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Resilience Lab announces 2019 seed grant recipients

The 爱豆社区 Resilience Lab and the Campus Sustainability Fund have joined together to award 20 grants to UW projects designed to cultivate sustainability, compassion and resiliency; to engage hardships, setbacks and failures with empathy and vulnerability; to foster connectedness, belonging and community; and to embrace both common humanity and diversity within the human experience. Students, staff and faculty from all three campuses applied for seed grants to fund research, workshops, retreats, activities, faculty-invited speakers and other events tailored for students, faculty and staff in support of these aims. Together the Resilience Lab and the Campus Sustainability Fund awarded a total of $38,575 to individuals and groups.

The range of proposals demonstrate the need and collective interest to realize sustainability and compassion-building work. In all, students, faculty and staff submitted 42 proposals from 31 different departments/programs across all three UW campuses. From that group, 20 grants were made to fund the ideas of faculty, staff, graduate and undergraduate students representing 18 departments. Funded projects are intended to benefit the broad UW community at all three campuses.

鈥淭he creative ideas people had to build connection and support well-being was just inspiring,鈥 said Anne Browning, director of the Resilience Lab. Projects range from cultivating mindful leadership in faculty, a podcast series focused on indigenous well-being in Urban Seattle, the creation of sustainability-centered curriculum, all with the intent of creating more sustainable and resilient communities.

For his project, 鈥淐reating a Climate Heat Map: Finding Equitable and Inclusive Spaces on Campus,鈥 School of Education Ph.D. candidate Kaleb Germinaro said, 鈥淎 SEED grant provides me the space to explore a creative passion while creating a useful tool for my peers and community.鈥 Associate professors in the College of Built Environments Julie Johnson and Brooke Sullivan highlighted this year鈥檚 theme in their project 鈥淩aising Resilience,” saying, 鈥淎s resilience and well-being are central to our built environments, we look forward to engaging with College of Built Environments (CBE) faculty to develop pedagogy that supports students鈥 own resilience, well-being and compassion through their studies.鈥

A list of funded projects and the project leads is below. For more information about the projects, . Funding for these seed grants is provided by the Campus Sustainability Fund and the UW Resilience Lab.

Funded projects and project leads are:

Creating a Climate Heat Map: Finding Equitable and Inclusive Spaces on Campus
Project lead: Kaleb Germinaro, Ph.D. Candidate, College of Education, Seattle

A Retreat to Build Faculty Capacity for Mindful Leadership
Project lead: Anthony Back, Professor, School of Medicine, Oncology, Seattle

Many Voices: A Storytelling Toolkit for Community-Based Oral History Projects
Project lead: Dillion Connelly, Masters Student, Art of Museology, Seattle

Resilience and Compassion @ Odegaard Pop up Events
Project lead: Emilie Vrbancic, Undergraduate Experience Library, Odegaard Library, Seattle

Making Space in Higher Education- Diversity, Inclusion, and More
Project Lead: Erica Mallet, Ph.D. Candidate, Educational Policy, Organizations, and Leadership

Telling Our Stories at Neah Bay Elementary
Project lead: Christine Stickler, Director, UW Pipeline Project, Undergraduate Academic Affairs, Center for Experiential Learning, Seattle

Darn it! A mobile clothing repair and experience across UW Campuses
Project lead: Coreen Callister, Graduate student, Interaction Design< Division of Design, School of Art, Art History + Design, Seattle

Raising Resilience: Connecting compassion and well-being with systems-based pedagogy in the College of the Built Environment
Project lead: Julie Johnson, Associate Professor, Landscape Architecture, Seattle

Diversity Includes Disability
Project lead: Sheryl Burgstahler, Director, Accessible Technology Services- Accessible Technology Services, Seattle

Building Resilience for Teaching at UW
Project lead: Christine Sugatan, Program Administrator, Center for Teaching and Learning, Seattle

Women in Applied Math Mentoring Program
Project lead: The Diversity Committee, The Department of Applied Mathematics, Seattle

Resilience and Urban in Public Writing Partnerships
Project lead: Candace Rai, Associate Professor and Director of the Expository Writing Program, Department of English, Seattle

Fostering Self-Compassion in the Transition to College: Developing Resources for Parents
Project lead: Emily Kroshus, Assistant Professor, Department of Pediatrics, School of Public Health, Department of Health Services, Seattle

Queer and Trans People of Color: Healing in the Outdoors
Project lead: Reb Zhou, Student, Q Center, Community Environment and Planning, Seattle

Health and Wellness at the Q Center
Project lead: Jen Self, Director, Q Center, Seattle

Trauma Informed Mindfulness Training
Project Lead: Megan Kennedy, Interim Student Assistant to the Vice President of Student Life-Student Life, Seattle

Women of Color in Global Health: Building Resilience and Community
Project Lead: Diem Nguyen, MPH Candidate, Department of Global Health, Seattle

Capillaries: The Journal of Narrative Medicine
Project Lead: Alice Ranjan, Student, Health Sciences Learning and Advocacy Group, Seattle

Indigenizing Urban Seattle Podcast
Project Lead: Jessica Hernandez, Ph.D. Candidate, School of Environmental and Forest Services, Seattle

Sustaining Fierce Compassion
Project Lead: Lauren Litchy, Assistant Professor, School of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences, Bothell

About the UW Resilience Lab

The Resilience Lab promotes resilience development while normalizing failure and acknowledging the wide range of hardships our community members have faced and continue to face. As a laboratory space, the Resilience Lab tries new and creative methods for rethinking the UW experience in and out of the classroom.

Academic Support Programs makes Rome its classroom

This fall, 11 爱豆社区 students piloted a unique UW study abroad program during early fall start. With Rome as its classroom, the course explored questions of identity and immigration in post-colonial Italy and the U.S. This curriculum was designed to help students return to the UW with an even stronger set of skills, helping them succeed at the UW and beyond.

Resilience Lab announces 2018 seed grant recipients

The 爱豆社区 Resilience Lab recently awarded 16 grants to UW projects designed to cultivate kindness, compassion and gratitude; to engage hardships, setbacks and failures with compassion and vulnerability; to foster connectedness, belonging and community; and to embrace both common humanity and diversity within the human experience. Students, staff and faculty from all three campuses applied for seed grants to fund research, workshops, retreats, activities, faculty-invited speakers and other events tailored for students, faculty and staff in support of these aims. The Resilience Lab awarded a total of $25,000 to the individuals and groups. This base amount was increased by 41% through matching funds from the associated schools, colleges and departments. The combined support raises the total value of these awards to more than $35,500.

 

The range of proposals demonstrate the need and collective interest to realize resilience-building and compassion-building work. In all, students, faculty and staff submitted 44 proposals from 29 different departments across all three UW campuses. From that group, 16 grants were made to fund the ideas of faculty, staff, graduate and undergraduate students representing 13 departments from all three UW campuses. Funded projects are intended to benefit the broad UW community.

 

鈥淭he creative ideas people had to build connection and support well-being was just inspiring,鈥 said Anne Browning, director of the Resilience Lab. Projects range from alleviating burnout among medical residents, a resilience and compassion podcast series, a wellness challenge and much more, all with the intent of creating more compassionate and resilient communities.

 

For their project, 鈥淲hat Compassion Looks Like: Journaling for Self-Kindness,鈥 School of Medicine associate professors Jennifer Best and Jennifer Zumsteg said, 鈥淲e hope to break down Health Sciences silos, foster vulnerability and combat isolation in clinical practice and education; cultivate peer communities; and curate stories of self-compassion to sustain our community.鈥

 

A list of funded projects and the project leads is below. For more information about the projects, . Funding for these seed grants is provided by the Maritz Foundation.

 

Funded projects and project leads are:

 

A Pilot Study of Search Inside Yourself for UW Faculty and Staff

Project lead: Anthony Back, Professor, School of Medicine, Oncology, Seattle

 

Building Compassion and Promoting Burnout Recovery Through Resident Team Reflection

Project lead: Michelle Lam, Resident Physician, School of Medicine, Seattle

 

CARE Training to Prevent Burnout and Improve Well-Being at the Center for Equity and Inclusion

Project lead: Jane Compson, Associate Professor, Politics, Philosophy and Public Affairs, School of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences, Tacoma

 

Changing the Culture of the University: Beginning Within

Project lead: Kelly Edwards, Associate Dean, Student and Postdoctoral Affairs in the Graduate School; Professor, Department of Bioethics and Humanities, School of Medicine, Seattle

 

Cultivating Compassion and Resilience Through Mindful Inquiry

Project lead: Anil Coumar, Clinical Assistant Professor, Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, School of Medicine, Seattle

 

Engaging Students in Creating Inclusive, Welcoming and Connected Learning Environments

Project lead: Sujata Pradhan, Associate Professor, Rehabilitation Medicine, School of Medicine, Seattle

 

Knit for Nice

Project lead: Alyssa Taylor, Senior Lecturer, Bioengineering, College of Engineering and School of Medicine, Seattle

 

Map of Restorative Spaces on UW Seattle’s Campus

Project lead: Beck Tench, Ph.D. student, The Information School

 

The Resiliency Collective

Project lead: Marissa Jackson, Master of Public Health student, School of Public Health

 

Resilience and Compassion Podcast Series

Project lead: Gregory Heller, Adviser, Senior Associate Director, MBA Career Management, Foster School of Business, Seattle

 

Self Care is Revolutionary

Project lead: Alice Pederson, Lecturer, School of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences, Bothell

 

Starting the Year off Right: Cultivating Community in the Epidemiology Department

Project lead: Jen Balkus, Assistant Professor, Department of Epidemiology, School of Medicine, Seattle

 

Trauma Informed Yoga

Project lead: Brittany Bowhall, Student Advocate for Sexual Assault, Relationship Violence, Stalking, and Harassment, Health and Wellness, Division of Student Life, Seattle

 

What Compassion Looks Like: Journaling for Self -Kindness

Project lead: Jennifer Best, Associate Professor, General Internal Medicine, School of Medicine, and Jennifer Zumsteg, Assistant Professor, General Internal Medicine, School of Medicine, Seattle

 

The Whole U Summer Wellness Challenge

Project lead: Lauren Updyke, Assistant Director, The Whole U, Bothell, Seattle and Tacoma

 

About the UW Resilience Lab

The promotes resilience development while normalizing failure and acknowledging the wide range of hardships our community members have faced and continue to face. As a laboratory space, the Resilience Lab tries new and creative methods for rethinking the UW experience in and out of the classroom.

2014-15 President鈥檚 Medalists contribute to a world of good, as undergraduates

Each year, undergraduate students of the highest caliber are selected for the prestigious President鈥檚 medal. For 2014-15, the President’s Medalists are active within and beyond the four walls of a classroom. Whether it’s through research, teaching dance or volunteering in hospitals, these students aren’t waiting until they graduate to contribute to a world of good. They’re busy making the world a better place right now.