Cougar Quest Students Take Up-Close Look at College Life

About 113 high school students are on the Washington State University campus at Pullman this week to take part in Cougar Quest, a hands-on interactive opportunity to immerse themselves in college life. Students take a variety of workshops – including creative writing, web design, popular culture, math, veterinary medicine, engineering, leadership and musical theater – taught by WSU faculty members and graduate students. Students live in residence halls and also visit the Holland/New Library, the Student Recreation Center, the Compton Union Building and Ferdinand’s during their stay on campus, which concludes Friday. Four years ago, the first Cougar Quest for high school students attracted 18 students. The program for junior high students, which was held last week, has seen similar growth. For details and to talk to people involved with the program, contact Linda Schoepflin, Cougar Quest director, at schoepfl@wsu.edu or 509.330.1792. More information on Cougar Quest also is available at www.cougarquest.wsu.edu.

Next Story

Dr. Universe explains why people drop out of school

With help from WSU psychologists Brian French and Paul Strand, Dr. Universe explains that there’s rarely just one reason students leave school.

Recent News

ROAR students win gold at Washington Special Olympics

WSU ROAR students helped lead the Whitman County Superstars to a gold medal at the Washington Special Olympics Winter Games, capping a season defined by teamwork, growth, and standout sportsmanship.

WSU research helps to unravel power outage mystery

Since a massive outage of the European power grid last year, researchers have helped to unravel why it occurred and how to prevent similar events in the future.

Inside WSU’s student-run hackathons

Hackathons have become a defining space for student innovation, with two taking center stage this year.