Collaborative Innovation Archives - Give to 56Թ Bothell /give/news/category/collaborative-innovation Just another 56Թ Bothell site Sun, 15 Jun 2025 22:12:54 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.1 Joe Decuir’s Gift Expands Opportunities for Future Engineers /give/news/2025/02/22/joe-decuirs-gift-expands-opportunities-for-future-engineers Sat, 22 Feb 2025 19:39:00 +0000 /give/?p=20185 Lecturer Joe Decuir’s $100,000 gift created 56Թ Bothell’s Electrical Engineering Capstone Lab, giving students hands-on experience and the tools to tackle real-world projects.

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56Թ Bothell lecturer Joe Decuir, a computing industry veteran, is helping future engineers through a generous gift supporting students in engineering and computing. With decades of experience in computer engineering and video game technology, Decuir’s contributions inside and outside the classroom are shaping the next generation of innovators.
Read the full story on 56Թ Bothell News

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More support, more impact /give/news/2024/11/22/more-support-more-impact Fri, 22 Nov 2024 09:40:00 +0000 /give/?p=20302 The 2024 I ♥ 56Թ Bothell luncheon raised more than $190,000 to help students succeed in and beyond the classroom.

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More than 370 alumni, donors, faculty, staff and students gathered at the Westin Bellevue for the I ♥ 56Թ Bothell luncheon, raising over $190,000 for scholarships, faculty support and student success programs. The event highlighted the powerful impact of even modest support — from emergency funds to undergraduate research opportunities — and celebrated the 56Թ Bothell community’s continued commitment to educational access and student achievement. Read the full story on 56Թ Bothell News.

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Inspiring communities to connect with nature /give/news/2024/03/25/inspiring-communities-to-connect-with-nature Mon, 25 Mar 2024 21:30:07 +0000 /give/?p=19857 Inspired by her parents and a passion for nature, Susan Carlson helped lead the creation of the Environmental Education & Research Center at Saint Edward State Park.

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When Susan Carlson looks back on her career in the environmental field, she sees three big influences: her mother, her father and Mother Nature. Together, they gave Carlson the motivation to make a difference to the world — and the drive to help coordinate the creation of the Environmental Education & Research Center (EERC) at Saint Edward State Park. 

The 56Թ Bothell-led EERC makes use of the park as an outdoor classroom and living laboratory for research and learning. Community members, including K-12 students, also experience enhanced opportunities to connect with and learn from nature.  

Learning about the world — and herself

Carlson’s own love of the outdoors developed early in life, growing up in Ithaca, New York, and mid-coast Maine where nature was never far away. Her parents sent her to an outdoor preschool and as the oldest sibling, she was often pulled into her father’s adventures. Carlson remembers some of those experiences viscerally. “He would take me night sailing in the epic dark waters off coastal Maine, with the aurora borealis in the night sky above,” she said. “The boat stirred up the phosphorescent diatoms in the cold Atlantic below. It was so surreal and so emblematic of my father’s fluidity across science and spirituality.” 

While Carlson views her father as the philosopher in the family, her mother was more of an activist. She taught English as a Second Language to Cornell’s international faculty wives, helping them get a toe hold in Ithaca society. She also transformed abandoned lots into community gardens in Washington, D.C. Thrift, frugality and a Do-It-Yourself outlook on life was central to the family ethos. Challenges were often met with an “If not you, then who?” approach to getting a job done. 

While in elementary school, Carlson was deeply affected by her father’s explanation that the human population was growing exponentially while the earth’s resources remained finite. When Carlson asked what she could do, her father’s response, “If not you, then who?” motivated her to organize her first environmental organization — an ecology club made up of three friends who met in shrubs behind her house. They conducted “salamander monitoring expeditions” in the creeks and gorges of Ithaca.  

In high school, Carlson traveled to Cape Cod to clean up oiled birds after a major oil spill off the George’s Bank. By college, she was studying natural resource management at the University of Maine. She jumped at the chance to do an internship with The Wilderness Society in Washington, D.C. That internship evolved into a paid fellowship which ultimately launched a 30-year career with several national environmental NGOs in the district. 

Along the way, Carlson directed EnvironMentors, an environmental science mentorship program for diverse high school students interested in environmentally related college degree programs. Carlson helped scale the program to include chapters in 14 partner universities. Working with faculty and administrators to launch the EnvironMentors chapters at across the country kindled Carlson’s interest in the powerful role universities could play in the environmental education ecosystem, particularly related to high school to college bridging programs for diverse youth.  

A vision for environmental education and research

After 30 years in the nation’s capital, it was time to follow a dream to live closer to nature. Carlson and her husband, Eric, moved back to his hometown in the Puget Sound region, settling into a house in large part because of its proximity to Saint Edward State Park.  

She envisioned the park as a place for community connections to nature and potentially to fulfill a dream to help create a university-led environmental education center of which there are few nationally. Having just moved from the East Coast and knowing very few people, Carlson consulted with her father on how to get a campaign underway and who could help. His first words were, “If not you, then who?” His main advice was “to just get the right people in a room.” This set the stage for an upcoming three-year period of building support for the EERC. 

During this period, Carlson presented at community and state park commission meetings, met with state park leadership, North Shore legislators, and 56Թ faculty and administrators. She played a central role in early fundraising and secured and helped to direct the EERC’s year-long planning process for community engagement. 

Soon, some of the larger features of the future EERC began to fall into place when the right people joined together. A lease between Washington State Parks and Daniels Real Estate included 2,000 square feet for the EERC; state Rep. Gerry Pollet sponsored a planning grant for the EERC’s programming; former senator David Frockt secured a capital construction grant to renovate a former gym annex for the EERC’s facility; former 56Թ Bothell chancellor Wolf Yeigh awarded the EERC a three-year capacity building grant; the EERC’s Faculty Oversight Committee was formed, with professors Dr. Warren Gold and Dr. Santiago Lopez serving as the EERC’s faculty directors, and Lily Cason was hired as the EERC’s program manager.  

The years between 2017 and 2020 seemed like something of a windfall for the EERC. Then the COVID pandemic hit. Renovating the gym annex during the pandemic resulted in supply chain delays and cost overruns. The architect’s design for the EERC facility included a garage door that would open to an Outdoor Learning Area (OLA), yet construction funds were exhausted renovating the EERC’s interior. Carlson’s mother died, and what was to be an inspiring Outdoor Learning Area was instead a pile of rubble outside the garage door.  

Securing the facility’s finishing touches

In the wake of his wife’s passing, Carlson’s father created a small family foundation in her honor with a mission “to help ensure a cohesive democracy which thrives in an environmentally sustainable world.” The family believes there is no better way to achieve both aspects of this mission than to connect people to nature in ways that inspire stewardship and build community. 

A foundation contribution to 56Թ Bothell to finish the OLA was among her father’s first major gifts. This too occurred during the latter part of the pandemic, and further cost overruns resulted in insufficient funds to complete the OLA as envisioned by the EERC’s architects. At this point, running out of resources, Susan’s architect husband volunteered to build the final details of a trellis, planters and bench supports in their garage. The now completed OLA is dedicated to Susan’s parents, Sam and Mary Lawrence, who made sure she spent her formative years outdoors, immersed in nature.

Eric Carlson completing the OLA

While Carlson will accept that these early-life influences may have lit the spark for the EERC, she is also quick to state the EERC is much less about her as an individual than it is a testament to the power of a positive vision which is shared by many. 

“I am in awe of the enormous patience, persistence and perseverance invested by so many 56Թ Bothell faculty, staff and administrators to bring what started as an idea to life as a major new facility and academic center supporting student learning, research and community connections.”   

“I sincerely hope hundreds of 56Թ Bothell students will benefit from the EERC and will be inspired to follow their own ideas and vision for the future they want to live in.” 

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WSECU named 2023 56Թ Bothell Legacy Award winner  /give/news/2024/03/01/wsecu-named-2023-uw-bothell-legacy-award-winner Fri, 01 Mar 2024 16:50:00 +0000 /give/?p=20078 The 2023 Legacy Award recipient, WSECU, has supported 56Թ Bothell students since the 1990s through workshops, scholarships, donations and event sponsorships.

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56Թ Bothell’s annual Legacy Award recognizes individuals, families and organizations who contribute their time, service and philanthropy to 56Թ Bothell. 

For 2023, 56Թ Bothell named Washington State Employees Credit Union (WSECU) as the first corporate recipient of the award. WSECU’s relationship with 56Թ Bothell dates to the mid ‘90s when WSECU first began conducting financial wellness workshops on campus for students as well as faculty and staff. Since then, the credit union has supported 56Թ Bothell and the 56Թ at large through a number of scholarships, donations and event sponsorships. Learn more about WSECU’s deep and broad support in this video. 

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Innovation Hall expands STEM pathways /give/news/2023/11/30/innovation-hall-expands-stem-pathways Thu, 30 Nov 2023 08:58:00 +0000 /give/?p=20292 New academic building opens doors for research and career readiness.

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With the opening of Innovation Hall, 56Թ Bothell and Cascadia College are offering more space and resources for STEM learning. The facility enhances collaboration, research and training in high-demand fields, supporting students as they prepare for careers in Washington’s growing tech economy. Read the full story on 56Թ Bothell News.

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Supporting faculty who spark discovery /give/news/2023/09/30/supporting-faculty-who-spark-discovery Sat, 30 Sep 2023 09:36:00 +0000 /give/?p=20300 An endowed fellowship honors faculty mentorship and expands opportunities for 56Թ Bothell students in STEM.

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Dr. Joey Shapiro Key, associate professor of physics and an advocate for student research, has been named the inaugural recipient of the Sr. Chief Ronald G. Gamboa Endowed 56Թ Bothell STEM Faculty Fellowship. The award, created by alumna Michelle Gamboa in honor of her father, recognizes faculty who mentor undergraduates and inspire the next generation of scientists. With support from the fellowship, Key will expand the reach of 56Թ Bothell’s STEM Public Outreach Team — helping more students engage in hands-on science communication and research. Read the full story on 56Թ Bothell News.

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My Story: Leadership and social justice /give/news/2023/03/17/my-story-leadership-and-social-justice Fri, 17 Mar 2023 20:30:00 +0000 /give/?p=20282 Chancellor Emeritus Kenyon Chan reflects on how his lived experience shaped a transformative vision for 56Թ Bothell.

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Chancellor Emeritus Kenyon Chan shares how his upbringing, activism and academic journey led him to center social justice in higher education leadership. As 56Թ Bothell’s second chancellor, he navigated major financial and institutional challenges while helping the campus grow in size, identity and mission. Chan’s leadership focused on equity, inclusion and collective responsibility — values that continue to shape 56Թ Bothell’s impact today. Read the full story on 56Թ Bothell News.

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A mask that tells our story /give/news/2021/11/10/a-mask-that-tells-our-story Wed, 10 Nov 2021 07:14:00 +0000 /give/?p=20270 Art installation reflects 56Թ Bothell’s values and student diversity.

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Now housed in Discovery Hall, an Alaskan Alutiiq-style mask created for 56Թ Bothell represents the transformation, resilience and identity of the student body. Commissioned as a tribute to the University’s growth, it honors both cultural tradition and institutional evolution. Read the full story on 56Թ Bothell News.

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