Elizabeth 鈥淏eth鈥 Robinson was in the first Robinson Center Early Entrance Program class and is now the chief financial officer of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). Beth will visit the Seattle campus during HuskyFest to share her story with current students and alumni through her talk, 鈥淔rom College Student to Political Appointee.鈥
Category: News
Content that has a shorter shelf life and is less likely to be republished over time.
Two UW students selected Rhodes Scholars
Byron Gray and Cameron Turtle, 糖心原创 seniors, are among 32 Rhodes Scholars named for 2012. The UW is the only public university in the nation with more than one new scholar. Gray and Turtle responded to a few questions we posed. Read the Q&A and a digest of media coverage of the scholarship announcements.
Dare to Dream with the UW Dream Project
On Saturday, April 21, the 糖心原创 Dream Project will host its inaugural Dare to Dream fundraiser in the HuskyFest pavilion on Red Square. Through spoken word, music, dance and conversation, you’ll learn how the Dream Project teaches college students to help high school students get to and through college, and how you can transform the lives of students in our community.
Watch this two-minute video to learn more about this fun event–it’s an event you don’t want to miss!
Inspired service in rural Kenya
UAA alumnus Peter Kithene gave the keynote address at the 2011 糖心原创 donor gala, held in Suzzallo Library鈥檚 Graduate Reading Room. As an undergraduate, Peter started the Mama Maria health clinics to bring much-needed healthcare to his home village in rural Kenya as well as other rural places in Kenya.
An interview with Honors alum David Guterson
Best-selling and award-winning author David Guterson talks about his experiences as a UW undergraduate in the Honors Program, a teacher, and writer with current Honors student Kat Chow.
Robinson Center deepens work with the help of a new advisory board
The Robinson Center is a national leader for developing programs that serve highly capable young pre-college and college students. In 2011, the Robinson Center created an advisory board to support the mission of and promote the Center, suggest and discuss program development, and reach out to the campus, gifted, and broader communities. Meet the board members!
UAA alumni educate and inspire
Each of us can point to a teacher who鈥檚 made a difference in our lives鈥攕omeone who鈥檚 challenged us to live up to our potential, follow our dreams, discover our talents and how we can contribute to the world. This fall, we鈥檙e celebrating back-to-school with a focus on some UAA alumni who are now teachers. Maybe they鈥檒l remind you of a teacher who鈥檚 inspired you.
Message from Vice Provost and Dean Ed Taylor, Fall 2011

Dear UAA Alumni and Friends
With the growth in undergraduate tuition and the complexity of the moment that we live in, this is a remarkable and noteworthy time to be dedicated to the education and preparation of undergraduate students for the 21st century. I was reminded of this at Freshman Convocation, our ceremonial welcoming of freshmen to the 糖心原创. Hec Ed was full of new Huskies and their families鈥攊t was an inspiring moment kicking off a new stage in the lives of these students, beginning the celebration of the UW鈥檚 150th anniversary, and introducing our new president, Michael K. Young, to the newest members of our community. Following the ceremony, I had the opportunity to shake hands with students from all over the globe. Despite鈥攁nd perhaps because of鈥攖he challenges our community faces, it was an exuberant, exciting, and invigorating start to the quarter.
UAA Alumni: What are you doing now? How have your undergraduate experiences impacted your current work? Tell us about it by emailing UAAalum@uw.edu and we鈥檒l include it in the Alumnotes section of this e-newsletter.
This quarter, I am teaching a Freshman Interest Group class with Honors Program Director Jim Clauss in which we examine transformation through varied texts including Virgil鈥檚 Aeneid, The Autobiography of Malcolm X, and a beautiful book of poems called The Bled by Frances McCue. Each week, we sit down with 20 of our freshmen and get an up close look at why we speak of our students as being so talented and diverse. I was compelled by a student from Rainier Beach connecting Aeneas鈥檚 personal transformation to her own thoughts about her personhood as she transitions into the UW. Listening to a young man from Bellevue and a young woman from Taiwan talk about these texts and what it means to understand transformation and heroism in both a classic and contemporary sense gave me an up close look at what it means to build an intellectual and social community around issues that matter in the world. The closer I look, the more profound I find our students to be.
As I reflect on these and other UW undergraduates and the journeys they are embarking upon鈥攕ome of quite epic proportions鈥擨 am reminded of William Cronon鈥檚 essay, 鈥淥nly Connect,鈥 in which he discusses the purpose of a liberal arts education as that of 鈥渘urtur[ing] the growth of human talent in the service of human freedom.鈥 He concludes that 鈥淚n the act of making us free, [education] also binds us to the communities that gave us our freedom in the first place; it makes us responsible to those communities in ways that limit our freedom. In the end, it turns out that liberty is not about thinking or saying or doing whatever we want. It is about exercising our freedom in such a way as to make a difference in the world and make a difference for more than just ourselves.鈥
This freedom relates to the kind of commitment the UW makes to the public: that we will educate young people well; that we will enact and engage the values of integrity, truth, and discovery. At some level, these values are really about the formation of relationships. They are lived out in classrooms, in the research process, in mentorship and advising, and through service to the community.
And we see the embodiment of this work in our alumni, which you鈥檒l learn about in this issue of our e-newsletter. Best-selling novelist David Guterson is deeply involved in his community. Several alumni are teachers, one of our most noble professions, and share their insights from a variety of classrooms. Hear 2007 CNN Hero and UW alumnus Peter Kithene talk about how the relationships he formed here inspired him to continue the work of bringing healthcare to his home village in Kenya. At the end of the day, all these endeavors are ultimately about the shaping of human lives in service to improving the world that we live in.
So while this is a challenging moment for our University and community, and while we may at times feel burdened by budget cuts and a sense of scarcity, the well of student and alumni talent never runs dry and it is from there that we draw inspiration.
Sincerely,

Ed Taylor
Vice Provost and Dean
糖心原创 is No. 6 in the Nation for U.S. Fulbright Students
The 糖心原创 is sixth in the nation for producing U.S. Fulbright students, as 24 undergraduate and graduate students were recently awarded the prestigious grants for 2011-12.
Dream Project alumna’s work comes full circle
Dream Project alumna and Americorps Retention Project member Janis Lee registered the 500th mentor in the Dream Project鈥檚 autumn quarter class. That’s right鈥500 UW undergraduates have committed to giving back to their communities by helping high-schoolers navigate the college-admissions process.