• From Burke Volunteer to EMP Curator

    EMP Museum curator Jacob McMurray ('95) discovered a passion for museums while working at the UW's Burke Museum as an undergrad.

    January 2014 Perspectives
  • Teaching with Technology

    UW graduate students start program that has instructors share ideas and experiences that incorporate technology in the classroom. The group provides a platform for teachers to discuss digital tools in various classroom settings.
    Simpson Center
  • Three Huskies football players explore their heritage with Burke Museum

    Huskies John Timu, Hau'oli Kikaha and Danny Shelton take a weekly independent-study class at the Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture.
    Seattle Times
  • Hands-on Course in Agroecology

    Students learned about agroecology from the ground up—literally—as they worked with farmers in an unusual and isolated high-altitude farming community in the Upper Rio Grande.
    September 2013 Perspectives
  • Report finds gradual fall in female genital cutting in Africa

    Anthropology professor Bettina Shell-Duncan consulted on a report that finds female genital cutting has seen a gradual but significant decline in many countries.
    The New York Times
  • Big feet preference in rural Indonesia defies one-size-fits-all theory of attractiveness

    People in most cultures view a woman's small feet as a sign of youth and fertility, but that's not true of all cultures, including the Karo Batak of island of Sumatra, reports UW anthropologist Geoff Kushnick.
    UW Today
  • UW student, alumnus among national dissertation winners

    University of Washington doctoral candidate Maria Quintana (History) and alumnus Samuel Anderson (Anthropology, '00) are among the Charlotte W. Newcombe Doctoral Dissertation Fellows for 2013, awarded each year by the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation.
    Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation
  • The best of the best American poetry | Book review

    "The Best of the Best American Poetry" collects 25 years of the best poetry published in this country, including poems by Sherman Alexie and the University of Washington's Heather McHugh.
    Seattle Times
  • John Timu wins Baldwin Scholarship in Anthropology

    Huskies linebacker John Timu has become the first UW student-athlete to win the prestigious Baldwin Scholarship in Anthropology. Timu will be a featured researcher at the Undergraduate Research Symposium in May.
    gohuskies.com
  • Grieving parents find solace in remembrance photography

    A UW anthropology student investigated how remembrance photography helps grieving parents, and how the practice's resurgence could signal a change in the way death and dying are dealt with in our society.
    UW Today
  • Get the lowdown on your treasure at the Burke Museum

    Do you have any ancient artifacts lying around at your house? You can learn more about your treasured collector items at the Burke Museum's 28th annual Artifact ID Day on Feb. 9.
    HeraldNet
  • Down on the Farm, a Vibrant Community

    No need to leave campus for the farm experience. The student-run UW Farm, tucked into a third of an acre on campus, is a working farm with ties to courses in everything from biology to anthropology to American Ethnic Studies. 

    July 2010 Perspectives
  • Students Collaborate with Seniors for Anthropology Project

    Working in teams with seniors from the Pike Market Senior Center, students in a course on qualitative research methods learned to embrace the "organized chaos" that is field research.

    May 2010 Perspectives
  • Creating Opportunities for Students in Rural China

    Anthropology Professor Steve Harrell, PhD students Barbara Grub and Tami Blumenfield, and alumna Victoria Poling ('04) created the Cool Mountain Education Fund, providing scholarships for students in China’s Liangshan region to continue their studies beyond primary school.

    December 2009 Perspectives
  • Searching for Clues in the Kuril Islands

    A team of UW faculty and students, along with Russian and Japanese colleagues, are piecing together a history of the isolated Kuril Islands by studying its archaeological, geological, and biological record. 

    October 2007 Perspectives