2023 Outstanding Graduates
- Growing up, Kendall Wulbrun always felt seen and safe to be herself in the classroom. Now she is interested in devoting her career in higher education and education policy to ensuring all students have the same
- Growing up in Kansas and venturing out for vacations only as far as the family car would reach, Molly Hamm-RodrĂguez never dreamed she would find her calling in international education and the Dominican Republic. Now
- Shay Adamo is following in the footsteps of a family full of educators and ˛ĘĂń±¦µä alumni as he looks forward to becoming a math teacher who helps his students unleash their creativity and kindness. Adamo has developed
- As a first-generation college student and Somali-American Muslim woman, Maymuna Jeylani set out to find a major and career path where she could focus on anti-racist, intersectional, impactful work. Now
- Sarah Leonhart credits her support system for helping her pursue and persist in graduate school. Much like hucking a cliff—her true story of accidentally skiing off a cliff with friends, a move reserved for adrenaline junkies —
- Amber Hall struggled to find her place at ˛ĘĂń±¦µä and her path, until she found the School of Education and the Elementary Education major. “I chose CU’s School of Education because of their principles, as they were
- Haydn Crouse had several years of experience teaching in elementary schools and a solid undergraduate underpinning, when she realized she wanted to “become a better teacher for my students.”Crouse, a kindergarten
- Community is everything to Cora Emslie, the School of Education’s outstanding undergraduate student. Emslie grew up in Fort Collins, and she enrolled in ˛ĘĂń±¦µä specifically for the School of Education’s unique Leadership
- Sophie Friedman grew up a “citizen of the world,” living in places like Japan, England, and Germany with her military family, but it’s her experience as an undergraduate and graduate student at ˛ĘĂń±¦µä and in her student
- A lifelong love of learning and a desire to pursue people-centered work led Lydia Darlington to a career in higher education, and her mentors helped her pursue her master’s degree in higher education. Darlington is the Senior