Honors and Awards

  • Celebrating the 2024–25 Undergraduate Medalists

    From the thousands of undergraduate students at the University of Washington, three are selected each year for the prestigious President’s Medalist Award.

    Kaytlin Rose Vanderhorst (Psychology; Education Studies: Wellness and Social Emotional Learning), Carilyn Brandt (English: Creative Writing) and Luna Crone-Barón Drama: Performance; English) are the medalists for 2024–25, selected by a committee for their high GPAs, rigor of classes and number of Honors courses. All three Honors students are pursuing the Interdisciplinary Honors track, a unique academic opportunity that challenges students to explore connections across disciplines and prepares them to address complex societal challenges.

    02/06/2026 | Undergraduate Academic Affairs
  • Where lived experiences becomes research: Mary Gates Scholar Francesca Espey

    Undergrad Francesca Espey receives a Mary Gates Scholarship for disability rights research, inspired by observations of society's attitude toward her father's disease. Meet Francesca

    01/27/2026 | The Henry M. Jackson School of International Studies
  • UW MFA alum is a 2026 USA Fellow

    The USA Fellowship is a highly prestigious award with a two-decade history of supporting artists. USA Fellows are selected based on their artistic visions and unique perspectives within their fields. Anthony Sonnenberg (MFA 2012) is among this year's 50 artists awarded the USA Fellowship.

    01/20/2026 | School of Art + Art History + Design
  • Charting the Path: An interview with Lydia Berhanu, OMA&D’s 2026 honoree for Martin Luther King Jr. Day

    Lydia Berhanu is her own mentor. That’s not to say the University of Washington senior didn’t grow up in a supportive household (she did) or wasn’t surrounded by supportive educators (she was). But when it comes to illuminating her path forward, she’s been the one holding the flashlight.

    01/19/2026 | Office of Minority Affairs & Diversity
  • Jacob Lawrence Gallery welcomes 2026 artist in residence, indira allegra

    According to the Jacob Lawrence Gallery, allegra was chosen for their unique approach to conceptual practice, interdisciplinary research, and community engagement. Allegra will spend January working with student assistants as well UW academic departments and resources to further develop their artistic work.

    01/09/2026 | The Daily
  • Many stories, one land

    “This Is Native Land” is a permanent, 3,000-square-foot exhibition at the Washington State History Museum in Tacoma that weaves the stories of Indigenous peoples into the fabric of the 30-year-old institution. Co-curated by Associate Professor Danica Sterud Miller (Puyallup) and Todd Clark (Wailaki), tribal liaison for the Washington State Historical Society, the project engaged more than 100 Native contributors from more than 60 tribes. 

    Key collaborators include elder Philip H. Red Eagle, ’83, ’87 (Dakota and Puget Sound Salish); artist Joe Feddersen, ’83, (Colville); Owen Oliver, ’21 (Quinault); current UW museology student Markus Teuton, ’24 (Cherokee); and museum staff, including head of collections Maggie Wetherbee, ’00, and director of audience engagement Mary Mikel Stump, a former UW student. Viewpoint spoke with Miller, who is on faculty at UW Tacoma, for a look at the making of “This Is Native Land.”

    01/01/2026 | University of Washington Magazine
  • Washington state’s teacher of the year, Gabriela Núñez Whitemarsh, is a changemaker, problem solver and bilingual math maven

    A bilingual educator with 18 years of experience at both the college level and in K–12 public schools, Whitemarsh hopes to give back to her hometown of Pasco.

    01/01/2026 | University of Washington Magazine
  • Local writer named new poet laureate for Bainbridge Island

    The Bainbridge Island City Council approved to have local resident and writer Erin Malone, affiliate associate professor of English at the UW, be the citys new poet laureate through 2027. Malone is the author of Sight of Disappearance, a full-length collection of poems.
    12/17/2025 | Bainbridge Island Review
  • Awards for Research, Social Justice Efforts & More

    Recent awards celebrate Arts & Sciences faculty, staff, and alumni for their research, social justice work, lifetime achievements, and more. 

    November 2025 Perspectives
  • Honoring the 2025 Alumni Hall of Fame and Alumni of Distinction Inductees

    On October 22, the Department of Communication recognized outstanding alumni who have made a difference in their communities at our annual Alumni Hall of Fame and Alumni of Distinction awards dinner.

    University of Washington Department of Communication
  • Million named Freedom Scholar

    American Indian Studies professor Dian Million received a Freedom Scholar Award, which honors leading academics whose visionary work advances social and economic justice.

    10/29/2025 | College of Arts & Sciences
  • Editorial: Seattleites Nobel Prize-winning work benefits all humanity

    Seattleite Mary Brunkow said she was astonished when she learned she and two scientist colleagues had won the 2025 Nobel Prize for medicine or physiology. But based on her career accomplishments in medical research, she shouldnt have been. Brunkow earned a bachelors degree in molecular and cellular biology from the UW.
    The Seattle Times
  • Seattle scientist Mary Brunkow wins Nobel Prize for groundbreaking immune system research

    Mary Brunkow, a Seattle scientist who earned a bachelors degree in molecular and cellular biology from the UW, is one of three scientists awarded this years Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.

    KOMO
  • Much-loved UW collaborator John Clarke wins the Nobel Prize in Physics

    The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences on Tuesday awarded the 2025 Nobel Prize in Physics jointly to John Clarke, Michel H. Devoret and John M. Martinis, for the discovery of macroscopic quantum mechanical tunneling and energy quantization in an electric circuit. Clarke, a professor emeritus of physics at the University of California, Berkeley, collaborates with the Axion Dark Matter Experiment at the University of Washington.

    UW News
  • She didnt believe she won the Nobel until a photographer showed up at her Seattle door

    On Monday morning, Mary Brunkow was among three scientists who won the Nobel Prize in medicine for discoveries about how the immune system knows not to attack the body. Brunkow is a Seattle scientist who earned a bachelors degree in molecular and cellular biology from the UW.

    The Seattle Times