience and offers opportunities for students and faculty to enjoy special common book events and discussions.

Respect tells the stories of six remarkable but ordinary people and the central role that the value of respect plays in their lives and work. The accounts span the human experience, from birth to death and across a wide range of professions including midwife, pediatrician, teacher, professor, artist, and therapist, each revealing another dimension or 鈥渨indow鈥 into the nature of respect. Several stories also describe the experiences of students.

鈥淣ot only is respect a 糖心少女value,鈥 says Ed Taylor, vice provost and dean of Undergraduate Academic Affairs. 鈥淏ut the book itself is a wonderful introduction to a particular form of scholarship practiced by our faculty. This is work of deep inquiry. It is an example of questioning and the kind of discovery and insight that come from careful observation, analysis, and thought.鈥

The author, Lawrence-Lightfoot, is a noted educator, researcher, author and public intellectual. She is a professor in the School of Education at Harvard University and author of 10 books. Lawrence-Lightfoot has received broad public and academic acclaim for her work, including a prestigious MacArthur Fellowship.

As in past years, this year鈥檚 Common Book project encompassed a number of student oriented-activities including a 聽lecture by Lawrence-Lightfoot on November 5. Additionally, for the first time the Common Book served as a text for Freshmen Interest Groups (FIGs) and Transfer Interest Groups (TriGs). FIGs and TrIGS are small student-led classes designed to help incoming students make the transition into the 糖心少女community.

To help integrate the Common Book into the FIG curriculum, a group of student FIG leaders met weekly during spring quarter to develop new classroom exercises and assignments around Respect.

Students received a copy of Respect during their summer orientation and advising sessions and were asked to read it over the summer before the start of classes.

The Common Book is sponsored by Undergraduate Academic Affairs. Learn more online via the

Janice DeCosmo elected to executive board of national Council on Undergraduate Research

Janice DeCosmo, associate dean in Undergraduate Academic Affairs, was recently elected chair of the division of Undergraduate Research Program directors for the national organization Council on Undergraduate Research. Janice has served as a councilor of that division for several years; being elected chair of that division also includes being a member of the executive board for the Council on Undergraduate Research. It is a two-year term.

The Council on Undergraduate Research is a membership organization representing more than 900 colleges and universities, and is the professional organization for faculty and administrators who work on undergraduate research initiatives. The Council helps colleges and universities support faculty involvement in undergraduate research and draws attention to undergraduate research on a national level. They support an undergraduate research poster session on Capitol Hill and meetings with legislators, serve as an informed body to provide feedback and insight on National Science Foundation work involving undergraduate researchers. As a member of the executive board, Janice will be involved in policy, planning, decision-making, structuring the annual meeting, etc.

“The thing I find compelling about CUR is there are so many institutions that are members,” says Janice. “The meetings are full of rich ideas about implementation and big ideas about new directions. It’s a very open and collegial organization.”

Here’s CUR’s website: http://www.cur.org/

Honors Colloquium showcases student experiential learning experiences

At this year’s Honors Colloquium, presentations included students鈥 research, leadership, travel and service learning experiences. This new premise was designed to align with the alterations to the Honors curriculum, which incorporates each of these four elements (research, service, leadership and travel) into the new set of Honors requirements.

This I believe: Being open to connection

Katie McCorkell Photo
Katie McCorkell is an undergraduate Honors student majoring in psychology at the 糖心少女. She received a Mary Gates Leadership Scholarship for her involvement with Active Minds, a student organization that works to change the conversation about mental health.

In my first moment of leadership, I wasn鈥檛 trying to be a leader. I didn鈥檛 know if anyone would really get what I was saying, but I said it anyway. 鈥淢y brother has paranoid schizophrenia.鈥 It was part of a poem I performed at a poetry slam in Seattle, a poem that upon finishing, left me in tears. That night I discovered that there was someone who needed to hear what I was saying. That someone was me.

This is the foundation of all leadership work I do. I believe that leadership is about opening yourself to connection, and if you鈥檝e been closed off for a while, you鈥檒l find the first person you need to connect with is yourself. When I stood up for my beliefs in front of other people, I was most amazed by the things I learned about myself. Previously I wanted to speak out about mental illness, but I had never seen anyone else do it before. Not at school, not at poetry events, not in church. I didn鈥檛 know the impact speaking out could have until I did it. When I spoke openly about my brother鈥檚 struggle with a mental illness, I figured out what his struggle meant to me. I admitted it was a part of me, even though I wanted to ignore it. When I really connected with the experience, and discovered the grief and pain and hope that I held, I gave others the courage to make their own connections.

Last fall I helped start a poetry community at the 糖心少女. When we planned our first open-mic, we weren鈥檛 sure many people would come. I said, 鈥淓ven if it is just the five of us, I want to get together and share poems with you.鈥 I wanted to speak out and I needed to be heard. It turns out, so did a lot of other students. Our first open-mic was packed, and I was amazed at the number of people who gave poetry, applause, or simply their presence. Each open-mic, I learned a new name and encouraged a new poet to the stage. It was a joy to watch other people perform for the first time, because I got to see them discover the same thing I discovered: that other people find their stories important. I saw them hear themselves in a way that they never imagined possible.

Once I invited someone to go with me to the youth slam where I first got my start. I called her directly, and I said, 鈥淗ey, Want to go with me? Oh, and you鈥檙e eligible to compete. You should give it a try.鈥 She wasn鈥檛 sure. 鈥淏ut they鈥檙e so good鈥ut what if I suck?鈥 鈥淪o what,鈥 I said, 鈥淲e鈥檙e going together, why not compete? Meet me at the bus stop at 6:15.鈥

My friend won the slam that night, but I got the biggest prize of all. Bringing her to the slam was far different than simply performing myself. She had a new found confidence in the importance of her voice, and she got much more involved in the Seattle poetry scene. She is a leading officer in our club this year, committed to giving other people the same opportunity I gave her. Recently, she thanked me for taking her to the slam, 鈥淚 never would鈥檝e performed if you hadn鈥檛 told me to.鈥

This goes to show that leadership can sustain and grow itself. It can be energizing, not exhausting. The first step is simply saying, 鈥淚 think you鈥檙e the right person for the job,鈥 and the next step is following through to communicate the job鈥檚 skills and responsibilities. When these steps grow from genuine connections, the process is smooth. That鈥檚 why I believe that leadership is about opening myself to connection. Because leaders stand up for their beliefs in a way that connects and good leaders inspire others to join them. Great leaders give others the tools to take their own stand.

This essay is part of an occasional series inspired by the 鈥淭his I Believe鈥 series on the Bob Edwards Show. For more information on it, visit聽.