Posted on January 22, 2026

Monk stands at the mike speaking to a crowd with lights on him.

Greensboro found itself in a kismet moment as a group of Buddhist monks made their way into Guilford County on a bright, cold Martin Luther King Jr. Day. The monks, on a 2,300-mile journey from Fort Worth, Texas to Washington, D.C, are raising awareness for peace and compassion across America and the world.  

Spartan student groups attended the local stop on their historic Walk for Peace, finding power in the Buddhist leaders’ simple actions in a busy, public scene.

Spartan Side Quest 

Meeting near campus, a group of first- and second-year students in a seminar class titled Mindfulness, Resilience and Meaning boarded a Spartan Chariot with their teacher Sarah Krive. The group was bound for the Walk for Peace stop at Grandover Resort and Spa just south of campus. They brought daisies, the UNCG flower, to offer the monks. On the drive over, students talked about their class, which had just begun the week before. This “field trip” came at the perfect time for an introduction to mindfulness practices in religions like Buddhism. 

Student and teacher talk as they ride on a bus with the Spartan head decal on the window behind them.
Damani Davis-McLendon talks mindfulness with her teacher, Sarah Krive, on the way to the Walk for Peace.

Gregory Grieve, head of the Liberal and Professional Studies Department whose research includes Buddhist and Hindu religious practices, joined the class with a Buddhist flag to wave in support of the monks. Traffic thickened as the Chariot neared its destination, following a line of red brake lights as the sun dropped below the horizon.   

Grieve and his sister, who had traveled from Idaho to see the Walk for Peace, had attended the monks’ lunch stop in High Point earlier in the day. He said the monks addressed their largest crowd to date at Truist Point Stadium and wondered if this group would be even larger.  

Krive commented that the event had “captured the attention” of so many people. “We are watching history unfold right in front of our eyes,” she said. 

As cars began to make parking lots out of medians and road shoulders, the group decided to disembark the Chariot and walk the mile and a half to Grandover Resort & Spa where the monks would address the crowd. If the monks could walk over 1,800 miles in 86 days, this crew could handle a three-mile hike. 

“This is what the world needs today,” said Gabriella Pittman, a student from Charlotte. “What a perfect day for a side quest!”

Students walk at dusk with traffic behind them. The faculty member at the back carries a Buddhist flag.
UNCG students and faculty trek to the Walk for Peace.

Ripples of Peace Through a Busy Crowd 

Meanwhile, Marcia Hale, associate professor in the Department of Peace and Conflict Studies, had arrived with some of her graduate students just in time to see the monks walk towards the entrance to the resort. As part of a Skills in Transformative Conflict class, these students are learning about nonviolent communication, mindfulness, negotiation and mediation, as it relates to relationships and community building. 

“I was amazed how many people turned out,” she said. “It felt a bit more like a concert or celebrity event than I anticipated, but it was amazing to see so many people hungry for peace and unity, and willing to stand in the cold for the sake of it.” 

Student holds flowers in the foreground as monks walk behind her and a crowd watches on behind them.
UNCG student Gabrielle Pittman watches as the monks walk into Grandover Resort.

Hale’s group witnessed a quiet fall over the crowd as the monks passed. They saw acts of kindness ripple through the crowd. Master’s in peace and conflict studies student, Caitlin Poe watched with her child and found a likeminded mother with tears in her eyes. They bonded over their hope for a more peaceful world for their children. 

Hale noticed a sweet moment when one of the monks passed a bouquet he had received to a woman in the crowd. She was visibly touched by his gesture and paid it forward by sharing individual buds with those around her.   

Unbeknownst to the monk, that woman was MariKay Abuzuaiter, the mayor of Greensboro. Minutes later, she would issue a proclamation declaring Jan. 18, 2026, Walk for Peace Day in Greensboro in honor of the monks’ “wisdom, passion and mindfulness.” 

Monkin’ Ain’t Easy 

After the mayor issued her proclamation, Bhikkhu Pannakara stood to address the crowd, spotlights catching his orange wrap as it glittered with the pins given to him along the walk. He stepped to the microphone, as his solemn Buddhist brothers sat in a line behind him, and began by addressing the obvious: 

“I never thought we’d walk for peace and end up at a fancy resort.”

A line of chairs with seated monks in foreground, one stands at the mike, a crowd gathers behind.
Bhikkhu Pannakara addresses the crowd gathered at Grandover Resort.

Although the monks had declined the offer of private rooms and would be sleeping on the floor in a communal space at the resort, the optics of these simple people arriving at a castle on a hill to rest from their journey was just one of the many visuals illustrating the dichotomy of this event.

Crowd of people gathered in the dark holding phones up.
Walk for Peace attendees and their “lovers.”

Hundreds of raised phones recorded videos of the speech as Pannakara beseeched the public to live in the moment, stop chasing the world, and take time to breathe. “You’ll never get this moment back,” he said. Using his cheeky reference to our society’s connection to our phones, he added, “Record it in your minds, not with your lovers (or cell phones).” 

Pannakara led a meditation practice and encouraged breathing with awareness, but participation was difficult. Even in this group gathered for peace, distractions were everywhere: security announcements, babies crying, dogs barking, audible phone conversations. His words about the importance of mindfulness impacted the UNCG students in our group, even as the event underscored society’s roadblocks to mindfulness and meditation.

Peace in Our Times 

“The sheer numbers of attendees were powerful,” said Damani Davis-McLendon when Krive’s class met the next day to reflect on their experience at the Walk for Peace. The Mindfulness, Resilience and Meaning students speculated about how much attention the monks would receive by the time they arrived in Washington, and what that means in today’s politically divided landscape.  

When the monks began this journey on Oct. 26, 2025 at Huong Dao Vipassan Bhavana Center, they emphasized that their journey was neither a political protest nor a religious parade to build donations for the center’s $150 million expansion. It was simply an opportunity to bring blessings of peace to lost souls in uncertain times.   

Greensboro’s response to their arrival proved that those blessings are welcome. Folks of all ages, backgrounds and viewpoints followed a live map through heavy traffic to catch a glimpse of the monks’ peaceful and kind countenances. Since October, each town they cross seems to draw larger crowds, but the Greensboro stop on MLK Day was particularly poignant in a city known for its role in the advancement of civil rights.  One imagines the Greensboro Four would have been proud of the UNCG students who came out in the cold for the Walk for Peace. Dr. King would have also approved of how they honored his birthday. After all, it was he who said “We must keep moving. If you can’t fly, run; if you can’t run, walk; if you can’t walk, crawl; but by all means keep moving.”

Story by Becky Deakins, University Communications.
Photography Sean Norona, University Communications.

Two women dressed in business suits shake hands across a table they are sitting at.

Enlighten All your spaces with peace.

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Posted on January 28, 2026

Ukraine Training

Viktor Burlaka, Ph.D., a clinical psychologist, partners with first responders in Ukraine to expand mental health care and prepare professionals to better manage trauma in high-stress crisis conditions.

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Posted on February 05, 2026

Three students stand around a high top table in a ballroom with refreshments and BHM t-shirts.

Black History Month has hit a significant milestone. It’s the 100th year the United States has honored the contributions of Black Americans to our nation, and UNC Greensboro joins the tribute with a variety of ways our community can observe the centennial this month.  

A Century of History in the Making 

The origins of Black History Month can be traced back to Feb. 7, 1926, when “Negro History Week” was established by Carter G. Woodson, an American historian, author, and journalist. He chose the second week in February to honor the birthdays of Frederick Douglass and Abraham Lincoln.  

One hundred years might feel like a long time for a nation that still struggles with equity, but much Black history has come to pass in that time. Its founding year, 1926, was three years before Martin Luther King Jr.’s birth and 37 years before his “I Have a Dream” speech at the 1963 March on Washington. It was 34 years before the Greensboro Four sat at a segregated lunch counter at Greensboro’s Woolworth’s drug store on Feb. 1, 1960, fueling a sit-in movement that led to desegregation of the American South. 

Black History at the G 

Chancellor Gilliam and Marcus T. Johnson ring the bell at the Alumni House naming.
Chancellor Gilliam and Marcus T. Johnson at the Alumni House naming in October 2025.

One hundred years ago, UNC Greensboro was the North Carolina College for Women. Although only White women were enrolled at the time, many of these early Spartans had a passion for women’s rights that later expanded to civil rights. Negro History Week was 30 years old when the first African American students were admitted to the Woman’s College in 1956. Four years later, three of our students joined the growing crowd of supporters on Day Four of the Woolworth’s sit-in.  

The University still celebrates the early pioneers of Black history at UNCG. This year, UNCG students painted a mural in the Foust Building to honor JoAnne Smart Drane and Bettye Tillman, our first African American students.

Black history continues to be made at UNCG, as evidenced by the naming of the Alumni House for alumnus Marcus T. Johnson ’99, just last year. His historic gift inspired the University to name the building after him, the first on our campus to honor a person of color. 

Older lady sits close between two students and chats with them.

Change Begins with Education 

Chronicling history–in–the–making is what Woodson had in mind when he designated a week to honor Black history, which was expanded to Black History Month in 1976 by President Gerald R. Ford. Woodson spoke of using the weeklong tribute not as a “new tradition,” but to remind schoolchildren of what they had learned all year. 

As the first scholar to study Black African diaspora in the United States, Woodson was passionate about using education to change hearts and minds. He famously said, “This crusade is much more important than the anti-lynching movement, because there would be no lynching if it did not start in the schoolroom.”  

Since Woodson’s historic designation, we’ve seen 100 years of Black history education, the Civil Rights Movement, and the ongoing work that must be done to advance equity in this country. 

Join the Celebration  

At UNCG, there are many ways to commemorate Black History Month through cultural celebrations, educational opportunities, and open discussions throughout February. Below are some of the popular campus events planned for Black History Month this year:  

Music, Performances & Games 

Dancers in jeans and white tops hold African flags above their heads on a stage.

BHM Kickoff Party x ILC
Monday, Feb. 9, 5-7 p.m. in the EUC Cone Ballroom
Free food, SWAG, and a live DJ to celebrate the start of Black History Month. 

Alive in Color
Feb. 11 & 13 at 6:15 p.m. in the EUC Auditorium
UNCG honors Black culture with a showcase of Spartan talent. 

BHM Night at Bodford Arena
Thursday, Feb. 12, 7 p.m.
Cheer on the women’s basketball team as they take on Wofford.  

AUX Wars
Wednesday, Feb. 25, 5:30-7 p.m. in the EUC Cone Ballroom
Join a jam session as students battle in a reimagined take on aux music. 

Education & Enlightenment 

CACE 2026  
36th Annual Conference on African American and African Diaspora Cultures and Experiences 
Feb. 24, 25, and 26 at the Elliott University Center
Presented by the Department of African American and African Diaspora Studies, this three-day educational conference includes presentations, roundtable conversations, poetry, performances, and workshops. Themed “Race and Education,” the sessions and keynote speakers present history and its impacts in ways you won’t expect. It’s free and open to the public, but registration is required. Click here for conference details, the official program, and the registration link.  

Speaker stands at a podium in front of an audience with an AADS banner in the background. Looks like they're discussing a book and the author is seated in traditional African clothes.

Reflections of Art 

Student with a backpack checks in at a desk at the Weatherspoon Art Museum.

Of Salt and Spirit: Black Quilters of the American South
Feb. 14 – Aug. 1 at the Weatherspoon,
2nd floor in The Bob & Lissa Shelley McDowell Gallery 
An exhibition of vibrant quilts hand-stitched by Black quilters across the United States features 24 quilts and two portraits from the Mississippi Museum of Art’s collection. 

Precious D. Lovell: Harriet’s Powers
Open through July 25 at the Weatherspoon,
2nd floor Gallery 6 
Precious Lovell’s installation is site-specific and multi-sensory. It represents her response to the Of Salt and Spirit exhibit, including stitched elements, sculpture, and historical artifacts commemorating the life and art of 19th-century Black quiltmaker Harriet Powers. 

Story by Becky Deakins, University Communications.
Photography by Sean Norona, University Communications.

Student stands in front of a mural in a hallway.

Impact Tomorrow By Understanding the Past

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Posted on January 27, 2026

Robert Hansen

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Posted on February 11, 2026

a woman, shelby rodriguez, stands in a garden

Alumna Shelby Rodriguez’s turn from ballet to nutrition and dietetics. 

After starting her career as a professional ballet dancer, Shelby Rodriguez faced a turning point. Knowing she wanted a new path that directly addressed nutrition issues, she turned to UNC Greensboro’s School of Health and Human Sciences to pursue a B.S. in Human Nutrition and Dietetics, a choice that helped her become board-certified specialist in gerontological nutrition. 

“I don’t think another institution could have been as supportive as UNCG for an alternative student while really maintaining a huge emphasis on academics and professional preparation,” Rodriguez says. 

A Dancer’s Motivation and a Professor’s Support 

A high school graduate of the UNC School of the Arts, Rodriguez never intended to go to college. Instead, she began her career as a professional ballet dancer in Pennsylvania.  

Portrait of Shelby Rodriguez.
Rodriquez, B.S. ’17, received UNCG’s Pacesetter Award in 2024.

“A lot of my colleagues in dance really struggled with eating disorders and mistaken ideas about nutrition,” she says. “I wanted to understand more about that.” 

She first took community college courses and then transferred to UNCG’s human nutrition and dietetics program. 

“I wasn’t quite aware of the competitiveness and academic rigor the program had in store for me, but I’m really grateful that’s where I landed,” she says. “UNCG is incredibly supportive of transfer students. I never felt like an outsider, I was immediately welcomed by instructors, professors, and other students—the entire community.” 

Rodriguez credits her mentor Professor Keith Erickson with supporting her through the program. 

“My mother was battling breast cancer while I was taking his microbiology course,” Rodriguez says. “He proctored a final exam for me at 6 a.m. so I could get on a flight and go see my mother before she passed. Since then, he’s kept in touch and it just demonstrates the student-first approach I felt while I was with UNCG.” 

Pandemic Professional Shift 

Rodriguez went on to earn her master’s in public health at the University of Minnesota. 

“I was in the middle of my dietetic internship when COVID 19 hit,” she says. 

She and her fellow interns were part of a group that helped administer the first COVID vaccines. With jobs for new dietitians scarce at the end of the pandemic, Rodriguez went out on a limb and applied for a position as lead dietitian for patients in a long-term care and skilled rehabilitation facility in Eugene, Ore. 

“My husband and I moved to Oregon sight unseen for this new job, newly pregnant while in the middle of a pandemic,” she says. “It amazingly has all worked out.” 

During her 2,000 hours of specialty practice with the rehabilitation facility, Rodriguez treated patients across the spectrum, with issues ranging from complex health problems to physical trauma to the unique needs of the geriatric population. Following her maternity leave, she sat for her board exam in gerontological nutrition. 

“I wanted to be the best dietitian I could be for my patients,” she says. “The board specialty opened up a lot of doors to what I’m doing now on a national scale as a fellow for the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics.” 

Be Brave and Say Yes 

In her current role she serves as one of two gerontological nutritional specialists on the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics national board where she reviews new procedures and certifications, exam requests and more.  

“I’m currently the lead developer for their new certificate for end-of-life nutrition,” she says. 

She is president-elect of the Oregon Academy of Nutrition and Dietetic and teaches nutrition at Lane Community College. She and her husband are still in Eugene raising their daughter, now age 4.  

“Dietitians are becoming more integral members of interdisciplinary health care teams and finding roles in non-clinical settings,” Rodriguez says. “My advice to students: allow yourself to be flexible and not too rigid in your expectations for your career in the field. Be brave and see where new opportunities may take you.” 

Written by Alice Manning Touchette 

Photography courtesy of Shelby Rodriguez

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Posted on February 24, 2026

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Posted on February 02, 2026

Featured Image for Spring is for Spartan Sports

Highlights of UNCG’s Spring Athletics Calendar

Winter belongs to men’s and women’s basketball in the pantheon of UNCG sports. But as the wintry weather marches our Spartan cagers towards the SoCon Tournament, held in Asheville in March, our warm-weather teams gear up for exciting seasons of their own. 

From the diamond to the track to the links to the courts, spring Spartans are here for the W’s. 

BATS AND BALLS 

Baseball 

Last season, the UNCG baseball team finished the regular season 21-33 overall with a 9-12 conference record, earning the sixth-seed in the SoCon Tournament, falling to Wofford in the first round of play. 

This season, the third for Head Coach Cody Ellis,  sees the return of outfielder Luke Jenkins. A redshirt fourth-year, Jenkins was named the 2025 Male Spartan of the Year and to the College Sports Communicators Academic All District Team. The hometown Grimsley High School graduate had a spectacular season in the field, with a .950 fielding percentage, and on the basepath, with seven steals in eight attempts. 

Joining him again this season will be fourth-year infielder Jacob Budzik, who was named to the All SoCon Defensive Team last year, and third-year fielder Brantley Truitt, who led the team last season with a batting average of .318. 

Schedule highlights include the season-opening three-game home stand against the 18th-ranked University of Kentucky (Feb. 13-15), an SEC powerhouse. They’ll play two other Triad squads this season: NC A&T State University at home on Feb. 18 at A&T’s field on March 3 and March 11; and 21-ranked Wake Forest University at home on Feb. 24 and in Winston-Salem on April 21. Other notable out-of-conference matchups during the regular season include a home game against Davidson College on Feb. 17 and an away game against 11th-ranked UNC on March 18. 

Softball 

Spartans’ softball Head Coach Janelle Breneman is the winningest coach in the team’s 41-year history, logging her 400th victory early last season against St. Francis College and ending the season with a 39-18 record, her seventh straight with 30 or more wins. And the team has already been recognized as the No. 1 pick in the SoCon Pre-Season Coaches’ Poll.

She’s built on last year’s success with a crop of new recruits and a few returning sluggers, including fourth-year outfielder Kaylyn Belfield, who broke the UNCG single-season batting average record last year, finishing with .431. Team 40 broke the UNCG record for RBI in a single season with 318. The previous mark of 306 was set by the 2014 team. The Spartans sat second with 318 RBI behind Mercer’s 319 last season 

The season kicks off with six softball tournaments, four of them with games at UNCG:  

  • The Spiro Classic, beginning Feb. 13 with games against Columbia University, Fairfield University, and Appalachian State University;  
  • The UNCG Invitational, running Feb. 20-24, where the Spartans will compete at home against Bucknell University, Canisius University, and Kent State University 
  • The UNCG/Elon Tournament, starting on Feb. 27, includes home games against Indiana University. 
  • The UNCG Tournament, from March 13-15, will bring Lehigh University and Tarleton State University to campus. 

CLUBS AND GREENS

The spring season kicks of for men's golf with two tournaments in Puerto Rico.
The spring season kicks off for men’s golf with two tournaments in Puerto Rico.

Men 

The men’s spring golf schedule starts next month with tournaments in Puerto Rico—the Palmas del Mar Collegiate running Feb. 8-10, and the Dorado Beach Collegiate from Feb. 22-24. Later, a flurry of road tournaments leads up to the SoCon Championship April 27-29, followed by the NCAA Regionals May 18-20 and the NCAA Championship May 29-June 3. 

Highlights of the fall tournaments include a fifth-place finish at the Bryan National Collegiate at Bryan Park, where fourth-year BJ Boyce clocked a career-low 64 on his way to a third-place finish; and the Elon Phoenix Invitational that saw second-year Will Guidry card a career low –8 (63) in the second round, which included two eagles, on his way to finish in a tie for 24th place. 

The UNCG Women’s Golf Team enters the spring after a strong fall.

Women 

The women’s golf team benefited from strong fall performances, including a win at the UNCG Invitational in October, earning fourth-year Julia Baemken SoCon Golfer of the Week honors. The spring season begins on Feb. 1 at the Advance Golf Partners Collegiate in West Palm, Fla., and wends through Greensboro, Ga. (Reynolds Lake Oconee Invitational, Feb. 20-22), Hilton Head, SC (Low Country Invitational, March 8-10), and Morganton, NC (Mimosa Hills Intercollegiate, March 30-31). The regular season wraps with a one-day tournament in Chapel Hill, NC (UNC Challenge Cup, April 4) followed by the SoCon Championship from April 20-22, leading into the NCAA Regionals (May 11-13) and the NCAA Championship (May 22-27). 

THE RACKETS 

Men’s Tennis will have a 5-game home stand from Feb. 27 to March 9.

Men

The Spartan Men’s Tennis Team began its spring run with a loss to NC State University earlier this month. Upcoming home matches include contests against NC Central University on Feb. 7 and Elon University on Feb. 8. There will be five home matches from Feb. 27-March 9 against James Madison University (Feb. 27), Florida Gulf Coast University (Feb. 28), Furman University (March 4), Samford University (March 7), and Gardner-Webb University (March 9). Other schedule highlights include a home grudge match against NC A&T State University (March 26) and a SoCon faceoff against Mercer University (April 1). The SoCon Tournament begins April 16 in Chattanooga, Tenn. 

WOMEN

The women’s tennis team began 2026 with three straight losses, two to the University of Virginia and one to NC State University. Their SoCon slate includes matches against Eastern Tennessee State University (Feb. 28, at home), The University of Tennessee at Chattanooga (March 15, at home), Furman University (March 21, at home), Wofford University (March 26, away), Western Carolina University (April 7, at home), and two away matches to end the regular season, Samford University (April 10) and Mercer (April 12) before the SoCon Tournament. 

FLEET FEET 

Early in the spring season, indoor runners for the Spartans Track Team have already set record times. First-year Maddison McIntyre broke the UNCG record in the 400 meters in December at the Winston-Salem College Kickoff, while in January at the Mondo College Invitational, first-year students Ayzia Jefferson set a new school record for the 200-meter for the women, and Emery Anderson and Jeremiah Jones broke the 200-meter and 600-meter school records, respectively. Jefferson bested her own 200-meter record in January at the Liberty Open, where first-year Alana Hill also set a UNCG record by beating the mark set by McIntyre in the 400. 

Just four regular-season meets remain, all on the road: The Tryon College Banked Invitational on Jan. 30, The Sound Invite on Feb. 14, The Tryon Last Chance on Feb. 20, and The JDL Last Chance Invitational on Feb. 21. The SoCon Indoor Track & Field Championship happens Feb. 27-28 in Lexington, Va. and the NCAA Championships are March 13-14 in Fayetteville, Ark. 

CHEER THEM ON 

Remember that all spring sporting events, aside from men’s basketball, are free to attend. So come on out and support your Spartans this spring. 

Aerial view of UNCG baseball field.

SPRING INTO ACTION

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Posted on February 03, 2026

Changee Chun addresses a group of students with a microphone and a smile

Acclaimed South Korean filmmaker and producer Changhee Chun fortifies media studies with strategic initiatives to enhance student experience 

South Korean filmmaker and producer Changhee Chun took the helm of UNC Greensboro’s Media Studies Department in August 2025 with a vision to bridge academia and industry, better prepare students for careers in emerging media and AI, and help them build a network to support their endeavors.

“Media has such a strong impact on our society,” Chun says. “Because of social media and other digital platforms, we now create media for a global audience, not just an American audience. That perspective is what I want to instill in my students.”

An Early Calling to a Global Industry

A native of South Korea, Chun grew up always knowing he wanted to be in the film industry. Part of the Korean Wave of the 1990s—when South Korean pop culture grew in popularity as access to the internet grew—Chun studied at Hanyang University Film School during the time other rising film producers were coming through universities, including Hwang Dong-hyuk, known for Netflix’s “Squid Games,“ and Bong Joon Ho, who created “Parasite.”

Chun worked in the South Korean film industry as an assistant director and director before joining Munhwa Broadcasting Corporation (MBC), one of three major networks in South Korea, to produce TV documentaries. In 1996, he served as an executive producer for Samsung Broadcasting Center (SBC) at the Olympic Games in Atlanta.

“I decided to stay in the U.S. and started my production company,” Chun says. “That’s when I joined UNCG for my graduate studies in broadcasting and cinema.”

He studied under his mentor and “American father” Michael Frierson (retired). The two stayed connected as Chun built his career as an award-winning independent filmmaker in the U.S. Chun developed over 50 commercial films, music videos, and documentaries, and received a Fulbright Senior Scholarship. While creating his prolific portfolio, he joined the University of Texas, where he served as Morgan Woodward Distinguished Professor in Film, leading the Cinematic Arts undergraduate and graduate programs.

Last year, he heard from his mentor.

“Michael told me when I graduated that I had to come back to UNCG,” Chun says. “In early 2025, he emailed me and said, ‘It’s time to keep your promise.’”

Revitalizing Media Studies at UNCG

Chun returned to UNCG in August 2025 as the department head of the Media Studies Department. Immediately, he laid out his vision for strengthening the department, executing tactics designed to give students the training and experience needed to compete in the booming U.S. media and entertainment Industry. He established Spartan Media Productions, a student-powered media company at UNCG. There, students get hands-on experience in professional-quality video production, delivering creative results for clients while building their portfolios.

“I hired 26 undergraduate students, and we completed five productions in the fall semester,” Chun says. “We have already received 15 different production requests this spring from campus clients, nonprofit organizations, and other community organizations.”

Poster for 48-hour film festival at UNCG

As a professional production house, Spartan Media Productions charges clients and pays the student workers.

“Our costs are very reasonable, and we provide high-quality productions,” Chun says. “The students really enjoy the process, and our clients appreciate that they receive professional creative work at affordable prices.”

This March, SMP will host a 48-hour Film Festival for local community college and high school students. The students will create a video in just two days and present their work at a screening at the festival.

“The idea is to bring awareness about the Media Studies Department and create a good connection with our local community,” Chun says.

In addition, Chun spearheaded a curriculum revision that created a new required course, “Professional Practice,” to better prepare students for their careers by focusing on internships, portfolio development, and alumni networking.

“Many of our successful alumni in the industry have agreed to come to campus to give us a masterclass on a myriad of topics from how to prepare e-portfolios to deep dives into different careers,” Chun says. “We want to make students feel less daunted as they enter the real world.”

He is also working to create a new graduate program: an MFA in Emerging Media.

“Media industry jobs are diversifying beyond traditional entertainment into other fields that require professionals who understand how to use visual techniques as a major communication tool,” Chun says.

A Leader with a Multitrack Mind

Changee Chun with a video camera.

Beyond strengthening the Media Studies Department, Chun continues actively working on personal creative projects, including the final episode of an eight-part documentary series on social justice and a sequel to his K-drama, “City Hunter.”

“I’m in pre-production for the new K-drama,” Chun says. “Once all is greenlit, my plan is to take our media studies students to the set as interns so they can have professional experience. That is a couple of years away, but that is the plan.”

In the meantime, Chun will continue to engage with his students through his East-West Cinema, Korean Media, and Media Production classes.

“I love teaching,” Chun says. “It makes me a better department head to communicate with and get to know my students.”

Story by Alice Manning Touchette

Photography courtesy of Changee Chun

support Spartan Media Productions

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Posted on January 07, 2026

Our best and most popular stories celebrated accolades for the University and the many ways our students, faculty, and alumni have impacted the world around us. Throughout the year, UNCG News provided a blueprint of life at the G while individual stories of opportunity, creative innovation, and community spirit added color and vibrancy to the scene.  

Let’s take a look back at the voices and accomplishments that defined Spartan Nation in 2025.


UNCG Leads the Way 

At UNCG, academic excellence doesn’t exist in and of itself. It’s a product of support, encouragement, mentorship, and opportunity. These quiet efforts were celebrated this year when UNCG was named the top performer in the UNC System. Appropriately, the UNCG News story with the most views in 2025 explained how we achieved this honor.

Two students sit on a bench on UNCG's campus and high five each other.

The G is for Gains:

Graduate stands in cap and gown flanked by parents in UNCG t-shirts in front of the Reynolds American building.

The UNCG Effect

Spartans continue to drive social mobility in North Carolina in 2025.

Students in Spartan t-shirts and daisies on the first day of classes.

Enrollment Soars

2025’s incoming freshman class brings numbers and a renewed school spirit.

2025 RAnking Honors UNCG

Reputable sources give high marks to UNCG programs and impact.


A Year of Innovation 

Our most popular research story was the identification of a new squirrel species by a UNCG assistant professor of biology, but that was just the tip of the iceberg. Research with practical applications kept Spartan scholars busy throughout 2025. Teams made up of faculty, graduate students, and undergraduate students in various fields of study worked to develop solutions for local and worldwide problems. 

A Snake River Plains ground squirrel out in the wild.

The G is for Genius: 

UNCG's Dr. Hemali Rathnayake works in the lab with a student.

The Bright Institute

Spartan scientists build next-gen energy workforce.

UNCG professor Dr. Eric Drollette gives his daughter a high five.

Exercise for Brain power

UNCG researcher proves that exercise enhances academic performance in children.

Help for Housing Crisis

UNCG center establishes tactics to lower eviction rates in Guilford County.


Spartan Standouts 

The UNCG campus is full of interesting personalities. Faculty, staff, and students inspire and motivate us to be our best. This year, the most popular profile of a Spartan on UNCG News was about a furry friend named Odin, but we were also introduced to other Spartans who would mold our community in ways we didn’t expect. 

German shepherd sits in grass on a spring day on the UNCG campus.

The G is for Guide: 

UNCG Dean Kelly Joyce sits on a bench beside a mill wheel.

2025’s New deans

Get to know the new deans that joined our faculty this year.

Graduate with Spiro shield and arrow stands in front of the Spiro statue.

Spiro Mascot Reveal

Spartans met the student behind the Spiro suit when Tyler Toborg graduated in 2025

Spartan GRad Soars

Ashanti Evans uses UNCG resources to graduate with a starting salary that will change her family’s future.


Learning with a Purpose 

At UNCG, learning is active and built to serve. A story and video produced after a ride-along on Minerva’s Mobile Health Unit illustrated how nursing students bring health services to communities. Creative collaborations across campus connected students with service this year, and their stories painted pictures of what hands-on learning looks like at UNCG. 

The G is for Goals: 

Children line up on a video set in front of an LED wall while a man holds a slate in front of them and a student with a UNCG media studies t-shirt stands with a camera to film them.

Creative Collab

Professors and students bring filmmaking to elementary students.

Student with laptop stands in front of a campus building with a Lloyd International Honors College banner hanging on it. Student

Elementary Impact

Natalia Fagundez ’25 combines passions for special education and languages to reach ESL learners.

Janae Wofford cuts branches in a UNCG lab.

Natural Remedies

Goldwater Scholar Janae Wofford seeks natural solutions for antibiotic resistance.


Alumni Impact 

We witnessed UNCG history this year when a record Light the Way gift resulted in the naming of the Marcus T. Johnson Alumni House, the first building on campus to be named for a person of color. Stories of alumni success were strong in 2025, from artists to business and educational leaders. Like Johnson, many credited the University for their success and pledged to light the way for future students.

UNCG Chancellor Gilliam and alumnus Marcus T. Johnson stand outside Alumni House.

The G is for Gratitude: 

CVPA Actor on the Rise

Patrick Ball ’22 turns heads on The Pitt.

UNCG staffmember Marisa Gonzalez.

UnA Voz De Experiencia

Marisa Gonzalez ’16, ’19 M.A. uses her degree to give back to the growing Hispanic student population at UNCG.

Singer holds a mic on an NC Folk Fest stage.

SPartan Rocks Folk fest

Lora Mouna ’22 reflects on UNCG opportunities that molded her career as a vocalist.


A Vibe Like No Other 

UNCG’s campus life is unique. It’s an environment that celebrates diversity, creativity, and community. One of our most popular stories of the year documented the making of a Harry Potter parody by UNCG roommates. The filmmakers credited campus vibes for inspiring their creation of a viral masterpiece, with 3 million views and counting! Our unique campus life is evident in student organizations, athletics, artistic endeavors, and traditions like homecoming. 

The G is for enerG: 

Something for Everyone

Campus life comes alive for the entire Spartan community at Homecoming 2025.

Maximizing Engagement

The Esports Club combines social events with service and career prep to turn out leaders.

UNCG women's basketball celebrates on the court after SoCon 2025 win.

Spartans Slay at SOCON

Fans old and new show their Spartan spirit at the 2025 SoCon basketball conference tourney.


Honoring the Past, Inspiring the Future

Even as we review 2025’s best stories, we are reminded how UNCG advances by adapting to the world around us. In May of 2025, student artists who painted a mural honoring the first African American students at UNCG were celebrated at a reception where they met JoAnne Smart Drane, one of the subjects of their mural. It was a beautiful meeting of Spartan minds, generations apart but with much in common. As we look ahead to a new year, UNCG continues to adapt with the times to meet the needs of an ever-changing world.  

Three African American students sit with an older African American lady on couches in a lounge with a mural painted on the wall behind them.

The G is for Growth: 

Four students stand in an art gallery and talk about a painting.

Humanities @ Work

The first class of UNCG’s unique internship program reflect on their paid internships.

Speaker crosses stage in front of a screen with career prep tips as students look on from the audience.

Workforce Prep

UNCG leverages partnerships to get students ready for a competitive job market.

Access at the Ready

Chancellor Gilliam rallies faculty and staff to continue UNCG’s commitment to educational access and impact.


Story by Becky Deakins, University Communications.
Photography by Sean Norona, University Communications.

Three students looking and smiling at their cellphones

Don’t Miss a Single Spartan Story in 2026.

Posted on April 02, 2026

UNCG student Skylar Sumrell.

Getting held back in first grade. A hearing loss diagnosis. These experiences, while difficult at the time, led two UNC Greensboro students to their career goals and the School of Education.

Now in its 50th year, UNCG’s Deaf education program has seen remarkable students thrive and carry on a mission of service to others. Its current students continue that mission, whether they major in it or take up American Sign Language (ASL) as a minor.

Katelyn Cruthirds and Skylar Sumrell talked about their own early experiences and how those led them to UNCG.

If I had gotten the help I needed from the start, I wouldn’t have needed to be held back. Because of this, I decided I wanted to help other kids who struggle with learning to read before it’s too late.

Katelyn Cruthirds, Elementary Education Major

Like many children today, Cruthirds fell behind her expected reading level. She says that second year in first grade was beneficial, but it also showed her the things she would change if she was the teacher. She pursues that dream now as an early education major with a minor in American Sign Language.

On my first day, I walked into that classroom and immediately felt an overwhelming sense of belonging. I wasn’t ‘different’ anymore, I was just me. Here, I fell in love with the joy of a Deaf child’s laugh. It was the purest and most unfiltered expression of emotion I had ever experienced.

Skylar Sumrell, Deaf education major

Sumrell began learning ASL after being diagnosed with sensorineural hearing loss. She unlocked a love of working with students during a high school internship. Now in her senior year, she shares her advice to incoming students that helped her since her enrollment to UNCG as a Spartan Education Scholar.

UNCG student teacher Amanda Best works an elementary student.

Your classroom is waiting.

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