UCORE faculty applications due March 5 for Law Award for teaching excellence

The selection committee for the Richard G. Law Excellence Award for Undergraduate Teaching announces that applications and nominations for the 2018 award are open now through Mon., March 5.

The new recipient will be recognized at the WSU Undergraduate Education awards ceremony on April 26.

Presented since 2013, the Law Award recognizes outstanding faculty on all campuses who teach courses in the University Common Requirements (UCORE) curriculum.

All instructors of record—instructors and clinical faculty as well as tenure-track faculty on all campuses—whose teaching has included at least one UCORE class annually for the past three years are eligible.

More information about the award and the application/nomination process is available on the Law Award webpage at https://vpue.wsu.edu/LawAward-UndergraduateTeaching/.

The award is named in honor of retired WSU administrator and faculty member Richard Law, who served as the director of general education from 1990 until his retirement in 2009. The award in his name values the important role played by general education/UCORE faculty across the university to help undergraduates attain WSU Learning Goals and Outcomes, especially outside their major area of study. [https://ucore.wsu.edu/students/learning-goals/]

Law Award recipients are described as educators who inspire curiosity and understanding of an area of study. Their classes encourage development of the lifelong learning skills of integrating and synthesizing concepts to solve real problems, according to application and nomination information.

Questions about the award or application/nomination process should be emailed to Karen Weathermon, review committee member, at kweathermon@wsu.edu, or Jeannie Holt at jmholt@wsu.edu.

Application or nomination materials are due by email to jmholt@wsu.edu by 5 p.m. on March 5.

The Notices and Announcements section is provided as a service to the WSU community for sharing events such as lectures, trainings, and other highly transactional types of information related to the university experience. Information provided and opinions expressed may not reflect the understanding or opinion of WSU. Accuracy of the information presented is the responsibility of those who submitted it. The self-uploaded posts are reviewed for compliance with state statutes and ethics guidelines but are not edited for spelling, grammar, or clarity.

Next Story

Recent News

WSU announces three new Goldwater Scholars

Nicole Diefenbach, Taylor Page, and Katy Touretsky, have been named recipients of the Barry M. Goldwater Scholarship, one of the nation’s most prestigious undergraduate research awards.

Ella Spillane connects business and wilderness

As the weather warms up, check out how WSU alumna Ella Spillane is turning her love of the outdoors into a global business with Trailbound Yoga.

Why endometriosis causes such chronic debilitating pain

A new WSU study shows that repeated inflammation from endometriosis can rewire the brain and nervous system, helping explain why debilitating pain often persists even after lesions are gone.