U.S. News and Washington Monthly put UW Tacoma in top 10 in the West.
New rankings out this month highlight UW Tacoma’s ability to help non-wealthy students get marketable degrees at affordable prices.
Washington Monthly released its 2020 college guide and rankings, which the publication calls “the socially conscious alternative to U.S. News and World Report.” UW Tacoma is #2 in the West, out of 215 schools ranked, in the category of “Best Bang for the Buck” colleges, “the schools where students of modest means get the most for their money.”
U.S. News & World Report released its 2021 Best Colleges report. Among 124 regional universities in the West, UW Tacoma is #8 on a list of “Top Performers on Social Mobility.”
Both rankings focus on social mobility, or the likelihood that students possessing an institution’s degree will experience upward movement through the layers of social and economic classes. Both rankings rely on data available from the U.S. Department of Education (the IPEDS database) and particularly focus on how the ranked colleges do with students that receive financial aid grants via the federal Pell program.
Differences between the ranking methodologies (Washington Monthly is here, U.S. News is here) include Washington Monthly’s use of an eight-year graduation rate for all students, which they say presents a more complete picture of a college’s success with students, rather than the six-year data on first-time, full-time students that U.S. News employs.
Twice per year, staff in the Division of Student Affairs nominate groups within the division to be recognized. One team is selected to be recognized with that quarter's "Team Spirit Award."
Alongside collaborators at four other universities, UW Tacoma’s Jeff Walters and Heather Dillon are working to enhance mentorship and expand undergraduate research opportunities in engineering.
Dr. Miller, an associate professor in UW Tacoma's School of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences, reflects on her role in co-curating the Washington State History Museum's new permanent exhibition, "This is Native Land."
UW Tacoma Professor Carolyn West's research underscores a critical gap in how gender-based violence is recorded and understood, raising urgent concerns about women’s safety and who should be held accountable at the policy level.
The UW has again earned a prestigious recognition for the impact and importance of the connections faculty, students and staff have with local, regional and global communities. All three UW campuses were recognized with the Carnegie Foundation Community Engagement reclassification.