May 19, 2024

UMW Sets 2023-24 Tuition and Fees; Holds Undergrad Tuition Flat

The University of Mary Washington Board of Visitors has set 2023-24 tuition and fees, deciding to hold undergraduate tuition flat, while implementing small increases in graduate tuition and student fees.

The University of Mary Washington Board of Visitors has set 2023-24 tuition and fees, deciding to hold undergraduate tuition flat, while implementing small increases in graduate tuition and student fees.

The University of Mary Washington Board of Visitors approved tuition and fees for the 2023-24 academic year at its May 18, 2023, meeting. Undergraduate tuition will remain the same in the coming year. Graduate tuition will increase 3%, and the auxiliary comprehensive fee and housing and dining fees for all students will increase by 5%.

UMW’s tuition and fee rates are one part of the equation to begin the year with a balanced budget, a requirement for public colleges in Virginia. In addition, the University relies on the state budget, and in recent years has pulled in reserve funding, particularly during the pandemic when enrollment varied.

All three strategies will once again result in a balanced budget to start fiscal year 2024, overcoming a deficit of nearly $7 million. The total is due to inflationary cost increases and changes in base expenses, primarily in energy and dining charges; state-mandated increases in salaries and health insurance premiums as well as minimum wage and administrative system charges for financial, human resources and information technology services; and adjustments to revenue sources from enrollment. Read more.

First-Year UMW Student Achieves ALL IN Student Voting Honor Roll

During her first year at UMW, Tonia Attie earned a spot on the 2023 ALL IN Student Voting Honor Roll. A political science and philosophy double major, she has a passion for urging young people to make sure their voices are heard at the polls. She poses here during the Student Government Association’s trip to Washington, D.C.

During her first year at UMW, Tonia Attie earned a spot on the 2023 ALL IN Student Voting Honor Roll.

First-year University of Mary Washington student Tonia Attie has been recognized by the ALL IN Campus Democracy Challenge (ALL IN) as part of the 2023 ALL IN Student Voting Honor Roll. This roster highlights college students doing outstanding work to advance nonpartisan democratic engagement at participating campuses.

Attie joins a group of just 175 students recognized for their voter registration, education and turnout efforts ahead of last year’s midterm elections, which saw a sizable number of young people weighing in at the polls.

A double major in political science and philosophy with a pre-law focus, Attie quickly established herself at UMW. “Having grown up in Fredericksburg, I’ve genuinely always wanted to go to Mary Washington and give back to my hometown,” she said. “As I started looking into college, I just knew that UMW would be the perfect fit for me.” Read more.

Valedictorians, Professors Take Center Stage at Commencement

Hannah Harris earned the Colgate W. Darden Jr. Award for Academic Achievement for completing her degree with the highest grade-point average in the undergraduate program. She finished with a perfect 4.0 GPA. Photo by Suzanne Carr Rossi.

Hannah Harris earned the Colgate W. Darden Jr. Award for Academic Achievement for completing her degree with the highest grade-point average in the undergraduate program. She finished with a perfect 4.0 GPA. Photo by Suzanne Carr Rossi.

As more than 1,000 Class of 2023 graduates crossed the stage at UMW’s Commencement to the applause of hundreds of faculty and thousands of family and friends, two students and two faculty received top-of-class honors.

Graduates Hannah Harris and Riley Smith earned the Colgate W. Darden Jr. Award for Academic Achievement for completing their degrees with the highest grade-point average (GPA) in the undergraduate program. Both finished with a perfect 4.0 GPA and are members of the UMW Honors Program and Phi Beta Kappa, the nation’s oldest honor society.

In addition, Associate Professor of Chemistry Randall Reif was recognized with the Mary W. Pinschmidt Award, for having had the greatest impact on the lives of the members of the Class of 2023, and Professor and Chair of Theatre and Dance Gregg Stull was named the first Anderson Distinguished Professor. Read more.

UMW Students Awarded Full-Ride Washington and Alvey Scholarships

The newest Eagles have landed at the University of Mary Washington, as May 1 marked the annual college decision day.

For the incoming cohort in fall 2023, UMW has named two Washington Scholars and three Alvey Scholars, offering full scholarships to these exceptional students. In addition to earning the scholarships, which are renewable for four years of undergraduate studies with GPA and residential requirements, the students are admitted to the Honors Program and have access to funding for experiential learning opportunities such as study abroad and undergraduate research. Applicants are automatically considered for UMW scholarship opportunities, including these top awards, which are equal to full tuition, fees, room and board.

The Washington Scholarship is available for Virginia residents, with priority to those who apply for admission to UMW by Nov. 15. UMW’s Alvey Scholars program recognizes out-of-state students, again with priority by Nov. 15. Several Alvey Scholarships focus on STEM majors, with generous support from Irene Piscopo Rodgers ’59, who has funded 12 Alvey Scholarships during her lifetime and through a transformational estate gift, leaving $30 million to the University of Mary Washington to fund scholars in science, technology, engineering and math through scholarships and undergraduate research.

Many are finalists or semifinalists in the National Merit Scholarship competition, valedictorians and salutatorians, and show promise for providing service and leadership to the University community through extracurricular activities.

Meet the 2023 Washington and Alvey Scholars at UMW. Read more.

UMW’s 2023 Commencement Set for May 6, Livestream Available

UMW commencementBagpipe music will fill the air and graduates will don their brand-new blue regalia, as the University of Mary Washington prepares for its 112th Commencement, scheduled for May 6, 2023. About 1,000 graduates and their families will celebrate their academic accomplishments and student success in person on Ball Circle during the Saturday ceremony.

livestream will be available to watch from home, as well as in several indoor viewing locations on campus, including Dodd Auditorium, Lee Hall Room 414 and the Colonnade Room in the Cedric Rucker University Center.

This year’s class includes more than 100 first-generation students who will be recognized with a white stole. Graduates in the Honors Program – celebrating its 10th anniversary this year – will don a light blue stole.

UMW students also customize their regalia by decorating their mortarboards and wearing colorful cords to signify their induction into various honor societies. These include the national senior honor society Mortarboard; the oldest national honor society, Phi Beta Kappa; the international honor society in education, Kappa Delta Pi; and an international honor society for business, Beta Gamma Sigma. Students top off their graduation-day style with academic hoods in colors that correspond to particular degrees worn over the traditional commencement gown. And while the gowns are now blue, they are also “green” – made from recycled water bottles by Virginia-based company Oak Hall.

Friends and family from the commonwealth, across the United States and around the world will be able to watch this year’s graduates make the iconic Mary Washington procession from the Bell Tower at the tip of Double Drive to the ceremony site at the center of campus. And viewers can share congratulations with all the graduates who cross the stage on Ball Circle using #UMWGrads on social media, with well wishes broadcast on site prior to the ceremony start at 9 a.m. EST.

Tune in on the livestream starting at 8:30 a.m. on Saturday, May 6.

UMW Juniors and Seniors Join Prestigious Phi Beta Kappa Society

The newest members of UMW's Kappa of Virginia chapter of Phi Beta Kappa pose at Mary Washington's Heslep Amphitheatre. Phi Beta Kappa membership is a prestigious honor, with chapters existing at just 10 percent of America's colleges and universities, and fewer than 10 percent of students at each of those schools being selected for membership.

The newest members of UMW’s Kappa of Virginia chapter of Phi Beta Kappa pose at Mary Washington’s Heslep Amphitheatre. Phi Beta Kappa membership is a prestigious honor, with chapters existing at just 10 percent of America’s colleges and universities, and fewer than 10 percent of students at each of those schools being selected for membership.

The newest members of the nation’s oldest academic honor society celebrated their induction recently, as UMW’s Kappa of Virginia chapter announced its 2023 Phi Beta Kappa Society cohort.

“These are among our most outstanding junior and senior students, all of whom have demonstrated particular strength in both the disciplines and methods of the liberal arts and sciences. We’re tremendously proud of these wonderfully accomplished students,” said Kappa Chapter President, Professor of English and Department of English and Linguistic​s Chair Jonathan Levin.

The induction ceremony on Sunday, April 2, featured a keynote by Virginia Poet Laureate Emerita Carolyn Kreiter-Foronda ’69, an honorary Kappa of Virginia member. Her reading included Monarch Butterfly, inspired by her own work with her husband to establish a habitat for the insects, and meant as guiding words to the newest inductees.

It concludes with “Let me be a leading light; a luminary, destined to survive.” Read more.

New Lab School Director Rebecca Towery Leading the Way for UMW and Stafford County Public Schools

Educator and administrator Rebecca Towery has been named director of the University of Mary Washington and Stafford County Public Schools’ proposed lab school.

Educator and administrator Rebecca Towery has been named director of the University of Mary Washington and Stafford County Public Schools’ proposed lab school.

The University of Mary Washington and Stafford County Public Schools’ proposed lab school has named a director to lead the next steps of the planning process and begin the implementation proposal to launch. Local educator and administrator Rebecca Towery has been appointed to the leadership role, continuing as an employee of Stafford County Public Schools, in partnership with UMW, her alma mater.

An experienced educator with expertise in strategy, research and evaluation, Dr. Towery brings a unique blend of in-classroom knowledge with the know-how to launch a lab school, from securing grant funding to building out the necessary capacity and curriculum for a successful program. She holds an Ed.D. in education leadership and policy from Vanderbilt University, an M.Ed. in secondary education from the University of Mary Washington, and a B.A. in history, with a political science minor, from Virginia Tech, as well as an education administration license from Lipscomb University.

“Dr. Towery has been an incredible asset to Stafford Schools, and was key in securing the grant to create this incredible opportunity for regional students. She is an energetic and forward-looking leader who applies critical thinking and long-range strategic planning to develop exceptional programs. She will certainly be an asset to both the school division and the University of Mary Washington. We know she will bring great success to this partnership,” said Stafford County Public Schools Superintendent Dr. Thomas W. Taylor. Read more.

Let’s Chat About ChatGPT: UMW Faculty Perspectives on Emerging AI Technology

Associate Professor of Geography Caitie Finlayson uses ChatGPT to help generate and refine questions for her students.

Associate Professor of Geography Caitie Finlayson uses ChatGPT to help generate and refine questions for her students.

When you ask how UMW is using ChatGPT in the classroom, you’ll hear a variety of responses. Some students and faculty have yet to hear of the emerging AI technology. Some know it well and make use of it for their assignments whether instructors know it or not. Some say they’re being encouraged by their professors to use it wisely as part of the writing process.

Several UMW faculty gathered on Feb. 8, 2023, to share their professional and personal experience with ChatGPT in an open discussion jointly led by the Center for Teaching and Digital Learning Support.

Professor of Communication and Chair of the Department of Communication and Digital Studies Anand Rao kicked off the conversation, after spending a semester exploring and embracing ChatGPT in his debate and speech class.

“What are some of the possibilities? What’s the potential?” he asked. Read more.

Let’s Chat About ChatGPT: UMW Faculty Perspectives on Emerging AI Technology

When you ask how UMW is using ChatGPT in the classroom, you’ll hear a variety of responses. Some students and faculty have yet to hear of the emerging AI technology. Some know it well and make use of it for their assignments whether instructors know it or not. Some say they’re being encouraged by their […]

UMW President Troy Paino Wins National Award for Student-Centered Work

Students, families, alumni, faculty and staff at the University of Mary Washington have long recognized President Troy D. Paino’s commitment to their work, well-being and success. Now his dedication on campus has earned national acclaim, with NASPA-Student Affairs Administrators in Higher Education selecting Paino to receive the 2023 President’s Award.

has received the 2023 President’s Award from NASPA-Student Affairs Administrators in Higher Education. The national award recognizes Paino’s exceptional commitment to students.

President Paino has received the 2023 President’s Award from NASPA-Student Affairs Administrators in Higher Education. The national award recognizes Paino’s exceptional commitment to students.

“He is, above all, a student-centered leader,” UMW Vice President for Student Affairs Juliette Landphair said in the nominating letter. She emphasized Paino’s compassionate approach to strategic planning and decision-making, his personal attention to student ideas and feedback, and his commitment to understanding diverse perspectives – viewpoints he intentionally seeks during regular dinners with students at his residence, Brompton.

Gabby Taroc ’26 attended one of those dinners and described President Paino as welcoming: “It was a great time! He was so interested in each of the students’ stories and what we want in life. It was wonderful meeting him and his wife!” Read more.