Washington State University’s DAESA honors faculty, staff, and student accomplishments
The Washington State University Division of Academic Engagement and Student Achievement (DAESA) celebrated the recent accomplishments of faculty, staff, and students at an April 13 event where a spectrum of awards was presented.
“The endeavors our programs undertake to advance academic student success and promote faculty development are impressive,” said William B. Davis, interim vice provost for DAESA, part of the Provost’s Office. “We are pleased to recognize at our annual celebration the outstanding accomplishments of so many of our people.”
A total of 19 types of awards were presented at the annual event. Most were from DAESA and its units, including the Academic Success and Career Center (ASCC), the Distinguished Scholarships Program, the First-year Programs’ Common Reading Program and First-year Focus Learning Communities, the Office of Academic Engagement (OAE), the Office of Undergraduate Research, and The Writing Program and its Writing Center.
Joining DAESA’s event to present their own awards this year were: the Alumni Centre for its Top Ten Senior Awards; the Teaching Academy for conference, publication, and large-class teaching awards, as well as the induction of 32 new members; Smith Teaching and Learning Awards; and the WSU Emeritus/Emerita Society for its undergraduate researcher awards, plus arts and humanities grants.
DAESA awards and awardees for 2023 include:
The inaugural DAESA Excellence Awards
This award honors those whose exceptional contributions to the division, its programs, and student success made a significant difference throughout the year. First-ever recipients of the award are:
April Seehafer
Director of the Distinguished Scholarships Program
Category: Administrative/professional
Amanda Morgan
Associate director of ASCC
Category: Administrative/professional
Erin Rapone
Administrative and communications manager for OAE
Category: Classified staff
The Richard G. Law Excellence Award for Undergraduate Teaching
This award honors UCORE/general education faculty who help undergraduates progress toward achieving WSU Learning Goals and Outcomes. The selection committee was impressed by the awardee’s ability to bring to life the processes and concepts of science using a wide variety of active pedagogical tools and practices.
Lisa Carloye
Associate professor biology
The OAE’s Staff Excellence Award
This award is presented to the team member whose exceptional contributions have advanced student success, and who exemplifies the characteristic spirit of the OAE community. This year’s awardee has a genuine commitment to excellence, servant leadership, and lifelong learning, and whose commitment and contributions were indispensable over the past year.
Josefina Galvan-Barajas
Assistant director of College Success Programs
The Writing Program’s Contributions to Writing Across the Curriculum Award
This award is sponsored by the Harold and Jeanne Rounds Olsen Endowment, presented to those whose work improved the teaching of writing, supported grant writing, and helped students make writing authentic and in service of a practical, tangible outcome.
Cameron Peace
Professor in Integrated Plant Sciences
Bob Krikac
Professor in the School of Design and Construction
The Common Reading Excellence Award
This award recognizes exceptional efforts surrounding the use of the year’s shared text — “Braiding Sweetgrass” — to create dialogue within and beyond classrooms on topics raised in the book. The awardee is credited with bringing indigenous voices and perspectives to programming, and for contributing to the faculty teaching guide developed for use of the book.
Julian Ankney
English instructor and coordinator of Native American Programs at WSU Vancouver
The Learning Communities Excellence Award
This award is presented to First-year Focus faculty and staff for collaborative and significant efforts to help entering first-year students make meaningful connections with their peers and faculty, and with new ideas and experiences they encounter at college. The awardees received the award for their work leading pilot and themed living-learning communities — one at Olympia Hall called GreenHouse focused on environmental sustainability, and another at Stephenson North called Wellness House focused on many facets of wellness.
Griffin Hogan
Residential education director at Olympia Hall
Grant Mongin
Residential education director at Stephenson North Hall
The Recognition of Excellence in Support of Undergraduate Research Award
This award recognizes those who support students’ mentored undergraduate research, scholarship, and creative activities in unique and important ways. This year’s awardees were applauded for helping guide students into research opportunities, thus impacting the academic experience and student success of hundreds over many years. They were also credited with serving on the Showcase for Undergraduate Research and Creative Activities (SURCA) Committee.
Andrei Smertenko
Professor in the Institute for Biological Sciences
Donelle “Dee” Posey
Professor in the Dept. of Psychology
Samantha Gizerian
College of Veterinary Medicine (CVM) associate dean and professor in Integrative Physiology and Neuroscience
The Distinguished Scholarships Ambassador Award
This award is given to those who make valuable contributions to the program and support the many student applicants that it serves. The awardee is credited with advising, reviewing materials and giving feedback, and providing applicants with country- and field-specific advice that made applications stronger, and for serving for seven years on the Fulbright Review Committee.
Kay Brothers
Retired advisor and professor in CVM
The Harold and Jeanne Rounds Olsen Award for Outstanding Contributions to Writing Center Initiatives
This award recognizes the efforts of its top student writing consultants. Awardees were credited with, for example, facilitating writing consultations with students in person, over Zoom, and through emails; working diligently to assist students throughout the COVID‑19 remote office months and since; excelling in listening and communications skills; training other consultants; and boosting the trust and confidence of WSU writers.
Aja Uesato
Civil engineering major and center writing consultant since 2019
Gerome Dosono
Wildlife ecology major and consultant since 2019
Jamie Diamond
English education major and consultant since 2017
Puneet Bsanti
Print journalism and English major, and consultant since 2021
OAE’s new College Reading and Learning Association (CRLA) Peer Educator Certification
This certification offers undergraduate and graduate students who are mentors the opportunity to develop knowledge, skills, and abilities to effectively engage and support fellow Cougs, and to respond to students in crisis. This certificate program from CRLA is new at WSU.
Jonah Bates
Criminal justice and criminology major who mentors in OAE’s Veterans Student Support Services (SSS) program
Krystal Flores
Wildlife ecology and conservation major and STEM SSS mentor
Ryley Griffiths
Animal science and animal management major and Teacher Prep SSS mentor
Collin Helsel
Criminal justice and criminology major and Veterans SSS mentor
Jasmine Payne
Psychology major and criminal justice minor and Passport Program mentor
Kaulanie Rivers
Kinesiology major and Passport Program mentor
Vanessa Solorzano Cardenas
Neuroscience major and STEM SSS mentor
ASCC’s CRLA Peer Tutor Certification
This certification is awarded to students who obtained more than 10 hours of training through a UNIV 497 course, and accumulated more than 25 hours of active tutoring of students. ASCC’s tutors assist students across a wide range of disciplines — from chemistry and math to engineering and computer science, and from kinesiology to bioengineering and organic chemistry, and more.
Jenna Jeffries
Biology major who tutors in kinesiology, chemistry, and math
Logan Willis
Mechanical engineering major and mathematics minor who tutors in mathematics, physics, engineering, and computer science
Ethan Jaeger
Bioengineering major who tutors in biology, physics, mathematics, chemistry, organic chemistry, microbiology, chemical engineering, electrical engineering, civil engineering, bioengineering, and statistics