Faculty Staff Insider /facultystaff A centralized landing page for 天美影院faculty, staff and student employees. Wed, 01 Jul 2026 18:04:52 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 2026 Awards of Excellence honors the 天美影院community /facultystaff/2026/07/01/2026-awards-of-excellence/ Wed, 01 Jul 2026 17:42:24 +0000 /facultystaff/?p=9911 Written by Lili Derkach

The 天美影院鈥檚 Awards of Excellence celebrates exceptional alumni, faculty, staff, students and retirees who embody the public mission at the heart of the University.

On June 11, Meany Hall welcomed colleagues, friends and family members to honor this year’s recipients at the 56th annual ceremony. President Robert J. Jones hosted the ceremony for the first time, presenting the recipients with their medals and sharing celebratory remarks alongside 天美影院Provost and Executive Vice President for Academic Affairs Tricia Serio.

Read about the extraordinary 2026 recipients below and take a look at some photos from the event.

2026 Awards of Excellence Recipients

Distinguished Staff Award for Career Achievement

Danielle Woodward, Assistant Director, Social Development Research Group, School of Social Work

Since beginning her 天美影院career in 1994 as a data collector, Danielle co-founded the Survey Research Division and built a nationally respected data enterprise. She now leads a 35鈥憄erson team that generates about $2 million annually, with longitudinal study retention exceeding 85%. Known as a compassionate and visionary leader, her mentorship, collaboration and commitment to excellence underpin the group鈥檚 lasting success.


Distinguished Staff Award for Collaboration

Traci Townsend, Program Operations Specialist III, Wireless Design and Architecture, 天美影院Information Technology

As a program operations specialist, Traci oversees the complex Wi鈥慒i infrastructure across all 天美影院campuses and medical centers, ensuring reliable connectivity for thousands of users. Known as 鈥淭raci Wi鈥慒i鈥 for her expertise, she collaborates with vendors, finance teams and partners throughout the University, leading complex deployments and sharing solutions across the UW-IT system.


Distinguished Staff Award for Impact

Lisa Norton, Director of Licensing, Physical Sciences & Engineering, CoMotion

Through her more than 20 years of service, Lisa has guided 天美影院research teams through technology commercialization that delivers societal, economic and health impacts. She helped expand CoMotion鈥檚 work and negotiated a landmark licensing agreement benefiting the UW, innovators, investors and patients. Known as an exceptional technology licensor, Lisa鈥檚 work has improved lives across Washington state and the world.


Distinguished Staff Award for Inclusion and Belonging

Angela Ott, Fiscal Specialist, Payee, Mental Health and Addiction Services, Harborview Medical Center

Angela embodies the values of inclusion and belonging through her compassion and respect for every client and colleague at Harborview Mental Health and Addiction Services. She consistently supports unhoused and vulnerable populations with patience and humility, while fostering a clinic culture rooted in empathy, human connection, trust and teamwork in keeping with Harborview鈥檚 mission.


Distinguished Staff Award for Innovation

Undergraduate Advising Centralization Leadership Team, Office of Student Academic Success, 天美影院Bothell

Claire Grant, Assistant Director of Advising

Garick Sherburn, Assistant Director of Advising

Nhi Phuong Tran, Assistant Director of Advising

Jessica Trenkamp, Assistant Director of Advising

Suzanne Yates, Assistant Dean

This team reimagined student success by leading a bold, campus-wide transformation to centralize undergraduate advising. In one year, they united 26 staff into a single collaborative unit, cross-trained advisers, established shared policies, launched an online system to connect students and advisers, and created a new professional adviser career ladder. Their work has improved equity, retention and students鈥 experience.


David B. Thorud Leadership Award

Suzanne Allen, Vice Dean, Academic, Rural and Regional Affairs, School of Medicine

As the nation鈥檚 largest and most geographically complex medical education program, WWAMI serves five states and hundreds of partners. With her collaborative, equity-centered leadership, Suzanne has built innovative regional partnerships, strengthened rural health education, safeguarded state funding and guided curriculum and strategic planning to shape regional medical education.


David B. Thorud Leadership Award

Santhi Perumal, Vice Chancellor, Planning & Administration, 天美影院Bothell, recognized for her work at the 天美影院College of Education on the Seattle campus

Santhi is a visionary, people-centered leader whose work blends strategic insight, operational excellence, and a deep commitment to equity, transparency and care. At the 天美影院College of Education, Santhi led transformative innovations that were adopted across the 天美影院 in Seattle, expanded community-engaged doctoral education, strengthened facilities planning, elevated fiscal transparency, and fostered a culture of trust, mentorship and shared leadership.


Distinguished Librarian Award

John Vallier, Curator, Ethnomusicology Archives, Special Collections, University Libraries

John has transformed access to and preservation of the 天美影院Ethnomusicology Archives, one of North America鈥檚 largest collections of its kind. He secured nearly $1鈥痬illion to digitize and protect fragile, at鈥憆isk recordings 鈥 which created more interdisciplinary access. He also led 天美影院Libraries鈥 largest repatriation effort, returning more than 30,000 items through ethical, community-centered collaboration and stewardship.


天美影院Alumni Association Distinguished Service Award

Gregg Blodgett, 鈥76, Michael G. Foster School of Business and College of Arts & Sciences; President, 天美影院Alumni Association (ret.)

Since graduating from the 天美影院in 1976, Gregg has been a longtime Alumni Association volunteer and leader who served as UWAA president during a pivotal period of institutional growth and closer integration with the University. A trusted mentor to successive UWAA board leaders, Gregg鈥檚 guidance has strengthened alumni engagement and governance for nearly two decades.


天美影院Alumni Association Distinguished Retiree Excellence in Community Service Award

Sandy Moy, Chief Operating Officer, University Computing Services (ret.)

After more than 20 years in computing and communications at the UW, Sandy retired in 2008 as the chief operating officer from what is now UW-IT. A founding volunteer and longtime leader of Northwest Neighbors Network, Sandy helped that organization grow from 20 to 400 members. As one of the network鈥檚 most dedicated volunteers, Sandy contributes about 3,000 hours each year supporting seniors and adults with disabilities.


Distinguished Teaching Award

Megan Callow, Teaching Professor, English, College of Arts & Sciences

Megan is the founding director of Writing@UW, a program that fosters a tri鈥慶ampus culture of writing and centralized support for faculty who teach writing. She models reflective, learner鈥慶entered pedagogy that emphasizes metacognition, rhetorical agency and belonging, particularly in STEM contexts. Megan鈥檚 impact extends through faculty development, graduate instructor mentoring and nationally recognized scholarship on writing pedagogy.


Distinguished Teaching Award

Hannah Jordt, Associate Teaching Professor, Genome Sciences, School of Medicine

By following high鈥慽ntensity active learning and growth鈥憁indset practices, Hannah creates inclusive, evidence鈥慴ased learning environments in large STEM courses. She builds community through personalized outreach, peer鈥慺acilitator programs, and mentorship of graduate students and faculty. Beyond her classroom, she advances equitable genetics education through discipline鈥慴ased education research and national service.


Distinguished Teaching Award

Wes King, Assistant Teaching Professor, Information School

Wes designs courses that invite students to critically examine social, ethical and cultural tensions around information, technology, identity and power. Through experiential assignments and inclusive pedagogy, Wes encourages active learning and courageous dialogue. In addition, Wes builds strong teaching communities by mentoring teaching assistants and modeling reflective, socially responsible teaching practices.


Distinguished Teaching Award

Jill Purdy, Professor; Director, Entrepreneurship Center; Milgard School of Business, 天美影院Tacoma

As an award-winning educator with more than 30 years of experience, Jill is renowned for her reflective, student-centered teaching. She fosters inclusive, engaging classrooms; designs accessible materials; and leads community-engaged, real-world learning. Jill mentors faculty and builds cross-disciplinary connections that strengthen teaching culture and student success through campus-wide entrepreneurship initiatives and mentoring.


Distinguished Teaching Award

Georgia M. Roberts, Lecturer, American Ethnic Studies, School of Interdisciplinary Arts & Sciences, 天美影院Bothell

To help students connect their coursework to lived experiences, Georgia creates transformative, inclusive learning environments that blend interdisciplinary scholarship, critical inquiry and reflective practice. Georgia is recognized across 天美影院Bothell for exceptional mentorship and innovative impact achieved through inclusive, anti-racist teaching at the intersection of literature, hip-hop and ethnic studies.


Distinguished Teaching Award

Casey J. Self, Teaching Professor, Biology, College of Arts & Sciences

Casey鈥檚 evidence鈥慴ased, growth鈥憃riented teaching practices emphasize reflection and learning as an iterative process. She creates highly structured, learner鈥慸riven classrooms focused on the 鈥渨hy鈥 behind concepts and empowers student inquiry. Her impact extends beyond the classroom through extensive service, including chairing the Faculty Council on Teaching & Learning and advancing University鈥憌ide teaching effectiveness.


Distinguished Teaching Team Award

Collier-Otten-Spiker Food Systems Teaching Team, School of Public Health

Sarah Collier, Assistant Professor, Environmental & Occupational Health Sciences

Jennifer Otten, Professor, Environmental & Occupational Health Sciences

Marie Spiker, Assistant Professor, Epidemiology

Through their collaboratively designed courses, this team has built and sustained an interdisciplinary teaching partnership that anchors the food systems, nutrition, and health major. Grounded in civic health principles, their teaching and mentorship helps their students reach the nuanced understanding of complex food system topics that will advance their leadership throughout their careers.


Distinguished Teaching Team Award

Community-Engaged Civil Engineering and Urban Design Capstone Team, 天美影院Tacoma

Nara Almeida, Assistant Teaching Professor, Civil Engineering, School of Engineering & Technology

B谩ra 艩af谩艡ov谩, Assistant Professor, Urban Design, School of Urban Studies

This team immerses students in鈥痳eal-life challenges that nurture not only technical competence but also civic responsibility. One example is their interdisciplinary capstone course in which civil engineering and urban design students work directly with University partners, city stakeholders and local firms to help create a new vision for 天美影院Tacoma鈥檚 2050 comprehensive plan.


Distinguished Teaching Legacy Award 鈥

Edward D. Lazowska, Bill & Melinda Gates Chair Emeritus, Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering

With a teaching legacy that spans more than five decades, Ed has mentored generations of students, future faculty and technology leaders. Beyond the classroom, he powerfully communicated the value of the University and the Allen School to civic, business and political leaders. While leading transformative growth in computer science, he remained deeply committed to teaching and advising Ph.D. students whose global influence endures.


Excellence in Teaching Award

Rachael Herren, Doctoral Candidate, Theatre History and Performance Studies, School of Drama

Rachael鈥檚 theater classrooms are supportive spaces for rehearsing the complexity of adult life. She embraces practices such as 鈥渟peaking in drafts鈥 to encourage revision, risk-taking and confidence. She encourages undergraduate scholarship, and many of her students present their research at University and national conferences. Rachael also demonstrates exceptional teaching leadership across multiple instructional roles while mentoring new graduate instructors.


Excellence in Teaching Award

Jennifer Zheng, Doctoral Candidate, Communication, College of Arts & Sciences

Jennifer has served in a variety of teaching roles, including instructor of record and lead teaching assistant for large鈥慹nrollment courses. She supports undergraduate research, in addition to developing curriculum and training instructors in community鈥慴ased public speaking and debate programs. Jennifer鈥檚 reflective, experiential pedagogy connects theory to real鈥憌orld contexts to empower students鈥 confidence, critical thinking and academic growth.


Distinguished Contributions to Lifelong Learning Award

Rebecca M. Price, Professor, School of Interdisciplinary Arts & Sciences, 天美影院Bothell

Grounded in mentoring, reflection and inclusive practice, Rebecca has created inclusive, evidence鈥慴ased learning environments for undergraduates, adult learners and future faculty across disciplines. As one nominator wrote, Rebecca鈥檚 鈥渃ontributions鈥痙emonstrate鈥痶hat lifelong learning is not an add-on to academic life, but a guiding principle that shapes teaching,鈥痬entoring, scholarship and service.鈥


University Faculty Lecture Award

Noah A. Smith, Professor, Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering; Charles and Lisa Simonyi Endowed Chair, Artificial Intelligence and Emerging Technologies; Vice Provost, Artificial Intelligence

Recognized as an international leader in natural language processing and artificial intelligence, Noah has helped shape modern language modeling, machine learning methodology and computational social science. He is widely recognized for advancing responsible, sustainable 鈥淕reen AI鈥 through open research and replicability, and is an engaging public speaker who makes complex AI concepts accessible to broad audiences. Noah will present a lecture in鈥2027.


Excellence in Global Engagement Award

James Sherrell, Program Specialist, EthnoMed, Harborview Medical Center

Through community partnerships and teaching cross鈥慶ultural care, James is strengthening communication and cultural competency across 天美影院Medicine. When he redesigned EthnoMed, James centered the needs of immigrant and refugee communities 鈥 and, at the same time, expanded experiential learning for 天美影院students, residents and clinicians. As one colleague wrote, James鈥 work reflects his belief that global engagement begins in one鈥檚 own backyard.


Marsha L. Landolt Distinguished Graduate Mentor Award

Anjum Hajat, Associate Professor, Epidemiology, School of Public Health

Over her career, Anjum has chaired 31 graduate committees 鈥 and served on 31 more. She has mentored more than 90 graduate students and postdoctoral scholars. Anjum exemplifies the highest standards of graduate mentorship through sustained, holistic support that centers students and their voices to encourage their academic, professional and personal development.


Outstanding Public Service Award

Scott Bingham, Executive Director, Computing and Productivity Platforms, 天美影院Information Technology

Beyond his leadership role at the UW, Scott founded Housing Solutions for Hope to support families facing housing instability during their ch ildren鈥檚 medical care. He leads a volunteer鈥憆un guild that has raised more than $1 million, helping over 250 families and building trusted community partnerships that address housing as a critical factor in positive health outcomes and lives.


Distinguished Alumni Veteran Award

Elizabeth Bridges, 鈥91, 鈥98, School of Nursing; Colonel, U.S. Air Force Nurse Corps (ret.)

A national leader in military and critical care nursing, Elizabeth transformed care for critically ill and injured service members, particularly in aeromedical evacuation. An inspiring mentor, she challenged nurses, officers and professionals to exceed their own expectations. Through leadership and example, she continues to develop future nurse leaders across military medicine and academic nursing communities.


President鈥檚 Medal

Julia Grace Lee, 鈥26, School of Nursing

Julia earned her degree in nursing and graduated with a perfect 4.0. As a Seattle native, she was drawn to the 天美影院to stay connected to the communities that shaped her. She has studied Mandarin Chinese and Japanese to deepen her ability to connect with patients. And she has conducted honors research in music-based interventions for dementia patients. She will be starting as an intensive care unit nurse at Swedish Medical Center.


President鈥檚 Medal

Tom McAlister, 鈥26, School of Art + Art History + Design, College of Arts & Sciences

Tom transferred to the 天美影院 from Tacoma Community College and has maintained a perfect academic record at the UW. He graduated as an art major and a member of the Phi Beta Kappa Honor Society. He is also the recipient of the prestigious Bonderman Fellowship, which will allow him to travel the world and further explore the question of how humans and their relationship to art can change the world.


天美影院Alumni Association Alumna Summa Laude Dignata

Mary Brunkow, 鈥83, College of Arts & Sciences; Distinguished Investigator and Senior Program Manager, Institute for Systems Biology

An internationally recognized scientist, Mary was awarded the 2025 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for co鈥慸iscovering the FOXP3 gene, a foundational breakthrough that has transformed understanding of regulatory T-cells and immune tolerance. Her work has advanced treatments for autoimmune disease, cancer and transplant rejection, reflecting extraordinary global impact and lifelong commitment to scientific service. She also served as the University鈥檚 2026 commencement ceremony speaker.

Photo gallery

Orchestra performance
Danielle Woodward receiving award
Traci Townsend receiving award
Lisa Norton receiving award
Crowd cheering
Angela Ott receiving award
Undergraduate Advising Centralization Leadership Team Undergraduate Advising Centralization Leadership Team receiving award
Suzanne Allen receiving award
John Vallier receiving award
Gregg Blodgett receiving award
Sandy Moy receiving award
天美影院Provost and Executive Vice President for Academic Affairs Tricia Serio on stage
Megan Callow receiving award
Hannah Jordt receiving award
Wes King receiving award
Jill Purdy receiving award
Georgia Robers receiving award
Casey Self receiving award
Collier-Otten-Spiker Food Systems Teaching Team receiving award
Community-Engaged Civil Engineering and Urban Design Capstone Team receiving award
Edward Lazowska receiving award
Rachael Herren receiving award
Jennifer Zheng receiving award
Rebecca Price receiving award
Noah Smith receiving award
James Sherrell receiving award
Anjum Hajat receiving award
Scott Bingham receiving award
Elizabeth Bridges receiving award
Tom McAlister receiving award
Julia Lee receiving award
Mary Brunkow receiving award
Mary Brunkow
Attendees in conversation
Attendees taking a photo
Attendees taking a photo
Recipients celebrating
Attendees in conversation
Attendees taking a photo
Reception table
Reception
天美影院Provost and Executive Vice President for Academic Affairs Tricia Serio with others at reception
Paul Rucker reception
President Robert J. Jones at reception

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Announcing the 2026 Awards of Excellence recipients /facultystaff/2026/04/29/uw-announces-2026-awards-of-excellence-recipients/ Wed, 29 Apr 2026 16:59:52 +0000 /facultystaff/?p=9786 The 天美影院is delighted to announce the recipients of the 56th annual 天美影院 Awards of Excellence! The awards honor outstanding alumni, faculty, staff, students and retirees who contribute to the richness and diversity of our University community.

The awardees will be honored at a ceremony in Meany Hall on Thursday, June 11 at 3:30 p.m. The program includes a one-hour ceremony hosted by President Robert J. Jones and Provost Tricia Serio, followed by a reception with refreshments and community connection.

The 天美影院 is committed to providing access and accommodation in its services, programs and activities. To make a request connected to a disability or health condition, contact University Marketing & Communications at 206-616-8160 or via email.

2026 awardees

Distinguished Staff Award

Established in 1997, the Distinguished Staff Award honors outstanding staff members who contribute to the missions of their units and the University, respond creatively to challenges, maintain the highest standards in their work, establish productive relationships with colleagues, and promote a respectful and supportive workplace. This year, awardees are being honored in the following categories: career achievement; collaboration; impact; inclusion and belonging; and innovation.

Career Achievement

Danielle Woodward, Assistant Director, Social Development Research Group, School of Social Work

Collaboration

Traci Townsend, Program Operations Specialist III, Wireless Design and Architecture, 天美影院Information Technology

Impact

Lisa Norton, Director of Licensing, Physical Sciences & Engineering, CoMotion

Inclusion and Belonging

Angela Ott, Fiscal Specialist, Payee, Mental Health and Addiction Services, Harborview Medical Center

Innovation

Undergraduate Advising Centralization Leadership Team, 天美影院Bothell

Claire Grant, Assistant Director of Advising, Navigate 360, Undergraduate Academic Advising, 天美影院Bothell
Garick Sherburn, Assistant Director of Advising, Marketing and Communications, Undergraduate Academic Advising, 天美影院Bothell
Nhi Phuong Tran, Assistant Director of Advising, First Year Programs, Undergraduate Academic Advising, 天美影院Bothell
Jessica Trenkamp, Assistant Director of Advising, Hiring and Training, Undergraduate Academic Advising, 天美影院Bothell
Suzanne Yates, Assistant Dean, Undergraduate Academic Advising, 天美影院Bothell

David B. Thorud Leadership Award

The David B. Thorud Leadership Award is given to one 天美影院faculty member and one staff member who demonstrate exceptional abilities to lead, serve, inspire and collaborate. First bestowed in 2006, the award is named in honor of David B. Thorud, who served the University in leadership positions for 25 years.

Suzanne Allen, Vice Dean, Academic, Rural and Regional Affairs, School of Medicine
Santhi Perumal, Vice Chancellor, Planning & Administration, 天美影院Bothell

Distinguished Librarian Award

Established in 2008, the Distinguished Librarian Award recognizes excellence in librarianship, especially as it benefits the academic community through teaching, research, learning and innovative approaches to practice.

John Vallier, Curator, Ethnomusicology Archives, Special Collections, University Libraries

Distinguished Service Award

Since 1970, this award has honored a 天美影院Alumni Association group or member who positively impacts both the Alumni Association and the larger 天美影院 community.

Gregg Blodgett, 鈥76, Michael G. Foster School of Business and College of Arts & Sciences; CFO, Phamis, Inc. (ret.)

Distinguished Retiree Excellence in Community Service Award

This award is given to a faculty or staff retiree for the quality of the individual鈥檚 contributions, after retirement, in service to the community locally, regionally, nationally or internationally.

Sandy Moy, Director, University Computing Services (ret.)

Distinguished Teaching Award

Recipients of the Distinguished Teaching Award are chosen based on the degree to which they exemplify an iterative, reflective teaching practice with evidence of pedagogical experimentation and refinement over time; commitment to inclusive teaching and mentoring and valuing students鈥 experiences; dedication to creating transformative learning experiences that foster deep reflection and critical inquiry; and service as a mentor, collaborator and consultant on teaching-related matters to other faculty or teaching assistants.

Megan Callow, Teaching Professor, English, College of Arts & Sciences
Hannah Jordt, Associate Teaching Professor, Genome Sciences, School of Medicine
Wes King, Assistant Teaching Professor, Information School
Jill Purdy, Professor, Milgard School of Business, 天美影院Tacoma
Georgia M. Roberts, Lecturer, American Ethnic Studies, School of Interdisciplinary Arts & Sciences, 天美影院Bothell
Casey J. Self, Teaching Professor, Biology, College of Arts & Sciences

Collier-Otten-Spiker Food Systems Teaching Team

Sarah Collier, Assistant Professor, Environmental & Occupational Health Sciences, School of Public Health; Core Faculty, Food Systems, Nutrition, and Health, School of Public Health
Jennifer Otten, Professor, Food Systems, Nutrition, and Health, Environmental & Occupational Health Sciences, School of Public Health
Marie Spiker, Assistant Professor, Food Systems, Nutrition, and Health, Epidemiology, School of Public Health

Community-Engaged Civil Engineering and Urban Design Capstone: Students鈥 Vision for Campus Masterplan Team, 天美影院Tacoma

Nara Almeida, Assistant Teaching Professor, Civil Engineering, School of Engineering & Technology, 天美影院Tacoma
B谩ra 艩af谩艡ov谩, Assistant Professor, Urban Design, School of Urban Studies, 天美影院Tacoma

Distinguished Teaching Legacy Award

Created in 2017, this award celebrates the legacy of transformational teaching. It honors a 天美影院teacher, living or not, who influenced and inspired students long after they left the classroom.

Edward D. Lazowska, Bill & Melinda Gates Chair Emeritus, Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering

Excellence in Teaching Award

Presented since 1983, this award recognizes two graduate teaching assistants who demonstrate outstanding skills in the classroom.

Rachael Herren, Doctoral Candidate, Theatre History and Performance Studies, School of Drama

Jennifer Zheng, Doctoral Candidate, Communication, College of Arts & Sciences

Distinguished Contributions to Lifelong Learning Award

This award is given to a full-time 天美影院faculty member who has taught for at least two years in innovative non-degree programs sponsored by the University and designed for professional development, personal interest or career redirection.

Rebecca M. Price, Professor, School of Interdisciplinary Arts & Sciences, 天美影院Bothell

University Faculty Lecture Award

Since 1976, this award has honored current or emeritus faculty whose research, scholarship or art is widely recognized by their peers and whose achievements have had a substantial impact on their profession and society. The recipient of this award delivers the annual University Faculty Lecture to share their creativity and scholarship with the greater 天美影院community.

Noah A. Smith, Professor, Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering

Excellence in Global Engagement Award

This award honors a 天美影院community member whose teaching, research or community-building activities connect 天美影院students, faculty and staff to global communities locally, nationally and internationally 鈥 establishing the honoree as a leader in global engagement. The award alternates each year between faculty and staff honorees.

James Sherrell, Program Specialist, EthnoMed, Harborview Medical Center

Marsha L. Landolt Distinguished Graduate Mentor Award

The Marsha L. Landolt Distinguished Graduate Mentor Award recognizes a faculty member who excels at the intense one-on-one teaching that is the hallmark of graduate study. First bestowed in 1999, the award honors the memory of Marsha L. Landolt, who served as dean of the Graduate School from 1996 to 2004.

Anjum Hajat, Associate Professor, Epidemiology, School of Public Health

Outstanding Public Service Award

Since 1980, this award has recognized exceptional achievement in public service by a faculty or staff member.

Scott Bingham, Executive Director, Computing and Productivity Platforms, 天美影院Information Technology

Distinguished Alumni Veteran Award

This award is bestowed on a graduate and veteran who has made a positive impact through community service and civic engagement.

Elizabeth Bridges, 鈥91, 鈥98, School of Nursing; Colonel, U.S. Air Force Nurse Corps (ret.)

President鈥檚 Medal

Since 1932, the 天美影院president has awarded a medal to the听graduating senior who achieved the most distinguished听academic record at the University for that year. In 2004,听the president began awarding the medal to two graduating听seniors: one who has completed at least three-fourths of听their degree requirements at the UW, and one who entered听the University with at least 60 transfer credits from a听Washington community college.

Julia Grace Lee, School of Nursing
Tom McAlister, School of Art + Art History + Design

Alumna Summa Laude Dignata

This honor, first bestowed in 1938, is awarded to a former 天美影院student whose achievements have earned them national or international prominence. It is the highest honor the University can bestow on any graduate.

Mary E. Brunkow, 鈥83, College of Arts & Sciences; Distinguished Investigator, Institute for Systems Biology

 

Do you want to nominate a 天美影院colleague for an award? The next cycle of awards will open in early October 2026.

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An interview with University Faculty Lecturer Dr. Douglas Wood /facultystaff/2026/01/21/an-interview-with-university-faculty-lecturer-dr-douglas-wood/ Wed, 21 Jan 2026 20:51:43 +0000 /facultystaff/?p=9440 By any measure, 天美影院Surgery Professor and Chair Dr. Douglas Wood is a thoracic oncology trailblazer. He has spent his career saving the lives of lung cancer patients 鈥 individually as a world-renowned thoracic surgeon and en masse as a national leader in the development and expansion of lung cancer screening.

Dr. Wood and his sister were the first in their family to go to college; he attended Harvard University and stayed in the Boston area for medical training before joining the 天美影院 in 1992. At that time, 鈥淭here was little development of specialized thoracic surgery,鈥 he says. 鈥淣ow, we have one of the premier cardiothoracic training programs and one of the largest thoracic surgical practices in the country.鈥

Dr. Wood is the winner of the 天美影院2025 University Faculty Lecture Award, which has been honoring a current or former faculty member and the societal impact of their research or art for more than 50 years. He is only the second physician to receive the award. Dr. Wood will present his lecture, 鈥淎 breath of fresh air: The science and policy saving lives from America鈥檚 deadliest cancer,鈥 on Thursday, Feb. 5 at 5:30 p.m.

This talk is intended for a general audience, and attendees are invited to 听at the HUB Lyceum or .

In advance of his lecture, Dr. Wood spoke with us about his path to the 天美影院and the work 丑别鈥檚 doing to raise lung cancer awareness, increase access to early detection, and ultimately, change lung cancer victims to lung cancer survivors.

Tell us about why you chose to study medicine, and the lungs specifically.

My sister and I grew up on a farm, and my parents, who just completed high school, appreciated, respected and emphasized education for both of us, so it was a clear path to university.

I was always interested in science, particularly biology, and considered being a marine biologist. But as I went through college and was exposed to medicine, I really felt it was a place where I could apply my interest in science and biology in a way that had an impact on people. When I talk to my faculty or trainees now about the privilege of what we do, I say, 鈥淲e are so lucky. We get to do something every day that helps people live better or live longer.鈥 I think about it with more clarity now than I think I did as a college student, but that was a connection that I made.

I always had a surgical interest when I entered medical school. And as I considered different areas of surgery, I liked the anatomy, the physiology and the diversity of problems in cardiothoracic.

It鈥檚 alarming to hear that lung cancer is the most common cancer fatality 鈥 more than breast, colon and prostate (the following three most common) combined. What work are you doing to change that?

The other statistic that is important is that the sixth most common cause of cancer death in the U.S. is lung cancer in never-smokers. Lung cancer death rates peaked about 20 or 30 years ago and have been falling at a rate of about 2% to 3% per year, which is significant. More recently, that has increased to falling at a rate of 5% to 6% per year. That is huge.

Part of it relates to decreasing smoking rates in the United States. But it also relates to early detection and the advanced therapies that have developed in the last 10 to 15 years for people even with advanced lung cancer.

As for what I鈥檝e done, I would put it in three categories:

For my whole career, the most common disease I treat is lung cancer. So, one of my impacts, and maybe the one that I care most about, is the one-on-one of being a cardiothoracic surgeon who cares for patients.

If I may give an anecdote about patient experience, 10 years ago, I was in my clinic. My nurse came and said, 鈥淒r. Wood, there鈥檚 one of your former patients here, who does not have an appointment. Can you see her?鈥

Even though I was running late, I went in, and there鈥檚 a woman who says, 鈥淒r. Wood, I鈥檓 here, because 10 years ago you saved my life, and I鈥檓 here for our anniversary.鈥

I can still actually get emotional thinking about that. This connects to what I said about this being a privilege, to be able to do that for people. I got an email from her two months ago. It鈥檚 been 20 years now. She reminded me she was 54 when I operated on her, she had been told that she did not have any treatment options and had made funeral arrangements. I did a very high-risk big operation on her. And now s丑别鈥檚 74. That鈥檚 pretty great!

At the end of the day, that鈥檚 what matters most.

I have also been the national leader in lung cancer guidelines. The National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) is a prominent network of major cancer centers in the United States, and they do national and even worldwide cancer guidelines. I鈥檝e been working on that almost since its inception, about 25 years.

We meet annually to update the guidelines. And in 2009, we had a lot of debate about lung cancer screening because there were some initial reports that it might be useful. At the end of the day, two things happened: First, we said there wasn鈥檛 enough data to support routine screening. Second, the board of directors of the NCCN felt that there was enough importance to lung cancer screening as to create a new guideline panel specifically on lung cancer screening, which they asked me to chair.

We gathered a strong group of experts and put together the evidence around lung cancer screening to create national guidelines. It so happened that a landmark clinical trial of lung cancer screening was published while we were doing this work that changed the whole field of lung cancer screening. There was a publication in the New England Journal of Medicine from this trial that showed a 20% mortality reduction if you screen people with low-dose CT who were at risk for lung cancer.

This study led our panel to produce the first guidelines about lung cancer screening in 2012. And so, I鈥檝e had the privilege of leading that guideline work, and this has been a really important part of my career for the past 15 years.

That connects to the third thing, which is advocacy, because I learned a lot in this process. I thought, 鈥淪pectacular, we鈥檝e written guidelines, now people can get screened.鈥 And that was the naivete of me not really understanding the complexities of health-care policy in the U.S. and that our guidelines alone were insufficient.

If insurers were not going to pay for lung cancer screening, it wasn鈥檛 going to get done. The United States Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) is the agency that sets guidelines for preventive services in the U.S. They鈥檙e the ones that say who can get mammograms for breast cancer, whether prostate cancer screening should happen and a variety of other things. And their recommendations about lung cancer screening had been that there was no evidence to support it. So, we had to help USPSTF realize that new evidence did exist showing lung cancer screening saved lives and encourage them to revise their guidelines. We were successful in getting them to recommend lung cancer screening. Under the Affordable Care Act, private insurers are required to pay for what USPSTF recommends.

That decision by the USPSTF on Dec. 31, 2013, went into effect in terms of requiring insurer coverage on Jan. 1, 2015. Just 10, almost 11, years ago, so it鈥檚 recent. It seemed like that was the victory we needed to embark on lung cancer screening in the U.S. Then I learned that Medicare doesn鈥檛 have to follow USPSTF recommendations. And 70% of patients who are at risk for lung cancer are in the Medicare age group.

Medicare has a process for reviewing a decision like this through the Medicare Evidence Development and Coverage Advisory Committee (MEDCAC), and they put together a MEDCAC panel in April 2014. I testified to that panel, as I had also testified to a U.S. Senate briefing before. Remarkably, MEDCAC listened to the evidence supporting lung cancer screening and still recommended against lung cancer screening for Medicare beneficiaries, an enormous backwards step in trying to help people have access to the benefits of early detection.

That was a pretty dark day for those of us in the lung cancer care and screening space. But then we doubled down and put together a collaborative of experts. We worked directly with senior Medicare administrators to develop a major document to describe how they could safely implement lung cancer screening in an effective and reasonable way 鈥 and they ultimately agreed with us.

So, on Feb. 5, 2015, Medicare approved coverage for lung cancer screening for Medicare beneficiaries. To my knowledge, it鈥檚 the first time in history that Medicare has reversed a decision from their own advisory MEDCAC committee. That鈥檚 really when lung cancer screening could legitimately start.

The last part of that advocacy work is that our guidelines have continued to evolve, more data has come in, and we鈥檝e learned things to make them simpler, more applicable, and more equitable. We haven鈥檛 stopped, because there are still aspects of the inclusion criteria by our policymakers that I think are inappropriately restrictive.

Help us understand what screening looks like. Also, is there a downside to screening additional people?

It鈥檚 important to emphasize that screening is more than a procedure, it鈥檚 a process. The procedure is a low-dose CT scan, a single deep breath you hold for a few seconds. Our technology now is very sophisticated, so it鈥檚 simple and not invasive.

But the whole point is discipline and regularity of the follow-up. That鈥檚 the process. If there鈥檚 a spot in their lung, there鈥檚 expertise needed to evaluate and advise that individual. The guidelines that we developed in the NCCN have algorithms for what to do with all those scenarios. If you have a spot and it鈥檚 a certain size and appearance, here鈥檚 how you manage it. That鈥檚 an important part of the process.

The second part is that it鈥檚 not one and done. For those who are at risk, screening is meant to be annual. One of our problems in screening implementation is people doing a scan, getting a good report, and then not coming back. Mammography has developed a really systematic approach of reminders and processes for getting people to come back 鈥 and that just hasn鈥檛 developed to the same degree for lung yet. The whole point is your risk continues. In fact, as you get older, the risk keeps increasing, because it is both age and smoking exposure related.

Regarding downsides, I think non-physicians think, 鈥淚f we can catch something, let鈥檚 scan everybody.鈥 But there are downsides, which is why we鈥檙e trying not to screen people who aren鈥檛 at high risk for lung cancer. And the biggest downside is false positives. There鈥檚 lots of stuff that we shouldn鈥檛 know about, because if there鈥檚 something noted on a CT scan, then we start investigating, we create worry, we might do invasive tests that have risks, and many of those things might be unimportant. So benign neglect is sometimes good. It keeps healthy people out of doctor鈥檚 offices for things that are benign and unimportant.

Many people associate lung cancer specifically with an older audience of smokers. What would you say to people who might think, 鈥淥h, that doesn鈥檛 apply to me or my family?鈥

I guess I would say that it鈥檚 not just people that have a smoking history that get lung cancer, and it鈥檚 not just old people that get lung cancer. I鈥檓 vice chair at the American Cancer Society National Lung Cancer Roundtable, and one of our points is the risk of getting lung cancer is having lungs. There鈥檚 currently not a role for lung cancer screening in people that don鈥檛 have smoking exposure. But there鈥檚 research going on about how we might evolve lung cancer screening to groups that don鈥檛 have just the risk of smoking, but have other risks, like familial risks, which do exist for lung cancer.

Early detection of lung cancer gives a high opportunity for cure. The five-year survival for patients with lung cancer is 22%, which is really bad. The five-year survival for individuals that have undergone lung cancer screening is 84%. There aren鈥檛 many interventions in medicine that make that big of an impact.

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Plan Ahead: 天美影院vs. Rutgers on Oct. 10 /facultystaff/2025/09/05/plan-ahead-uw-vs-rutgers-on-friday-oct-10/ Fri, 05 Sep 2025 17:08:38 +0000 /facultystaff/?p=9287 Husky home games always bring a buzz of excitement 鈥 and a lot of traffic 鈥 to our Seattle campus. With fans arriving by bus, light rail, car, bike, van and even boat, getting to Husky Stadium is a team effort.

The 天美影院vs. Rutgers game kicks off at鈥6 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 10, which may bring more traffic challenges than usual. With the rise in remote work and a later game time, congestion isn鈥檛 expected to be as great as in the past. Still, here are a few key things to know:

Getting to campus on Oct. 10:

  • Use sustainable transportation.鈥疻hether you’re coming to campus for work, class or the game, everyone is encouraged to take transit, bike, walk, carpool or use a shuttle.
  • 天美影院staff:鈥疍on鈥檛 forget your fully subsidized 鈥 it鈥檚 a great way to take advantage of .
  • Game attendees:鈥疨arking will be limited, so please take transit or carpool if you can to save time and stress. Check the for lot opening times and details.
  • Parking attendants will be on hand to help 鈥 please be patient, as many lots will fill gradually throughout the day due to regular staff and student use.

Parking info for permit holders:

Parking permit holders will receive separate emails directing them where to park on Oct. 10, but the general plan is as follows:

  • East Campus Lots鈥(E01, E04, E08, E09, E12, E14, E17, E18, E19, E20, E21, E97 (TG/IMA) ):
    Closed to regular parking starting at 10 a.m. Permit holders will be redirected to other lots and garages.
  • Football parking opens at 1 p.m.鈥痠n these areas:
    • Stadium Parking Garage
    • Padelford
    • N25, N24
    • C12
  • South Campus Garage, Central Plaza Garage, C10, and Portage Bay Garage鈥痺ill be partially open for football parking at 1 p.m. and will be fully available by 3 p.m.

For more details on getting to the game 鈥 or to grab your tickets 鈥 visit鈥.

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Tour connects new 天美影院faculty with Washington communities, demonstrates local impact /facultystaff/2025/07/10/tour-connects-new-uw-faculty-with-washington-communities-demonstrates-local-impact/ Thu, 10 Jul 2025 19:03:50 +0000 /facultystaff/?p=9221 More than 30 new 天美影院 faculty members set out on a five-day, 1,100-mile bus tour across the state of Washington in June to better understand the region they now serve.

The annual trip 鈥 called the Faculty Field Tour 鈥 introduces new professors to the state鈥檚 diverse landscapes, dynamic economy and the many communities their students call home.

The immersive tour began at the Burke Museum in Seattle, then continued with stops at the Port of Tacoma, the Washington State Capitol in Olympia 鈥 where participants met with Lieutenant Governor Denny Heck 鈥 and was followed with a visit to Mount St. Helens.

“I have had so much fun thinking about my students from the various parts of Washington and can envision using what I have learned on this tour in my teaching practice,鈥

Mihkai Wicklineassistant teaching professor, biobehavioral nursing and health informatics, School of Nursing

From there, the group traveled to Vancouver, then headed east to Toppenish, Zillah and the Tri-Cities. On the third day, the tour stopped in Ritzville at the Schoesler family wheat farm, operated by Senator Mark Schoesler and his sister, to learn more about the history of wheat farming in eastern Washington.

Participants posing as a group by a lake

Then, the new faculty ventured to Spokane to join an annual 鈥淲elcome to Washington鈥 reception at the 天美影院Spokane Center. Incoming local 天美影院students, their families and 天美影院Alumni Association Spokane members were also invited.

Thursday included a visit to the Grand Coulee Dam, and on Friday, the group returned to western Washington via scenic Washington Pass.

A group of people standing taking photos of the Grand Coulee Dam.

鈥淚 found the Faculty Field Tour to be profoundly meaningful,鈥 Jodi Erickson, an assistant professor at the 天美影院Tacoma School of Nursing & Healthcare Leadership, says. 鈥淚t was great to meet other faculty as well as to get to know our leaders. As a longtime Washington resident, I didn’t expect to learn as much as I did about the state. The experience broadened my understanding of the state and the people we serve. The focus on humility and open-mindedness was inspiring.鈥

A person standing on a road, outside of included the Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory.

In a published in鈥The Yakima Herald-Republic, Ed Taylor, vice provost and dean of Undergraduate Academic Affairs and a professor in the College of Education, highlighted the value of the tour.

鈥淢ost of the faculty on this journey are new to Washington. This is their opportunity to see some of the places and faces that have educated and nurtured the students they will teach, given that about three-quarters of those students are Washington residents,鈥 Taylor writes. 鈥淎long the way, the new faculty take in lessons in their areas of specialty 鈥 geography, sociology, economics, geology, biology, history, medicine, engineering and technology 鈥 new educators in conversation with the citizens we meet at every stop. I can鈥檛 think of a more important time to connect faculty with the communities we serve.

Participants posing as a group at Mt. St. Helens

鈥淚 really appreciate the opportunities to create these connections and ask folks facing real challenges in Washington 鈥 from governance to farming to health care 鈥 how they are rising to these challenges,鈥 Julie Larson, an assistant professor of ecological restoration and management in the School of Environmental and Forest Sciences, says. 鈥淚t opens the door for us as new faculty to understand what the most important issues and opportunities are for Washingtonians, and how our work might connect into it.鈥

Learn more about the Faculty Field Tour.

Photo of Mt. St. Helens
Group looking over a large lake
Participants eating lunch on the steps of the State Capitol Building in Olympia, WA
Participants in a meeting inside the State Capitol
Group photo inside the State Capitol Building in Olympia
Participants at a round table meeting
Participants learning about a mural at Yakima Valley Farmworkers Clinic in Toppenish
Participants posing in front of a mural at Yakima Valley Farmworkers Clinic in Toppenish
Participant looking through an observation binoculars at the Port of Tacoma
Participants posing by a tepee at Heritage Museum
Participants learning about the Two Mountain Winery
Participants posing by the vinyards at the Two Mountain Winery
Participants interacting with museum at the Grand Coulee Dam museum
Participants mingling at the Welcome to Washington event
Participants mingling at the Welcome to Washington event
Farmer from Schoesler Farm talking to the group
Participants posing in a tractor at Yakima Valley Farmworkers Clinic in Toppenish
Group photo by large tractor at Yakima Valley Farmworkers Clinic in Toppenish

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2025 Awards of Excellence recognize our outstanding 天美影院community /facultystaff/2025/06/30/2025-awards-of-excellence-recognizes-our-communitys-excellence/ Mon, 30 Jun 2025 17:00:40 +0000 /facultystaff/?p=9124 Every year, the 天美影院 celebrates the people who make our campuses stronger, more compassionate and more connected. The Awards of Excellence honor alumni, faculty, staff, students and retirees whose work embodies our values and elevates our shared mission.

On Thursday, June 12, hundreds of colleagues, friends and family members gathered to recognize this year鈥檚 recipients at the 55th annual ceremony. The tributes below are based on remarks by President Ana Mari Cauce and Provost and Executive Vice President Tricia Serio.

Don鈥檛 miss for highlights from the unforgettable evening.

2025 Awards of Excellence Recipients


David B. Thorud Leadership Award
Munira Khalil, Professor and Chair, Chemistry, College of Arts & Sciences

As chair, Munira Khalil has set a new standard for departmental leadership, in the way that she guides meetings, responds to complicated management situations and communicates clearly. Her colleagues credit her with infusing a 鈥渟pirit of mattering鈥 throughout the department. She empowers faculty and staff colleagues to grow professionally in their research, teaching and administration roles while maintaining outstanding research in the field of molecular spectroscopy.鈥


David B. Thorud Leadership Award
Margaret Shepherd, Chief of Staff, Executive Office of the President and Provost

Margaret Shepherd is an outstanding leader whose intelligence, certitude and work ethic have been instrumental in countless successful initiatives. But what her colleagues admire most about her is that she fosters a culture of trust and respect. She is considerate, perceptive, effective, tactful and firm in her unwavering service to the institutional and public good.


Distinguished Alumni Veteran Award
Dana Curtis Covey, 鈥84, School of Medicine; Captain, U.S. Navy (ret.)

Throughout his dedicated service in the U.S. Navy, and later as a surgeon, Dana Curtis Covey has consistently served as a role model for the next generation of doctors. As a leading expert on combat surgery, he has unwaveringly served his country, his patients and his fellow service members with honor, courage and skill. The 天美影院is deeply proud to count this teacher, doctor, mentor and patriot among our most esteemed alumni.


Distinguished Contributions to Lifelong Learning Award
Jason Daniel-Ulloa, Associate Teaching Professor, Health Systems and Population Health and Global Health, School of Public Health

With each new class of students, Jason Daniel-Ulloa begins by creating an inclusive learning environment in which each student feels engaged, present and invested. He then adapts his teaching strategies to their needs and experiences, which often includes setting flexible deadlines and using storytelling to spark curiosity and connection. Next, he shares his expertise in community-based participatory research and community capacity building to help students find their own passion for public health, social justice and eliminating health disparities.


Distinguished Librarian Award
Stephanie Lamson, Director, Preservation Services, University Libraries

Throughout her 24-year career, Stephanie Lamson鈥檚 visionary approach and transformative contributions have contributed enormously to University Libraries and the University as a whole. She has made the 天美影院Libraries鈥 Conservation Center a leader in the field, and she is deeply committed to ensuring long-term access to research materials for current and future scholars. She has also had an active role in shaping the profession through teaching and mentorship, creating opportunities for a new generation of preservationists.


Distinguished Retiree Excellence in Community Service Award
Jill Morrison McKinstry, Librarian Emeritus, University Libraries

After nearly 30 years of service to University Libraries, Jill Morrison McKinstry has continued to serve the public as a volunteer, including leadership roles with the Mt. Baker Safe Access Committee and Grandmothers Against Gun Violence. She actively seeks out opportunities to better the community, and with her enthusiasm and dedication, she inspires others to join her. She is a powerful reminder of the positive change that one person can make in the world.


Distinguished Service Award
Brad McDavid, Director, 天美影院Athletic Bands (ret.)

In his extraordinary career leading the Husky Marching Band, Brad McDavid鈥檚 impact at the 天美影院was felt by thousands of student musicians and hundreds of thousands of Husky fans far and wide. As the director for almost a third of the band鈥檚 entire history, he designed and directed over 200 halftime shows and made invaluable contributions to our University and alumni communities. He is instantly recognizable to every 天美影院fan as a true Husky icon.


Distinguished Staff Award for Career Achievement
Leula Amaha, Custodian, 天美影院Facilities
Leula Amaha has served as a 天美影院custodian for 25 years, and in her role at the University鈥檚 Applied Physics Laboratory, she is consistently proactive and committed to maintaining a safe, clean and productive environment. Thanks to her focus, efficiency and dedication, this critical facility is always impeccably maintained to the highest standards, including when senior government officials and representatives of funding agencies visit.


Distinguished Staff Award for Collaboration
Lara Muffley, Director of Program Operations, Genome Sciences, School of Medicine and Brotman Baty Institute for Precision Medicine
In her role facilitating cooperation among hundreds of researchers studying genetic variation, Lara Muffley serves as a backbone in advancing scientific collaboration and discovery. Her innovative, hardworking and community-focused leadership has helped build a global genetic research community that is breaking new ground in genetic research. She enables complex and multidisciplinary teams to work toward common goals for the good of humanity.


Distinguished Staff Award for Diversity, Equity & Inclusion
MEDEX Northwest PA Program Admissions and Student Services Team
Tove Blake, Director of Admissions and Student Services, MEDEX Northwest PA Program, School of Medicine
Roxana Palma-Orantes, Counseling Services Coordinator, MEDEX Northwest PA Program, School of Medicine听
Kalee Lynn Warnimont, Counseling Services Coordinator, MEDEX Northwest PA Program, School of Medicine听

In their work conducting admissions and student support for the MEDEX program, this three-person team managescomplex processes across five campuses in Washington, Alaska and Hawaii, serving hundreds of students annually. Impressively, they have achieved 100% seat fulfillment. And, through their dedication to outreach and collaboration 鈥 from orientation to white-coat ceremonies 鈥 the team has been able to recruit a top-tier cohort reflecting increased diversity. Their excellent work has helped advance program goals and our University-wide commitment to equity and community engagement.


Distinguished Staff Award for Impact
Benjamin Hornburg, Facilities Manager, Chemical Engineering, College of Engineering
Described as 鈥渢he backbone of the chemical engineering department,鈥 Benjamin Hornburg not only maintains and manages the facilities in Benson Hall, but he also ensures that everything in the building meets the highest safety standards. Graduate students routinely ask for his assistance with lab setups, and 丑别鈥檚 essential to the smooth operation of many undergraduate labs. His outstanding work ensures that lab spaces run smoothly, accessibly and safely.


Distinguished Staff Award for Innovation:
Colin Gioia Connors, Electronic Media Producer 2, Scandinavian Studies, College of Arts & Sciences

Colin Gioia Connors produces and hosts the podcast Crossing North, which explores Nordic and Baltic society and culture. Since its launch in 2019, Crossing North has attracted a broad listenership and enhanced the Scandinavian studies department鈥檚 reputation among faculty, students and the public. Connors鈥 expertise, production know-how and hosting skills have helped the department and the College of Arts & Sciences educate the community with fun and fascinating content that connects the 天美影院with the communities we serve.


Distinguished Teaching Award
Martine De Cock, Professor, School of Engineering & Technology, 天美影院Tacoma

Through an iterative and reflective teaching practice, Martine De Cock designs transformative learning experiences for her students. For example, she has adapted a course to allow students to develop real-world, career-focused skills so they can create better artificial intelligence models. To expand access to graduate education to outstanding students from diverse backgrounds, she led the development of the Ph.D. program in computer science and systems. Her commitment to inclusive teaching, mentoring and valuing students鈥 experiences positively impacts the professional and academic trajectories of her students and mentees.


Distinguished Teaching Award
Keri DeGroot, Assistant Teaching Professor, Occupational Therapy, School of Medicine

As health-care professionals, occupational therapists support people in 鈥渄oing, being, becoming and belonging.鈥 This is also how Keri DeGroot approaches her teaching 鈥 by supporting her students in learning and doing basic skills, in their being occupational therapy students, in becoming practitioners and in belonging to the 天美影院community. Her teaching methods incorporate case studies and real-world applications to encourage critical inquiry and reflection. DeGroot is also involved in curriculum initiatives that promote diversity and inclusivity, contributing to the broader academic community at the UW.


Distinguished Teaching Award
Jasmine Mahmoud, Assistant Professor, School of Drama, College of Arts & Sciences

Whether s丑别鈥檚 teaching a seminar with eight graduate students or a lecture with 200 undergraduates, Jasmine Mahmoud makes meaningful connections with each of them. By providing feedback that encourages iteration, Mahmoud helps her students develop as critical thinkers with growth mindsets and lifelong learning practices. She offers them professional development activities, such as conference planning and research collaborations. In addition, she guides students in developing syllabi and in facilitating independent studies that lead to practical projects 鈥 all to help them prepare for academic and professional careers.


Distinguished Teaching Award
Laura McGarrity, Associate Teaching Professor, Linguistics, College of Arts & Sciences

To make linguistics as relatable and relevant as possible, Laura McGarrity transformed the course Linguistics 269 into 鈥淪wearing and Taboo Language.鈥 Enrollment in the course shot up, and now, 800 students take it each year. To create an inclusive learning environment in her course 鈥淟anguage and Thought,鈥 McGarrity assigns readings by a variety of authors. For that class, one student writes, she 鈥減resented topics that never occurred to me and did so in a way that encouraged us to debate them and make up our own minds on whether we found them true or not.鈥


Distinguished Teaching Award
Bryan White, Teaching Professor, Biological Sciences, School of Science, Technology, Engineering & Mathematics, 天美影院Bothell

By connecting classroom content to real-world scenarios, Bryan White sparks a sense of wonder and curiosity in his students 鈥 and they begin to see themselves as scientists in development. White, one nominator writes, 鈥渞epresents the pinnacle of educational excellence, transforming ordinary classrooms into vibrant spaces of discovery and engagement. His ability to turn complex science concepts into memorable experiences 鈥 whether through impromptu demonstrations, unexpected props or spontaneous dance moves 鈥 reflects his extraordinary gift for making learning both rigorous and joyful.鈥


Distinguished Teaching Award for Teams
Brotherhood Initiative Instructional Team, College of Education
Kandi Bauman, Assistant Director of Research and Curriculum, Brotherhood Initiative, College of Education
Joe Lott, Professor, Educational Foundations, Leadership and Policy, College of Education
Paul Metellus, Associate Director for Student Success, Brotherhood Initiative, College of Education
Siamak Vossoughi, Teaching Associate, Brotherhood Initiative, College of Education
T. Ling Yeh, Director of Research and Programs, Brotherhood Initiative, College of Education

This team helps students who identify as men of color navigate college and develop agency within their professional and civic identities. Through a cohort-based seminar structure that is developed with extensive data and planning, the team reimagines the curriculum each year to ensure that the project is relevant to students鈥 experiences and perspectives. The team鈥檚 work has created transformative learning opportunities that affirm students鈥 cultural experiences while promoting a sense of belonging and community.


Distinguished Teaching Award for Teams
CSE 121, 122 & 123 Course Launch Team, Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering
Kasey Champion, Lecturer, Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering听
Elba Garza, Assistant Teaching Professor, Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering听
Miya Natsuhara, Assistant Teaching Professor, Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering听
Hunter Schafer, Associate Teaching Professor, Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering听
Brett Wortzman, Associate Teaching Professor, Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering听

This team revitalized the introductory computer science courses that serve as an entry point for students to explore the world of computing. The team infused the course sequence with activities that encourage students to reflect on their work, integrate their personal experiences into their learning, embrace a growth mindset and consider ethical questions related to computer science and engineering. Their chair notes, 鈥渢his multiyear, iterative, collaborative project has been wildly successful and impressively innovative, better serving thousands of students each year.鈥


Distinguished Teaching Legacy Award
J鈥橫ay Bertrand Rivara, Associate Teaching Professor Emerita, School of Social Work; Co-Director, Carol LaMare Scholars Program, Center for Integrative Oncology and Palliative Care Social Work

A cornerstone of support. Advocate. Champion. Guiding light. Enduring influence. These are just some of the words students use to describe J鈥橫ay Bertrand Rivara. Throughout her career, Rivara has taught, mentored and nurtured graduate social work students who are committed to cancer care, palliative care or end-of-life care. 鈥淗er actions and words have shown me that being a social worker is not a time-limited role,鈥 one student writes, 鈥渂ut rather a set of values and relationships that are pursued over the long haul.鈥


Excellence in Global Engagement Award
Anu Taranath, Teaching Professor, English and Comparative History of Ideas, College of Arts & Sciences

As a speaker, educator, study abroad program director and public scholar, Anu Taranath partners with a range of people and organizations to encourage students and faculty to explore their own stories while deepening conversations on equity, social justice and global consciousness. Her book, “Beyond Guilt Trips: Mindful Travel in an Unequal World,” serves as a critical resource for academics, students, researchers and travelers who engage globally and want to better understand and navigate worlds of difference.


Excellence in Teaching Award
Sourojit Ghosh, Doctoral Candidate, Human Centered Design & Engineering, College of Engineering

For Sourojit Ghosh, teaching is an iterative process and a partnership. He actively involves students in course design and adapts his curricula based on their feedback. After designing one of the University鈥檚 first courses on ethics in artificial intelligence, he was invited to expand it into a five-credit version for undergraduates. His students said that the class equipped them with a clearer understanding of generative AI tools and gave them a strong foundation in ethical frameworks to champion responsible AI design and communicate integration strategies to their employers.


Excellence in Teaching Award
Robert James Swan, Doctoral Candidate, School of Environmental and Forest Sciences, College of the Environment

Having taught more than 1,000 students, Robert James Swan is recognized for creating meaningful opportunities for all students to engage with forestry research 鈥 including those without backgrounds in science 鈥 by guiding them in essential skills such as fieldwork and lab techniques. His noteworthy class assignments focus on helping students learn experientially and build their metacognitive skills. To enhance networking and extracurricular opportunities for students, he revived the 天美影院chapter of the Society of American Foresters and founded the 天美影院Beekeeping Club.


Marsha L. Landolt Distinguished Graduate Mentor Award
Hannah C. Wiley, Professor, Dance, College of Arts & Sciences

To help professional dancers transition to careers in higher education, Hannah C. Wiley established a master of fine arts program aimed at addressing their unique challenges and providing financial support through teaching opportunities. She actively recruits, trains and mentors a diverse鈥痓ody of students, advocating for changes in curriculum, programming and support systems. 鈥淗annah鈥檚 office door is always open 鈥 literally,鈥 a colleague writes. 鈥淎nd while there isn鈥檛 a fireplace inside, you always leave her office feeling as if you鈥檝e gathered around one.鈥


Outstanding Public Service Award
Vadym Provozyuk, Lead Network Specialist, 天美影院Information Technology

Vadym Provozyuk, who emigrated to the U.S. following Russia鈥檚 2014 invasion of Ukraine, has devoted himself to helping Ukrainians since the start of Russia鈥檚 2022 invasion. His heroic coordination of organizing and planning has helped thousands of Ukrainians evacuate to safety. Working with the nonprofit Grace Tea, he has also helped ensure that urgently needed food, water, medical supplies, fuel and other necessities reach Ukrainians in need.


President鈥檚 Medal
Kerry Petit, Undergraduate Student, Anthropology and Urban Ecological Design

Kerry Petit returned to higher education later in her career, first at Shoreline Community College before transferring to the UW. She embraces new experiences inside and outside the classroom, and as an anthropology major, she is interested in how culture and design can shape more equitable futures. After graduation, Petit, a member of the Chinook Indian Nation family, plans to apply her learning to working with underserved communities supporting cultural revitalization and ethical museum practices.


President鈥檚 Medal
Gloria Shen, Undergraduate Student, Neuroscience and Dance

As a Seattle native, Gloria Shen was drawn to the 天美影院from an early age, but as a student, she discovered an even deeper connection through a strong sense of belonging in the neuroscience program. She has pursued an ambitious academic program at the intersection of dance, medicine and neuroscience, receiving numerous awards and scholarships in recognition of her academic excellence. After graduation, she plans to pursue a medical degree and hopes to one day become a pediatric neurosurgeon.


University Faculty Lecture Award
Douglas Wood, Henry N. Harkins Professor and Chair, Surgery, School of Medicine听

Douglas Wood鈥檚 leadership in developing and promoting lung cancer screening guidelines has been nothing short of transformative. As a world-renowned expert in thoracic oncology and founding chair of the National Lung Cancer Screening Panel, Wood has overseen the creation and continual refinement of evidence-based guidelines for the early detection of lung cancer. Now the standard in clinical practice, these guidelines have been instrumental in saving thousands of lives throughout the world. Wood will present his lecture in 2026.


Please take a moment to congratulate our 2025 recipients for their exemplary work to expand knowledge, serve our students, improve people鈥檚 health and well-being, and to better communities.

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天美影院announces 2025 Awards of Excellence recipients /facultystaff/2025/05/01/uw-announces-2025-awards-of-excellence-recipients/ Thu, 01 May 2025 21:35:47 +0000 /facultystaff/?p=9044 天美影院sealThe 天美影院is delighted to announce the recipients of the 55th annual 天美影院 Awards of Excellence! The awards honor outstanding alumni, faculty, staff, students and retirees who contribute to the richness and diversity of our University community.

The awardees were honored at a ceremony in Meany Hall on June 12. The program included a one-hour ceremony hosted by President Ana Mari Cauce and Provost Tricia Serio, followed by a reception with refreshments where our community was able to connect with one another.

Do you want to nominate a 天美影院colleague for an award? The next cycle of awards will open in early October of 2025.

2025 awardees

Distinguished Staff Award

Established in 1997, the Distinguished Staff Award honors outstanding staff members who contribute to the missions of their units and the University, respond creatively to challenges,

maintain the highest standards in their work, establish productive relationships with colleagues, and promote a respectful and supportive workplace. This year, awardees are being honored in the following categories: career achievement; collaboration; diversity, equity and inclusion; impact; and innovation.

Career Achievement

Leula Amaha, 天美影院Facilities

Collaboration

Lara Muffley, Genome Sciences, School of Medicine; Brotman Baty Institute for Precision Medicine

Diversity, Equity and Inclusion

MEDEX Northwest Admissions and Student Services Team

Tove Blake, MEDEX Northwest PA Program, School of Medicine
Roxana Palma-Orantes, MEDEX Northwest PA Program, School of Medicine
Kalee Lynn Warnimont, MEDEX Northwest PA Program, School of Medicine

Impact

Benjamin Hornburg, Chemical Engineering

Innovation

Colin Gioia Connors, Scandinavian Studies

David B. Thorud Leadership Award

The David B. Thorud Leadership Award is given to one 天美影院faculty member and one staff member who demonstrate exceptional abilities to lead, serve, inspire and collaborate. First bestowed in 2006, the award is named in honor of David B. Thorud, who served the University in leadership positions for 25 years.

Munira Khalil, Chemistry
Margaret Shepherd, Executive Office of the President and Provost

Distinguished Librarian Award

Established in 2008, the Distinguished Librarian Award recognizes excellence in librarianship, especially as it benefits the academic community through teaching, research, learning and innovative approaches to practice.

Stephanie Lamson, Preservation Services

Alumni Association Distinguished Service Award

Since 1970, this award has honored a 天美影院Alumni Association group or member who positively impacts both the Alumni Association and the larger 天美影院 community.

Brad McDavid, 天美影院Athletic Bands (ret.)

Distinguished Retiree Excellence in Community Service Award

This award is given to a faculty or staff retiree for the quality of the individual鈥檚 contributions, after retirement, in service to the community locally, regionally, nationally or internationally.

Jill Morrison McKinstry, University Libraries

Distinguished Teaching Award

Recipients of the Distinguished Teaching Award are chosen based on a variety of criteria, including mastery of subject matter, new ideas in course and curriculum design, enthusiasm and innovation in the teaching process, ability to engage students both inside and outside the classroom, and ability to inspire creative, original thinking in students.

Martine De Cock, School of Engineering & Technology, 天美影院Tacoma
Keri DeGroot, Occupational Therapy, School of Medicine
Jasmine Jamillah Mahmoud, School of Drama
Laura W. McGarrity, Linguistics
Bryan White, Biological Sciences, 天美影院Bothell

Brotherhood Initiative Instructional Team

Kandi Bauman, Brotherhood Initiative
Joe Lott, Educational Foundations, Leadership and Policy
Paul Metellus, Brotherhood Initiative
Siamak Vossoughi, Brotherhood Initiative
Ling Yeh, Brotherhood Initiative

CSE 121, 122 & 123 Launch Team

Kasey Champion, Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering
Elba Garza, Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering
Miya Natsuhara, Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering
Hunter Schafer, Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering
Brett Wortzman, Paul G. Allen School of Computer Science & Engineering

Distinguished Teaching Legacy Award

Created in 2017, this award celebrates the legacy of transformational teaching. It honors a 天美影院teacher, living or not, who influenced and inspired students long after they left the classroom.

J鈥橫ay Bertrand Rivara, School of Social Work

Excellence in Teaching Award

Presented since 1983, this award recognizes two graduate teaching assistants who demonstrate outstanding skills in the classroom.

Sourojit Ghosh, Human Centered Design & Engineering
Robert James Swan, School of Environmental and Forest Sciences

Distinguished Contributions to Lifelong Learning Award

This award is given to a full-time 天美影院faculty member who has taught for at least two years in innovative non-degree programs sponsored by the University and designed for professional development, personal interest or career redirection.

Jason Daniel-Ulloa, Health Systems and Population Health; Global Health

University Faculty Lecture Award

Since 1976, this award has honored current or emeritus faculty whose research, scholarship or art is widely recognized by their peers and whose achievements have had a substantial impact on their profession and society. The recipient of this award delivers the annual University Faculty Lecture to share their creativity and scholarship with the greater 天美影院community.

Douglas E. Wood, Surgery, School of Medicine

Excellence in Global Engagement

This award honors a 天美影院community member whose teaching, research or community-building activities connect 天美影院students, faculty and staff to global communities locally, nationally and internationally 鈥 establishing the honoree as a leader in global engagement. The award alternates each year between faculty and staff honorees.

Anu Taranath, English; Comparative History of Ideas

Marsha L. Landolt Distinguished Graduate Mentor Award

The Marsha L. Landolt Distinguished Graduate Mentor Award recognizes a faculty member who excels at the intense one-on-one teaching that is the hallmark of graduate study. First bestowed in 1999, the award honors the memory of Marsha L. Landolt, who served as dean of the Graduate School from 1996 to 2004.

Hannah C. Wiley, Dance

Outstanding Public Service Award

Since 1980, this award has recognized exceptional achievement in public service by a faculty or staff member.

Vadym Provozyuk, 天美影院Information Technology

Distinguished Alumni Veteran Award

This award is bestowed on a graduate and veteran who has made a positive impact through community service and civic engagement.

Dana Curtis Covey, 鈥84, School of Medicine; U.S. Navy (ret.)

President鈥檚 Medal

Since 1932, the 天美影院president has awarded a medal to the graduating senior who achieved the most distinguished academic record at the University for that year. In 2004, the president began awarding the medal to two graduating seniors: one who has completed at least three-fourths of their degree requirements at the UW, and one who entered the University with at least 60 transfer credits from a Washington community college.

Kerry L. Petit, Medical Anthropology & Global Health; Anthropology of Globalization
Gloria Shen, Neuroscience

Special Recognition

In lieu of the annual Alumnus Summa Laude Dignatus award, this year, we honor our University鈥檚 33rd president as she completes her final year in office. Since being selected for the role in 2015, she has had a transformative impact on the 天美影院.

Ana Mari Cauce, President, 天美影院

 

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UW-IT CIO Andreas Bohman Awarded 2025 SeattleCIO ORBIE Award /facultystaff/2025/04/28/uw-it-cio-andreas-bohman-awarded-2025-seattlecio-orbie-award/ Mon, 28 Apr 2025 22:34:36 +0000 /facultystaff/?p=9025 天美影院 Information Technology Chief Information Officer Andreas Bohman has been named the recipient of the 2025 SeattleCIO ORBIE庐 Award in the Corporate category.

The ORBIE Awards honor Chief Information Officers who have demonstrated excellence in technology leadership. Since 1998, the ORBIE has recognized CIOs who exhibit exceptional leadership, drive impactful innovation, and demonstrate a clear vision that inspires others to reach their potential. The award celebrates technology leaders who build strong relationships with business partners, contribute meaningfully to their communities, and help shape the next generation of executives.

Winners are selected through a rigorous, independent peer-review process led by prior ORBIE recipients. Evaluation criteria include leadership and management effectiveness, the business value created through technology innovation, and active engagement in both industry and community initiatives. Since its inception, the ORBIE Awards have recognized more than 5,000 finalists and honored over 800 CIOs across the country.

In support of Bohman鈥檚 nomination, 天美影院 President Ana Mari Cauce wrote:

鈥淲hether through his efforts in enhancing and maturing the University鈥檚 cybersecurity infrastructure, or his implementation of Workday across our entire campus, his work reaches across teams, units, and the entire University community. All members of our campus 鈥 students, faculty, staff and community 鈥 have benefited from his efforts. He has also been a leader in innovation, advancing the understanding and implementation of AI across the University, which is critical, timely and ongoing work.鈥

Bohman鈥檚 leadership exemplifies the University鈥檚 commitment to trusted solutions, innovation with global impact, and fostering a collaborative and inclusive environment.听

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New Year, New Space: 天美影院teams moving to University District Station Building /facultystaff/2024/11/21/new-year-new-space-uw-teams-moving-to-university-district-station-building/ Thu, 21 Nov 2024 21:20:16 +0000 /facultystaff/?p=8743 UDSB building exterior

Starting in January, several 天美影院teams will relocate to the new 266,000-square-foot , situated above the Sound Transit station at NE 45th St. and Brooklyn Ave. NE.

Teams moving to UDSB include:

UWHR: Floors 2 & 3
  • Floor 2: POD training and Labor Relations negotiations rooms
  • Floor 3: Campus HR Operations & Services, Compensation, Employee Experience, HR Benefits, Analytics & Info Systems, HR Policy & Workforce Strategy, Labor Relations, Office of the VP for UWHR, Total Talent Management
Compliance and Risk Services: Floor 4
  • Civil Rights Investigation Office, Office of Public Records and Open Public Meetings
Finance, Planning & Budgeting: Floors 4 and 5
  • Floor 4: Procurement Services, Travel Office, University Business Services
  • Floor 5: Banking & Accounting Operations, Budget, Planning & Operations, Enterprise Business Solutions, Equipment Inventory Office, Finance & Budget Strategy, Financial Accounting, Grant & Contract Accounting, Institutional Analytics & Decision Support, Management Accounting & Analysis, Policy, Planning & State Operations, Sponsored Programs Finance, Treasury, University Controller鈥檚 Office
Environmental Health & Safety: Floor 6
  • Administration, Employee Health Center, Environmental Public Health, Fire & Building Safety, Research Safety, Respirator Fit Testing, Safety Training, Workplace Health & Safety
Internal Audit: Floor 6

The University District Station Building will be a secured building, with visitors required to check in at the Welcome Desk, staffed from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. While office addresses will change, phone numbers and email addresses will stay the same. Updated campus mailbox numbers will be posted on forms and websites for departments as needed.

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Leadership profile developed for 天美影院presidential search /facultystaff/2024/10/24/leadership-profile-developed-for-uw-presidential-search/ Thu, 24 Oct 2024 20:08:31 +0000 /facultystaff/?p=8705 天美影院community input on the desired characteristics and qualities of the next 天美影院President has been incorporated into a new leadership profile, which is now available on the Presidential Search website.

鈥淪ince July, the听听(PSAC) has been receiving input into the characteristics and qualities desired in the next 天美影院President, as well as the opportunities and challenges before the 天美影院,鈥 said David Zeeck, 天美影院Regent and chair of the Presidential Search Advisory Committee. 鈥淲e listened and learned a lot from everyone who participated. I鈥檇 like to thank personally everyone who came to a public listening session, filled out our survey or reached out with advice and nominations.鈥

The leadership profile includes a list of attributes for the ideal presidential candidate, as well as key institutional priorities and background about the structure, accomplishments and current leadership at the UW.

While the open listening sessions have concluded, the PSAC is still accepting nominations via uwsearch@uw.edu.

Visit uw.edu/presidentialsearch to see the presidential leadership profile and learn more about the presidential search process, timeline and next steps.

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