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乱伦社区

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5 community connections we loved in 2025

Across Seattle and throughout Washington state, the is instrumental in the 乱伦社区鈥檚 community engagement 鈥 connecting the UW with neighborhoods, schools and community organizations to address critical social issues. Through authentic, reciprocal partnerships, the CELE Center provides students with opportunities to develop the knowledge, skills and attitudes needed to contribute to thriving communities.

The CELE Center鈥檚 programs are centered around four focus areas: community-engaged learning, leadership education, pre-K鈥12 student success and place-based initiatives; examples of programs within the CELE Center include the and . Since the University received the Carnegie Community Engagement Classification in 2020, the CELE Center has continued to deepen learning, expand opportunity and advance a more just region.

CELE Center programs invest in student leadership and long-term partnerships that strengthen both the University and communities. Below are five stories from this year that CELE Center staff wanted to highlight that show what this work looks like in practice. For more detail and data, be sure to check out the Center鈥檚 .

1. Othello-UW Commons and Creators Corner: A hub for community and creativity

At Othello-UW Commons, the CELE Center is growing a student-led, community-fueled space where campus and neighborhood meet. This year, Othello neighborhood resident and student assistant Mia Doan helped organize Creators Corner, a student-led pop-up market that centers and uplifts queer artists and small-business owners of color 鈥 giving them a platform to share and sell their work in the Commons, from prints and jewelry to live art at neighborhood events.

“I’ve been going to art markets with my friends ever since high school 鈥 it’s our favorite hangout activity, said Doan, now a UW graduate student. 鈥淏ut we’d always have to catch the train up north to go to those markets. The Creators Corner is one way to bring that joyful celebration of creativity to the south end [of Seattle].”

From Creators Corner to the South Seattle Welcome event and other neighborhood gatherings, Othello-UW Commons connects students, residents and businesses across the south end of Seattle. The Commons team met face painter Caroline Tran and photographer Von’Rico O’Neal of Hey Suav Photography at the Othello International Festival, then invited them to the South Seattle Welcome 鈥 an event for new UW students from Southeast Seattle that brings together families and neighbors. There, both creators gained exposure and built connections with students, families, community partners and UW staff.

Through its physical space, events and relationships, Othello-UW Commons supports neighborhood businesses while creating a welcoming place for experimentation, collaboration and growth.

Photo collage of people selling handmade soap, jewelry and pottery.
Participants share their work in the student-organized Creators Corner at the Othello-UW Commons.

2. CELE K-12 tutors in Seattle Public Schools: Amplifying learning for thousands of students

Through the CELE Center鈥檚 K鈥12 programs, more than 250 UW students served as tutors in Seattle Public Schools this year, partnering with teachers in classrooms across the district. With roughly 30 students in each classroom, that鈥檚 an estimated 7,500 K鈥12 students receiving more individualized support in reading, math and other core subjects.

This long-standing partnership with Seattle Public Schools, recognized this year with a UAA Distinguished Partner Award honoring Ania Beszterda, volunteer services program administrator at SPS, shows what is possible when we invest in sustained relationships. CELE Center tutors don鈥檛 just help students grasp content; they build trust, offer encouragement and create more room for teachers to focus on the diverse needs in their classrooms.

For UW students, this work is a powerful form of community-based learning: They gain firsthand insight into educational equity, practice collaborative problem-solving with teachers and contribute to stronger public schools across our region.

Five women standing and smiling at the lens, post lunch celebration.
CELE Center awards luncheon celebrating Ania Beszterda-Alyson. From left: Andrea Marquez, Jessica Hunnicutt Batten, Maria T. Lee, Ania Beszterda-Alyson, Emma Biscocho Pelletier.

3. Riverways Education Partnerships and CASE: Learning alongside community

Through Riverways Education Partnerships, UW students travel to rural and tribal communities to learn with and from local educators, families and youth. This year鈥檚 visits through the three Culture And Science Exchange (CASE) programs invited students to spend time on Yakama, Quileute and Makah lands, listen to community leaders, support youth programs and reflect on what responsible partnership really looks like.

The impact is two-way: Youth meet and learn from college students who genuinely care, while UW students gain a deeper understanding of reciprocity and educational justice. These relationships, built over time, help students recognize their role in supporting, rather than directing, community-driven work.

鈥淭hese student鈥揷ommunity relationships are years in the making. We have UW students who have worked with their partner communities for two, three, even four years,鈥 says Richard Parra, assistant director of Rural and Tribal Partnerships. 鈥淩iverways and CASE remind our students that meaningful change comes from showing up consistently, actively listening and supporting what communities are already working toward.鈥

 

Group of six middle school age kids standing in the Kirsten Wind Tunnel.
Middle school students from eastern Washington visited the Kirsten Wind Tunnel on campus as part of Riverways’ Culture And Science Exchange (CASE) program.

4. Leadership education: From the classroom to community impact

At the CELE Center, leadership is not a title, it is a practice rooted in community and civic responsibility. This year, a combined 232 students enrolled in CELE Center leadership courses and the leadership minor, exploring what it means to lead with equity, humility and collaboration in a complex democracy.

At the Spring CELEbration event in May, students in the Husky Leadership Certificate program presented their capstone projects, showing how they applied their learning in community organizations, student groups, public institutions and workplaces. Together, they form an interdisciplinary network of student leaders who carry their practice into every space they inhabit 鈥 strengthening civic life across our region.

Through reflection, relationship-building and community-based experiences, CELE Center鈥檚 leadership education deepens student learning, broadens access to leadership development and prepares students to engage in the ongoing work of building a more just, democratic society.

鈥淲hen students are given the space to reflect on their leadership in real community contexts, learning becomes something they carry with them 鈥 not just a course requirement, but a responsibility,鈥 said Fran Lo, executive director of the CELE Center. 鈥淲e see leadership education as preparation for participation in a living democracy, shaped through relationships, humility and sustained engagement. These experiences help students understand not only how to lead, but why their leadership matters beyond the University.鈥

Nathan Loutsis at the Spring CELEbration holding his Husky Leadership Certificate to the camera and smiling.
Nathan Loutsis at the 2024 Spring CELEbration, a showcase of student community engagement and leadership. Loutsis, a Husky Leadership Certificate recipient, began serving on the Kenmore City Council while an undergraduate and is working on his master’s degree in public policy. Photo: Photo by Jayden Becles

5. Dream Project: From near-peer mentoring to educational access leadership

For nearly two decades, the Dream Project has shown what is possible when UW students work alongside high schoolers to expand college access and advance educational equity across our region. What begins as near-peer mentoring often grows into a long-term commitment to supporting students and schools.

Jacob Shapiro is one example. A former Dream Project mentor and student intern, Shapiro continued this work after graduation as an AmeriCorps member supporting college and career readiness tutors in Seattle Public Schools. Today, he works with Seattle Promise, where he recently led a financial aid workshop for Dream Project college and career readiness assistants, bringing his experience full circle.

鈥淢y foundational professional experiences at Dream Project laid out the groundwork for my career,鈥 said Jacob Shapiro. 鈥淣ow, as an outreach specialist for Seattle Promise, I get to turn conversations into possibilities for students just beginning to imagine their futures. I appreciate the opportunities that Dream Project 鈥 and CELE as a whole 鈥 have offered me.鈥

Shapiro鈥檚 story is one of many. Dream Project alumni can be found in classrooms, nonprofits, youth-serving organizations and public institutions, carrying forward the skills, relationships and justice-centered values they developed at CELE. Together, they form a growing network of educational access leaders strengthening pathways for students across Washington.

Jacob Shapiro pointing out scholarships on a projector to a classroom of Dream Project workshop participants.
Jacob Shapiro led a financial aid workshop for Dream Project college and career readiness assistants.

Looking ahead

Across Seattle and throughout Washington state, the impact of the CELE Center is powered by partnership 鈥 including generous donors who believe in students as catalysts for change and in education as a tool to strengthen democracy.

As we look to the year ahead, additional gifts can open doors for more students and expand community-rooted learning and leadership. Alumni, family and friends are leaning in to strengthen the ripple effects of this work across schools, neighborhoods and regions through their philanthropy.

Now hiring temporary summer enrichment assistant instructors

Robinson Center is now seeking temporary summer enrichment assistant instructors.

The Robinson Center is seeking assistant instructors聽to teach its summer enrichment courses, which offer highly capable students a fast-paced, immersive learning experience. This position is grounded in our core values: honor and sustain the multiplicity of identities that enter the classroom; design and maintain inclusive learning environments that benefit all; and ensure emotional and physical well-being.

Visit the Robinson Center website to learn more about their programs. Interested applicants can apply to Req #0000127270 on the UW Employment site.

Outstanding opportunity for temporary summer enrichment lead instructors

The Robinson Center has an outstanding opportunity for temporary summer enrichment lead instructors to join their team.聽

The Robinson Center is seeking lead instructors to teach its summer enrichment courses, which offer highly capable students a fast-paced, immersive learning experience. This position is grounded in our core values: honor and sustain the multiplicity of identities that enter the classroom; design and maintain inclusive learning environments that benefit all; and ensure emotional and physical well-being.

Visit the Robinson Center website to learn more about their programs. Interested applicants can apply to Req # 0000127236 on the UW Employment site.

First Year Programs announces new name: New Student & Transfer Programs

The name of First Year Programs has recently changed to . The updated name more accurately reflects the work of the unit and the full range of first-year and transfer students it serves at the 乱伦社区. The change aligns with a University-wide shift in language and provides clarity as the UW adopts more inclusive terminology around student populations.

Vice Provost and Dean Ed Taylor talks with a student in front of a Dawg Daze banner, with other students in the background.
New Student & Transfer Programs supports incoming Huskies through academic transitions and community-building programs.

For more than two decades, First Year Programs has played a central role in supporting new undergraduates as they transition into the UW. Through orientation, first-year and transfer seminars, peer-led programs and other efforts that help students find community and connect with campus resources, First Year Programs has helped thousands of Huskies navigate their academic and social pathways. The move to New Student & Transfer Programs recognizes both the continued evolution of the unit鈥檚 work and its long-standing commitment to all new undergraduates.

鈥淥ur new name makes it clear that every student鈥檚 entry point into the UW matters,鈥 said LeAnne Jones Wiles, executive director of New Student & Transfer Programs. 鈥淲hether students are arriving straight from high school or transferring from another institution, we are here to ensure they feel seen, supported and connected from day one.鈥

In August 2025, the Office of Admissions formally shifted from using freshman to first-year, bringing UW terminology in line with peer institutions across the country. The change reflects national trends in equitable and inclusive language and clarifies how the University defines first-year and transfer students. As a result, the name First Year Programs no longer accurately represented the broad population the unit serves, including students entering directly from high school and students transferring from other colleges and universities.

New Student & Transfer Programs facilitates Advising and Orientation, Dawg Daze, First Year Interest Groups (FIGS), Transfer Seminars, and the Commuter and Transfer Commons (located in the Husky Union Building). These programs help students build relationships, understand academic expectations and establish a strong foundation for their time at the UW.

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UW opens the Transfer Center

Transferring to the 乱伦社区 is a major milestone for thousands of Huskies who start at Washington鈥檚 community and technical colleges. 鈥嬧婽his fall, the UW is opening the in Mary Gates Hall, uniting programs and partnerships under and providing transfer students with a centralized, welcoming home for advising, peer mentorship and campus connections. As a central space for connection, collaboration and celebration, the Center builds transfer community year-round.

Located in Mary Gates Hall 141, the UW Transfer Center offers drop-in advising with UAA and OMA&D advisers and also hosts small-group campus visits for Washington’s community and technical colleges.

 

鈥淓stablishing a Transfer Center is the critical next step,鈥 said Joslin Boroughs, director of advising initiatives and partnerships for Undergraduate Academic Affairs Advising. 鈥淐entralizing brings visibility to the transfer student experience and improves coordination so we can support student success. Think of the Transfer Center as your campus partner. It鈥檚 a single front door for referrals and a resource hub for best practices.鈥 A central point of contact, transfer guides and departmental connections streamline referrals for prospective and current students, as well as faculty and staff.

The Transfer Center unites long-standing partnerships between UW advisers and Washington鈥檚 community and technical colleges to remove barriers to timely transfer. It also connects existing initiatives such as Path to UW, which gives prospective students early access to UW resources. The Center’s space is reservable for partner-hosted, transfer-supportive events.

鈥淭he Path to UW partnership with Seattle Colleges is re-writing the story of transfer to a flagship university,鈥 said Melody McMillan, senior executive director of Seattle Promise at Seattle Colleges. 鈥淏uilt with student access and success at the center, Path to UW was shaped by student and faculty feedback 鈥 and acting on that feedback works.鈥

鈥淐oordinated advising through the Path to UW program meets students earlier and more consistently 鈥 expanding access to a world-class public research university,鈥 said Michaelann Jundt, senior associate dean of Undergraduate Academic Affairs.

Transfer students at a glance 鈥 2025

  • Enrolled: 1,685 transfer students

  • From Washington community and technical colleges: 1,400 (83%)

  • Regions: Puget Sound, Olympic Peninsula, Southwest, Central and Eastern Washington (such as Seattle Colleges, Bellevue, Peninsula, Clark, Yakima Valley and Spokane)

  • Top majors: business, computer science, psychology, biology, nursing, communication, economics, informatics, engineering, design, English, sociology, environmental science and resource management

Students will also meet , a peer leadership team developed with 鈥 who host welcome events, offer one-on-one support and help students navigate their first year on campus.

鈥淎djusting to new teaching styles and the course load can be overwhelming,鈥 said Transfer Ambassador and psychology major, Iqra Mohamed, 鈥26. 鈥淲hat helped me was introducing myself to people near me on day one and joining study groups. It can feel intimidating, but it sets you up for success and builds self-advocacy.鈥

鈥淲ith a dedicated space, there鈥檚 a go-to for questions and drop-in support,鈥 Mohamed added. 鈥It shows a place designed for transfer students, which can strengthen belonging. Transfer can feel like a short stop, but the Center will help students feel more connected and find accessible opportunities to create a memorable UW experience.” Kitchen access, study spaces and lockers remain available in the Commuter and Transfer Commons.

Ambassadors continue outreach at partner colleges, closing the loop from exploration to enrollment. 鈥淪eattle鈥檚 students are brilliant and driven,鈥 added McMillan. 鈥淲hen institutions align around them, applications turn into admissions, admissions into enrollment, and enrollment into graduation and career.鈥

鈥淥ne year in, we expect growth in ambassador engagement, referrals and event participation 鈥 clear signals that students are reaching support sooner,鈥 said Boroughs.

鈥淥ver the past decade, the 乱伦社区 has become more vocal and intentional about transfer student success,鈥 said Jundt.

鈥淭he Transfer Center is that commitment made visible 鈥 a place where students can find their path, and their people, from day one.鈥

About Undergraduate Academic Affairs Advising

Undergraduate Academic Affairs Advising supports undergraduates across all majors with academic planning, exploration and success 鈥 connecting students with advising, resources and opportunities that help them graduate on time and thrive at the UW.

UW alum Evan Siu named Schwarzman Scholar

乱伦社区 alumnus Evan Siu, ’23, has been selected as a Schwarzman Scholar, one of the world鈥檚 most competitive graduate and fellowship programs.

Siu, who earned a bachelor鈥檚 degree in informatics, joins the program鈥檚 10th class of 150 scholars chosen from nearly 5,000 applicants worldwide. will pursue a fully funded master鈥檚 degree in global affairs at Tsinghua University in Beijing, where they will study China鈥檚 role in global trends alongside leaders in business, technology and policy.

鈥淲hether through software, policy, investment or classrooms, my goal is to widen access through technology to finance, information and trade networks so geography isn鈥檛 the limiting factor in human potential,鈥 Siu said. 鈥淚鈥檓 excited to walk that path with my classmates, giving as much as I learn from all of them.鈥

Photo of Evan Siu
In Beijing, Evan Siu, 鈥23, plans to engage with China鈥檚 technology sector and explore the region鈥檚 design, consumer services and global economic connections.

Siu is an associate product manager at Visa in San Francisco, where he has supported products across AI-powered fraud and identity, cross-border payments, small-business tools and cryptocurrency. He now works with Visa Ventures, helping shape the firm鈥檚 strategy for investing in fintechs and startups worldwide.

鈥淢y professional experiences have shown me how financial technology can bank the unbanked, reduce barriers in commerce and make interactions between nations more seamless,鈥 Siu said. 鈥淚 hope to apply those lessons to deepen U.S.鈥揅hina collaboration.鈥

At the UW, Siu combined his informatics studies with leadership roles in entrepreneurship and technology communities. He was active in the Lavin Entrepreneurship Program, DubHacks Next, UW Blockchain Society, UW Consulting Association, and helped open undergraduate access to the Creative Destruction Lab during its inaugural year on campus.

Born in the United States and Chinese by ethnicity, Siu traces his passion for U.S.鈥揅hina exchange to a middle-school trip to Shanghai, where QR-code payments first showed him how technology could simplify everyday life.

With the incoming class, the Schwarzman Scholars network includes more than 1,300 members from 104 countries and 459 institutions. Alumni of the program are leading across industries and working together to address urgent global challenges. This year鈥檚 record-high number of applications demonstrates young leaders鈥 growing investment in understanding China and shaping the future of global cooperation.

About the Schwarzman Scholars Program

The is an elite scholarship program founded in 2013 by Blackstone Co-Founder, Chairman and CEO Stephen A. Schwarzman. The program was created to respond to the geopolitical landscape of the 21st century by preparing the next generation of global leaders.

Up to 200 scholars are selected annually from a broad range of backgrounds, including business, technology, science, politics, healthcare and more.聽

About the Office of Merit Scholarships, Fellowships and Awards

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

What happens on campus doesn鈥檛 stay on campus: Why undergraduate experiences matter for everyone

Every fall, new Huskies arrive at the 乱伦社区 鈥 curious, driven and a little nervous. More than 25% of our first-year students are the first in their families to seek a four-year degree. Of the UW鈥檚 undergraduate population, 55% receive financial aid, 74% are Washington state residents, representing all 39 Washington counties. Throughout their undergraduate journey, thousands will plug into research and community engagement, gaining experience and developing character traits that prepare them for their future.

Why should you care? Because it鈥檚 not just about current students. What happens at the 乱伦社区 doesn鈥檛 stay on campus. In just a few fast years, undergraduates will leave with more than a diploma: They鈥檒l carry with them the persistence, empathy and civic responsibility our workplaces, communities and democracy demand.

Photo collage of student working on her research project and another student packing produce from a farm.
Undergraduate experiences beyond the classroom, like research, community engagement and leadership education enliven and animate classroom experiences and bring students into the breadth and depth of the UW.

We readily see the ripple effects of undergraduate education, from the alum who teaches your child multiplication, to the nurse who cares for your parent, or the software engineer at your office who solves a thorny problem. However, undergraduate experiences beyond the classroom, like research, community engagement and leadership education have the potential to become difference-makers for students and the world they graduate into. They enliven and animate classroom experiences and bring students into the breadth and depth of the UW, one of America鈥檚 leading research universities. Teaching the next generation the foundations of research and service for the public good matters to Washington state residents personally, publicly, profoundly for decades to come.

Research, community engagement and leadership education 鈥 the areas we focus on in our work 鈥斅 are integral to students鈥 career preparation and teach skills, habits and mindsets that AI can鈥檛 generate. Undergraduate researchers learn persistence, flex the muscle that discerns fact from fiction, apply knowledge across a range of complex problems, and so much more. Students who learn to lead through communities wrangle with ethics, deepen their self-awareness, practice respectful dialogue, and develop a sustained commitment to our civic spaces.

One undergraduate researcher explored how people diagnosed with Alzheimer鈥檚 feel about different interventions and saw firsthand how those facing this disease have different opinions and approaches to the idea of memories. She was surprised to learn that some viewed forgetting as a gift. She plans on taking the lesson of being curious about different perspectives to her journalism career.

Another undergraduate volunteered in schools, helping students apply to post-secondary education. In this service and leadership work, he practiced public speaking and community-listening skills. He鈥檚 brought these skills to his law career representing victims of crime. He learned that listening and effective communication builds trust between communities and the justice system.

Photos of Sophie Pierszalowski and Fran Lo.
Sophie Pierszalowski, left, is the director of the UW鈥檚 Office of Undergraduate Research. Fran Lo, right, is the executive director of the Community Engagement and Leadership Education Center at the UW.

Let鈥檚 look at the big picture again. By 2031, an estimated 72% of jobs will require education beyond high school. Students who take part in research, community engagement and leadership education are more likely to persist to graduation. These opportunities help students articulate their why, which sets them apart in scholarship applications, job interviews, graduate school applications and more. More than two-thirds of UW graduates stay in Washington state. Undergraduate research, community engagement and leadership development teach the habits of heart and mind we should expect from our business community, politicians, civic leaders and the neighbors next door.

Summer鈥檚 over and fall is here. We are delighted to begin again 鈥 as we do at the start of every new school year 鈥 with this newest group of Huskies. We can鈥檛 wait to see what inspires them within and beyond the classroom and, most importantly, how they will contribute to the world beyond them. There is no time like the present, for their future and ours.


Fran Lo is the executive director of the Community Engagement and Leadership Education Center at the UW. Sophie Pierszalowski is the director of the UW鈥檚 Office of Undergraduate Research.

Four UW undergrads awarded Fulbright scholarships to study, teach and conduct research abroad

Four 乱伦社区 undergraduates have been awarded Fulbright scholarships for the 2025鈥26 academic year, joining three other UW students and alumni selected for the prestigious international program. They join about 2,000 recipients nationwide who will pursue graduate study, conduct research or teach English abroad.

This year鈥檚 undergraduate awardees will travel to Germany, Mexico, Tajikistan and the United Kingdom to engage in research, teaching assistantships and advanced study in the arts.

Funded by the U.S. Department of State, the is the nation鈥檚 flagship international exchange initiative, supporting students in building global connections through education, service and scholarship.

Seven UW students and recent alumni were selected for Fulbright exchange awards. Top row: Emily Bassett, Thomas Key, Vincent Da, Elana Skeers. Bottom row: Sabrina Prestes Oliveira, Jack Regala and Annabella Li. Photo: 乱伦社区

Explore the full story from UW News.

About the Office of Merit Scholarships, Fellowships and Awards

The Fulbright application process is supported by the聽聽(OMSFA), a UAA program. OMSFA works with faculty, staff and students to identify and support promising students in developing the skills and personal insights necessary to become strong candidates for this and other prestigious awards. The聽聽(and other scholarships supporting graduate studies around the world) will get started this spring. Watch for updates about OMSFA鈥檚聽.