April 26, 2024

That’s #UMWMade

Engineering battle bots. Launching startups. Building domains. Re-designing the clothes hanger. Imagining a different way to end poverty – and creating an international conversation about it.

All of the above? UMW-made.

With 3D-printed plastic wheels and a micro-controller, this student-built battle bot is run through an app. #UMWMade UMW students and faculty created "domainosaurs" to promote Domain of One’s Own. #UMWMade UMW senior Kendall Parker claimed a national award for her political science paper and broke school records as a member of the UMW Women’s Basketball team. #UMWMade

Known as the place where “great minds get to work,” UMW employs, enrolls, and produces movers, shakers, and change-makers. Getting to work is what we do – producing, creating, leading, influencing, and building – in communities around the world.

And not by chance. From the moment you step on campus, you’re immersed in a high-impact learning environment that takes you beyond the classroom. You’re surrounded by faculty who advise, research and offer opportunities for real-world experiences. You become part of an infrastructure designed for innovation – think Domain of One’s Own, the UMW ThinkLab, and the James Farmer Multicultural Center, just to get started.

“I’ve worked at a lot of institutions of higher education, and they all talk about ‘creation’ but UMW is unique insofar as they also walk the walk.” – Lee Skallerup Bessette, Instructional Technology Specialist

Along with students, professor Shawn Humphrey created not one but three social impact organizations, including the Two Dollar Challenge, and wrote the manifesto that is leading today’s conversation in the global poverty landscape. Senior Morgan Wellman became co-owner of Ladyburg, a natural bath and body works company, in her second year of college. Historic preservation students, alongside geology professor Stephen Hanna, have spent three years conducting groundbreaking research on the slavery narratives of plantations in the south.

And the UMW-made story keeps going. Abbas Haider ’12 and Robert Davis ’12 started America’s first bulletproof clothing line as students and were recently named to Forbes’ 30 Under 30. Heather Mullins Crislip ’95, CEO of the Richmond-based HOME, is on a civil rights mission focused on fair housing. Ken Fulk ’87 is a world-renowned design mastermind who is sought out by celebrities and has a Pottery Barn line.

College of Education students demonstrate Makers Space projects for Richmond Mayor Levar Stoney. #UMWMade art project A raku-fired ceramics collection by UMW art students, now on display at the Fredericksburg Visitor’s Center. #UMWMade

These are just a few of the powerful stories spilling out of our classrooms. And now it’s your turn to tell the story.

Get to work, UMW! Tell us what UMW has helped you make or how UMW has helped make you who you are today.

 

Share your story on social media with #UMWMade, or send your story to social@umw.edu.

UMW Students Design Curriculum for Accessible Learning

Suited for Success

UMW Alumni Make Forbes’ 30 Under 30

Finding Your Voice

Psychology major lands top auditory internship

Simply Newsworthy

What are Mary Washington’s campus hot spots? And what do UMW students love about their small, tight-knit community? These are just two of the questions Fox 5 DC asked when they arrived on campus for a morning of filming for the station’s College Tour series. News anchors Annie Yu and Kevin McCarthy talked student traditions, dove into the liberal arts experience and even tried their hand at making omelets in the University Center, as thousands tuned in to see what life at Mary Washington is all about.

Find the Mary Washington College Tour segments on Channel 5 and check out behind-the-scenes shots of Fox 5’s visit below.

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Bowling Throws First Pitch for Flying Squirrels

Lisa Bowling, Vice President for Advancement and University Relations, threw the first pitch at the Richmond Flying Squirrels game on Wednesday, Aug. 9. The minor league baseball game was part of the Fredericksburg community night at the Diamond. Mary Washington alumni, parents and friends joined together to watch the team take on the Portland Sea Dogs, a Boston Red Sox Double-A Affiliate.

Scientist Travels Globe to Track Climate Change

Nancy Maynard ('63) studies the impact of development and climate change on the world around us.

Mapping Heritage Trees

On a cold winter morning, biology major Elizabeth Piña ’18 and Associate Professor of Biology Alan Griffith met on the lawn at Brompton to determine just how big the Brompton Oak really is.

Home Equity

Advocate toils for equal access to housing.

Paino Visits Archaeological Field Project in Stafford

Earlier this summer, UMW President Troy Paino visited the annual Department of Historic Preservation archaeological field project.

The current excavations are focused on an antebellum garden associated with an 1840s slave quarter and kitchen quarter complex in Stafford County. The project has been led by incoming Assistant Professor Lauren McMillan for the past three summers.

Stafford site
Cheyenne Johnson, Troy Paino and Cathy Smith examine artifacts.
Stafford historic preservation project.
UMW President Troy Paino and UMW historic preservation students work on a site in Stafford County.
Historic preservation project in Stafford County.
UMW President Troy Paino and UMW historic preservation students, under the guidance of Assistant Professor Lauren McMillan, work on a site in Stafford County.