Posted on April 17, 2026

SLP Sarah Cunningham points to pictures on a tablet for a child.

“Gather around, dragonflies, butterflies, bumblebees, and fireflies!”

It’s singalong time at Growing Connections for Pediatric Achievements (GCPA) in Greensboro.

The names for the different children’s classes feel appropriate. Some of the kids are just barely old enough to walk. All have developmental delays or special health care needs. But in the comforting circle formed by their classroom leads, aides, and therapists, they happily sing along to “Wheels on the Bus” and other familiar nursery tunes as they participate in their speech, physical, or occupational therapy.

The staff wears colorful smocks decorated with a communication picture board. Children with speech delays or differences can point to the symbol of what they need, a system known as augmented and alternative communication (AAC). Similar boards cover their playground and the digital communication tablets they use in therapy sessions.

It feels like a place where a child can find their wings and soar.

One of the things that makes GCPA stand out, according to Executive Director Ma’Kayla Jefcoat, is that its programs are for children from birth to 3 years old. “A lot of other programs start at age 2,” she says. “But 80% of brain growth happens in birth-to-three. Two is a late start to be going into early intervention.”

Another perk is its location. If not for this center housed at Guilford County Schools’ Gateway Education Center, many Triad parents might have to go an hour or two out of their way, driving their children to Winston-Salem or Chapel Hill.

And GCPA has gone through a lot of growth upon reaching its 75th anniversary. It not only serves as a launchpad for children; it’s been a platform for UNC Greensboro students with a passion for care.

More than a grade; a mission

Jefcoat ’20, ’22 MPA, like many alumnae now working full-time at GCPA, began as an intern while she was earning her master of public affairs with a concentration in non-profit management, having moved onto graduate school immediately after getting her bachelor’s in English from UNCG.

UNCG alumna Ma'Kayla Jefcoat stands inside playroom of Growing Connections for Pediatric Achievements.
Jefcoat

She was drawn to GCPA because she knew she would see an immediate benefit from her contributions. “I wanted a project that I knew would be making an impact, instead of just doing one for a grade,” she says.

She got a sense of the importance of GCPA — then known as the Greensboro Cerebral Palsy Association — from her very first meeting with its vice president, Mike Krick, in 2020. “He got emotional talking about the program and how important the work was,” she relates. “That really spoke to me and made me excited to help them.”

One of her first tasks was taking over social media responsibilities. The young intern brought an internet savviness the older staff greatly appreciated.

Little did she know it would become much more than that.

Throughout her internship, she observed the operations, fundraising, and partnership strategies of a nonprofit, and she wrote down her own ideas for improving those functions. She shared her ideas with Krick.

To her surprise, he said, “That is something we want our executive director to do.” Within a matter of months, she was recommended by the vice president to take on that very position.

“Here we are, four-plus years later,” she says. “It was a shock, but I was excited. I like to start from a blank slate, to build and see what the possibilities are. It was kind of comforting that there wasn’t a ‘box.’ I could make that box.”

A growth plan serves growing minds

Jefcoat initiated a review of growth opportunities for the program. Changing the name was one of the first priorities.

“Greensboro Cerebral Palsy Association no longer fully reflected all of what we did after 75 years,” she says. “We serve children with all developmental delays and disorders: autism, Down syndrome. We’ve had rarer conditions. As long as a child needs developmental services, then we are a resource to them.”

Renaming GCPA also helped them promote connections to families in the rest of Guilford County, not just Greensboro.

One of their biggest growth achievements was taking advantage of new technology. Jefcoat and the team were able to secure AAC devices with multiple language capacities for children with speech delays.

“And we make sure they leave the program with a device,” she says, “because once they age out, if they try to get one through the school system, with all the medical and insurance documentation necessary, it can take over a year to get one. With our dedicated team, we can get it done in a month or two.”

And Jefcoat wanted to make sure support doesn’t end once the child ages out. “We expanded to provide outings and trainings to our alumni families,” she says. “Once they turn 3, we still provide those touchpoints every month. They can still come to us and ask questions. We have 5- and 6-year-olds who still come out to our events.”

Putting together the therapy dream team

The access to technology and education is inarguably life-changing, but it comes second to the personal interactions the children get each day with dedicated therapists, classroom leaders, and assistants.

Therapy Director and Speech Language Pathologist (SLP) Sarah Cunningham ’11 MA got to know GCPA during her UNCG graduate school fieldwork across the hall in the Gateway Education Center. She’s loved working with children since her childhood babysitting and nannying jobs. Eventually, she wanted to focus on kids with special needs. That led her to UNCG to get her master’s in speech-language pathology.

“I myself was born with a limb difference,” says Cunningham. “I have no fingers on my right hand, so I always had a propensity toward working with others in ways that might make a difference or help them improve their lives, to be accepted.”

Once the organization hired her as their full-time therapy director, she went to work getting GCPA credentialed and enrolled in additional Medicaid and other insurance programs. “That really opened up doors for me to invest in growing the therapy program,” she says. “Working with Ma’Kayla, I’ve had to stretch myself as a leader, be a more innovative thinker, be a role model, and be an advocate.”

Cunningham made several visits to UNCG to give alumni talks to SLP students. One of those was Roslyn Reynolds ’24 MA. “I thought it sounded a lot like what I wanted to do one day: open a childcare center for kids with special needs and have in-house therapists,” says Reynolds.

She came onboard as an SLP graduate student intern, while Cunningham was still doing speech and feeding therapy and had to spend a considerable amount of her hours trialing and obtaining AAC devices based on each child’s needs. Reynolds freed up Cunningham to focus on her other work obligations. Jefcoat and the board made her their center director, assisting with childcare licensing and compliance goals, and a specialty therapist focusing on AAC.

Reynolds says the work expectations of a non-profit versus a business — learning to advocate for her ideas to the GCPA board, seeking new funding sources, etc. — assures her that the children’s best interests always remain front and center. “It allows us to do a deep dive and think about how to best serve these kids,” says Reynolds. “We’re not just thinking about the 30 minutes they’re in our office. We’re thinking about how we can make things more accessible for their families, how we can meet their goals.”

In the business of making a difference

As part of Jefcoat’s job, she constantly looks for new funding and creative ways to stretch GCPA’s resources. Naturally, it made sense to lean upon a resource in her backyard: UNCG’s Bryan School of Business and Economics.

She already had a direct link through one of her board members, Dr. Sara MacSween, senior lecturer of marketing, entrepreneurship, hospitality, and tourism. Students in her capstone course Advanced Marketing Management must create a marketing plan for a real organization, so in 2024, she had them work on GCPA’s rebrand. The students compared GCPA’s services to similar health care programs. They proposed short-term and mid-term goals, including ways to attract more donors with increased marketing and a greater online presence.

Brochures for Growing Connections for Pediatric Achievements.

They recommended revamping the name and mission statement and proposed a new logo. “We went back and forth with the graphic designer, making changes so that it was just perfect,” says MacSween. “It’s a very strategic logo with different insects like ladybugs. We intentionally put in all the animals that make up the classrooms.”

Additionally, MacSween recommended Alice Jones ’24, a student from the capstone course, join GCPA as an intern to help with implementation. Her contributions were vital to Jefcoat. “I’m the only person on the organizational side,” she says. “All the administrative things — fundraising, development — that’s on me. You can imagine there’s a lot of things on my plate. And so, [Alice] was instrumental in rebranding.”

MacSween says nonprofits are great spaces for marketing students to experiment. “When working with a small company, a nonprofit or startup, the marketing needs vary greatly by client by client,” she says, “So students have to get very creative and come up with cost-effective ways to promote these smaller organizations.”

Soaring into the future

All these different skills come together, like the many voices in the morning singalong, to form one harmonious organization where children are empowered to break down their barriers and take to the skies.

UNCG alumnae together at Growing Connections for Pediatric Achievements playground.

Cunningham and Reynolds share Jefcoat’s gratitude in seeing how their work directly impacts their community. “Working in a nonprofit really takes money out of the equation, as far as you’re doing it for the betterment of the people,” says Cunningham. “We have more flexibility, more creativity, more thinking outside the box.”

“We really get to know the families,” says Reynolds, “And so we can celebrate their growth together.”

“UNCG produces some great people,” says Jefcoat. “We have an amazing team that is really dedicated to service and going above and beyond.”

Story by Janet Imrick, University Communications
Photography by Sean Norona, University Communications

SLP Roslyn Reynolds helps a toddler down the slide.

Be the next steppingstone in a child’s journey.

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Posted on May 06, 2026

a woman in a cap and gown by the bell tower

First generation college graduate Lah “SweE” Paw on engaging with opportunity

Lah “Swee” Paw surprised herself when she stood before a classroom of young learners during her practicum at Davis Elementary School. The self-described introvert once couldn’t have imagined engaging a group of children on her own, but on this day, she confidently led them through a lesson and then jumped in to help them trace letters.

“My student teaching experience really changed me,” Paw says. “It’s then that I knew I could really be an early childhood educator.”

This May, Paw will graduate from UNC Greensboro with her degree in human development and family studies with a concentration in early childhood education, the first in her Thai-Karen family to earn a degree. As she finishes the semester with a freshly signed contract to teach Kindergarten in Durham this fall, she shares how her university experience gave her the confidence to find her profession.

Swee Paw graduating from the School of Health and Human Sciences 2026.

First generation college student finds her way

Until the age of 10, Paw lived in Thailand with her mother and sister. When she arrived in North Carolina in 2014, she began attending school and learning English.

“I didn’t know if I would attend college, but when I toured UNCG’s campus, I knew this was the place for me,” Paw says.

It took her a few semesters to get her bearings, preferring the safety of her dorm room. But soon she accepted invitations to join student clubs, including the Human Development and Family Studies Club and the Vietnamese Student Association. Both gave her an opportunity to meet new people and spread her wings.

“A classmate in my BIO 111 class asked me to join the Vietnamese Student Association, and I realized it was a good chance for me to be involved on campus,” she says. “Now I’m the treasurer and I also performed the Vietnamese traditional fan dance at the International Night last semester.

“As an introvert I was really nervous,” she continues, “but I’m so glad I did it. It really helped me take another step to gaining confidence with being in front of other people.”

Paw’s sister, Bway Paw, came to UNCG a year after Paw, making a unique shared experience for the siblings.

“Her first year was really fun because I was able to walk her around the campus and help her navigate her classes,” she says. “We also lived together starting her second year, so it was incredible to do this together.”

A Leader Emerges

Paw was also nominated to join the Health and Human Sciences Leadership Program by one of her professors.

“I met so many friends in the program, and it made me step out of my comfort zone,” Paw says. “I was required to do a lot of public speaking, which terrified me, but I was able to overcome that fear.”

During the program, Paw represented her human development and family studies major and participated in networking, mentoring events, and workshops designed to develop her leadership skills, practice professional communication, manage projects, and more with her peers.

“The leadership program really gave me more confidence in my ability to lead and communicate, which I’ll definitely need in the classroom,” Paw says.

Paw used those skills in her practicum experience both on campus at the Childhood Education Center and during her time student teaching at Davis Elementary School.

“It has been a pleasure to watch Swee develop as a student, educator, and leader over the past few years,” says Jennifer Jones, assistant professor and student teaching coordinator for the Department of Human Development and Family Studies. “I have watched her grow from a quiet student in an introductory course to becoming an active member of our student group, Collaborative of Human Development Professionals (CHP) Executive Board, to fully embracing the teaching profession during her internship.”

The hands-on practicum, where she was given the opportunity to lead a preschool class, was a pivotal experience that confirmed her career choice.

“I never thought I would go from an introvert to confidently leading a classroom, but I realized that I was comfortable and confident with the kids,” Paw says.

A Bright Future Awaits

This August, Paw will begin co-teaching Kindergarten at Christian Academy in Durham. She’s grateful for the experiential learning, mentoring, and support she received at UNCG, crediting it with helping her discover what she wanted to do after college.

“At UNCG having a community was everything,” Paw says. “Every opportunity offered to me opened me up to more people and gave me the confidence to expand my friend group and express who I am.”

Written by Alice Manning Touchette
Photography by Sean Norona and courtesy of Swee Paw

CELEBRATE OUR GRADS!

Graduates and their families are encouraged to share their accomplishments on social media by tagging the University accounts and using the hashtag #UNCGGrad. Visit UNCG’s digital swag page for Commencement-themed graphics and templates.

Mention @UNCG in celebratory posts on Instagram and X and @uncgreensboro on TikTok.

Three masters graduates pose for a selfie in cap and gown.

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For the Media

Posted on April 17, 2026

A mix of students, staff, faculty pose with the Chancellor and three goats on College Ave.
A hand holds flowers with a note about mental health and the minerva statue in the background.

April 7, 2026 was a beautiful day at UNC Greensboro, but the mood felt lighter than most spring semester days on campus.

Bubbles floated by the Astera sculpture from a grassy area where students ate popsicles and played lawn games.

In Elliott University Center, students planted seeds along with paper slips with handwritten career goals in take-home terracotta pots.

At the Kaplan Center, the courts buzzed with pick-up volleyball and basketball games.

Music and laughter could be heard from across Spring Garden Street, as students crowded into a common room at Jefferson Suites for karaoke and ice cream.

And a small group of walkers developed into a parade down College Avenue, following three leashed goats who flicked their ears as students gathered to pet their fuzzy heads and coo at them.

On the first ever Wellness Takeover Day at UNCG, positive vibes could be found at every turn.  

All Hands on Deck for Wellness

“The idea started with our work on the Eight Dimensions of Wellness,” said Vice Provost for Student Success Regina McCoy. “SGA students expressed the desire to have a day dedicated to wellness, so we formed a committee to engage departments across campus to participate.” 

Students who participated in the activities on Wellness Takeover Day appreciated the University’s focus on mental health, especially during early April when students are gearing up for the final push before exams.

“Mental health is more important than a grade,” said second-year art major YaMiah Meadows. “A lot of people are stressing, and it does take a toll on how you perform in class.”  

Activities represented all dimensions of wellness: physical, emotional, social, intellectual, cultural, career, financial, and environmental. Over 100 events were organized by departments across campus including seminars, social media engagement, field day games, artistic expressions, special offerings in the dining hall, tabling activities, and giveaways.

Wide shot of the quad with lots of students playing games like volleyball. In the center, two people give each other a high five.
Scenes from Wellness Takeover Day.
Staff member in wellness takeover t-shirt kneels to pet a goat and smiles.
Kim Sousa Peoples enjoys the G.O.A.T Walk.

Isabella Ellis, a master’s student studying counseling in education, sat on a blanket making friendship bracelets with students on the library lawn. As a volunteer with the Vacc Counseling and Consulting Clinic, she was particularly impressed with how the Wellness Takeover Day was received: “It’s really cool to see the University put together something like this that’s so accessible to students.”  

Most organizations and departments were pleased with how students engaged with the Wellness Takeover activities they planned, but the most memorable event was the “G.O.A.T Walk” hosted by the College of Arts & Sciences Dean’s Office. Students met at the Foust Building for a walk with three goats, combining “gentle exercise with animal-assisted wellness.”  

“Goats walking down College Ave wasn’t on our bingo card when we first discussed plans for this day,” joked Kim Sousa Peoples, senior director of First Year Student Engagement and Experience, “But the positive student reaction to this and other events across campus was exactly what our committee was hoping to achieve with the Wellness Takeover Day.” 

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

Students in innertubes in the pool at RecFest at the Kaplan Center.

Need More Wellness in Your Life?

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For the Media

Posted on April 07, 2026

UNCG students around a table doing activities.

At UNC Greensboro, students hear about the Eight Dimensions of Wellness. Some of these practices, like a healthy diet, are obvious. But UNCG recognizes there are many pieces in the puzzle of well-being, and they all affect one another.

UNCG wants Spartans to work on those holistic aspects of wellness during their college years so they can keep improving after graduation. Through the Spartans Thrive initiative, UNCG leaders, faculty, staff, and students are always evaluating and creating new ways to explore wellness in the ways that best suit them.

These ideas are getting a boost from Spartans Thrive Engagement Grants, led by Provost Fellow and Professor of Music Eric Willie and the Division of Student Success.

Willie says, “Through mentorship, leadership opportunities, creative scholarship, and community engagement, the Spartans Thrive Engagement Grants demonstrate how wellness can be woven into the fabric of the University experience.”

The six initiatives center around three of the eight dimensions: career, environmental, and intellectual. Students will find opportunities to make a difference, practice strategies for tricky situations, and lock into all campus resources at their fingertips. Some will be emphasized during Wellness Takeover Day on April 8.

Peer Artist Leadership Program (PAL)

Dr. Scott Glasser with the School of Music is building undergraduate string-music education majors’ career readiness with the chance to become mentors/ His PAL program arranges weekly lessons with middle and high school students.

The program uses a layered mentorship model: Graduate students mentor the undergraduate instructors, and the undergraduates mentor younger musicians. This structure means they get to work serving the community right away, while also practicing communication, lesson planning, and reflection.

A conductor leads student musicians in rehearsal at UNCG.

Health and Wellness Event Series

Through the School of Health and Human Sciences‘ (HHS) Student Leadership Program, undergraduate students organize and lead health-focused events for their peers. They range from Pilates sessions and nature walks to run clubs and workshops.

Each event includes a short session showing how wellness feeds into academic success. Student organizers gain experience in planning, communication, and project management.

It’s led by Dr. Joi Bulls, HHS associate dean for undergraduate affairs; and Larissa Witmer, assistant dean for projects and programs.

Building Resilient Leaders

The Office of Leadership and Civic Engagement’s director Jarrod Rudd and associate director Jordan Farmer have expanded its Empower Hour programming with “Courageous Dialogue” and “Resilience,” two workshops created by the not-for-profit organization LeaderShape. Participants learn about emotional agility and communication skills. They practice navigating difficult conversations with empathy and respect, employing strategies to manage stress, adapting to change, and strengthening community. All these skills can be put to work in their classrooms, student organizations, and careers.

A UNCG lecture with a projector slide.

Active Girls–Healthy Girls

Kinesiology’s Dr. Jaclyn Maher’sActive Girls–Healthy Girls” program hosts a free Spring Break camp for elementary-aged girls in Greensboro. The Center for Women’s Health and Wellness used this grant to develop a comprehensive training program for UNCG students who serve as camp counselors. Sessions focus on teamwork, youth development, and leadership.

Maher says it’s a win-win for everyone. “Our students gain hands‑on leadership experience while the campers see role models who encourage healthy, active lifestyles,” she says.

UNCG students wearing climbing gear outside.

Spartans Walk for Wellness Challenge

For a first-year student, one of the biggest challenges to maintaining a healthy lifestyle is the dramatic change of routine. Assistant Professor of Information, Library, and Research Sciences Hamid Nadir’s “Spartans Walk for Wellness Challenge” helps them form a new routine, working in habits of movement and discovery.

Participants aim to walk five miles each week while taking photos to document their routes around campus. They log their progress through Spartan Connect and fill out a survey for a chance to win swag, turning a simple weekly event into a shared experience where physical wellness becomes a social moment and a time to forge new friendships.

Exploring Belonging Through Dialogue and Storytelling

The five-week dialogue series approaches wellness through a lens of culture, language, and shared history. Students explore how identity and history shape their experiences of belonging. They learn oral-history techniques and work with community partners to document local stories for UNCG’s Digital Greensboro archive, building communication skills and deeper cultural understanding along the way.

The initiative is led by Dr. Ana Hontanilla from the Department of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures and Dominick Hand of the African American and African Diaspora Studies program and facilitated by the Office of Intercultural Engagement.

Students hold up a UNCG t-shirt.

How to Get Involved

Wellness Takeover Day
April 8, All Day

Student Leaders Promoting Wellness
Pilates Princesses
April 8, 11 a.m.–Noon
Open to all students. The first 20 to arrive will receive a free mat. Due to limited availability, participants should register in advance.

Take a Moment, Take a Daisy
April 8, 11 a.m.–3 p.m.
Minerva Statue

Fueling Your Workout
April 8, 6–7 p.m.
Reynolds Hall Common Area

Walk and Talk with Alumni Series Finale
April 16, 4–5:30pm
Nursing and Instructional Building Courtyard

Spartans Walk for Wellness Challenge Locations
Our Secretaries’ Garden
April 13–17

Peabody parks Woods Bridge
April 20–24

Building Resilient Leaders
Resilience Workshop
April 20, 11:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m.
EUC Alexander Room

Peer Artist Leadership
Recital
April 25, 1 p.m.
School of Music Room 110

Greensboro Symphony Pre-Concert
May 2, 6:30 p.m.
Tanger Center for the Arts

Story by Janet Imrick, University Communications
Photography courtesy of Dr. Eric Willie, Provost’s Faculty Fellow for Faculty Development

Students pick up succulent plants off a table at UNCG.

Work on wellness at your own pace.

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For the Media

Posted on April 20, 2026

Five people walk together along a sunlit outdoor path surrounded by lush green trees and grass. They are smiling and laughing, conveying a sense of camaraderie.
Heather Adams, center, with the rest of the team leading the Mellon Foundation-funded Humanities at Work initiative at UNCG.

Congratulations to our 2026 Research Excellence Awards winners Dr. Paul Knapp and Dr. Heather Adams.


Professional headshot of Adams in a black top with arms crossed, smiling, against a gray background.

Dr. Heather Adams, associate professor of English, receives the Early Career Research Excellence Award for her groundbreaking scholarship in rhetoric, composition, and writing studies, with interdisciplinary specializations spanning feminist theory, feminist historiography, gendered health studies, reproduction studies, and public emotion.

Peers describe Adams as a preeminent early-career scholar in her field and one of her generation’s most prominent voices in feminist rhetorical studies. In her 9 years at UNCG, she has authored or coauthored an outstanding 17 peer-reviewed articles and book chapters as well as a book and a co-edited collection of scholarly essays — a level of scholarly activity one would expect from a full professor rather than an early career faculty member.

Adams’s work is published with top-tier publishers and journals, including the Quarterly Journal of Speech, which has a 6% acceptance rate, and Rhetoric Review, which has a 15% acceptance rate.

Her 2022 book, Enduring Shame: A Recent History of Unwed Pregnancy and Righteous Reproduction — which examines the raced and classed experiences of unwed mothers since the mid-twentieth century and traces a culture of shaming and blaming women into the present — won the highly competitive Horner Outstanding Book Award from the Coalition of Feminist Scholars in the History of Rhetoric and Composition. Her 2024 co-edited collection, Inclusive Aims: Rhetoric’s Role in Reproductive Justice, was released by the award-winning Parlor Press, which publishes some of writing studies’ most distinguished scholars.

Adams has delivered over 60 national and international conference presentations, earning a Distinguished Paper Award from the Rhetoric of Health and Medicine Symposium, and her invited talks include the prestigious 2023 Kenneth Burke Memorial Lecture at Pennsylvania State University. Her work has also appeared in Communication Currents, a National Communication Association publication that aims to explain scholarly information to broad and public audiences.

Beyond sharing her work with her scholarly peers, Adams also conducts extensive work in the realm of public advocacy. For example, she has been part of a community-engaged research team developing an advocacy tool to address stigma faced by those experiencing substance-exposed pregnancies.

Finally, Adams is known as a deeply engaged teacher who has published on pedagogy, collaborating with students, and undergraduate research. She is a principal investigator and the faculty director for the $5 million Mellon Foundation-funded “Humanities at Work” program that connects UNCG undergraduate humanities majors with community partners through paid internships. Her latest work with undergraduate researchers includes a digital exhibit of oral contraceptive advertisements from the 1960s that will be hosted by UNCG libraries.

Professional headshot of a Knapp in a navy blazer and light blue shirt, smiling, against a gray background.

Dr. Paul Knapp, professor of geography, environment, and sustainability, receives the Senior Research Excellence Award for his innovative work in biogeography and climatology using dendroecological techniques.

Dr. Paul Knapp, professor of geography, environment, and sustainability, receives the Senior Research Excellence Award for his innovative work in biogeography and climatology using dendroecological techniques.

In the field and at his Carolina Tree-Ring Science Laboratory, Knapp uses tree-ring data to reconstruct centuries of environmental conditions and help scientists better understand complex atmospheric and forest ecological dynamics. His work explores how human activities affect environments and how climate affects human well-being.

Knapp is known by his peers for innovative work advancing the frontiers of biogeography, climatology, and dendrochronology and impacting environmental understanding and climate science, locally, nationally, and internationally. The important research has drawn over $1.3 million in funding over his career, from organizations including the NSF, USDA, Bureau of Land Management, and the NC Policy Collaboratory.

He has published over 92 peer-reviewed articles over his career — 62 in his 21 years at UNCG — and amassed nearly 3,000 citations. Over the last 15 years, he has published three to six papers a year. His research appears in top-tier disciplinary journals such as Global Change Biology, Global Environmental Change, and Annals of the American Association of Geographers, which is one of geography’s flagship journals — as well as in prestigious interdisciplinary outlets.

The diversity of journals in which Knapp’s publications appear reflects the wide, multidisciplinary impact of his research explorations.

He is known for his series of publications using isotopic analyses to demonstrate physiological changes to trees due to rising atmospheric carbon dioxide, a then-controversial concept known colloquially as greening. He is also known for work demonstrating the importance of atmospheric rivers — narrow, moisture-laden plumes in the atmosphere that transport massive amounts of water vapor — in the radial growth, or width, of pine trees.

Knapp introduced the since-confirmed concept that the impact of Arctic sea-ice on the atmosphere influences wildfires in the western U.S., and he has published evidence on how atmospheric warming is associated with changing storm dynamics in North America.

He has also used dendroclimatic data to shed light on human history, as with a Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society paper on the Lewis and Clark expedition that demonstrates how the Corps of Discovery experienced one of the most severe Pacific Northwest windstorms in 300 years on their journey.

Meanwhile, his paper on the historical factors and human-environment interactions leading to the dominance of the invasive species cheatgrass throughout the Great Basin has 800 citations alone.

Knapp has delivered well over 100 conference presentations and given invited colloquia at top-tier geography programs across the country.

His outreach efforts also extend to educating the public through campus tree walks and public tours of his lab.

Finally, Knapp is an inspiring mentor who has guided over 30 graduate students over his career. His students have coauthored 26 publications with him and have won five best doctoral and masters paper presentation awards and a best research poster award at his discipline’s most important regional conference. He is also lauded for his mentorship of faculty peers.

Knapp stands on a rocky summit at Buffalo Mountain Natural Area Preserve in Virginia, with a sweeping view of forested hills and valleys below a partly cloudy sky.
Knapp in the field at the Buffalo Mountain Natural Area Preserve in Virginia.

Announcement by Sangeetha Shivaji
Feature photo by Sean Norona

Two researchers in white lab coats examine small plants under grow lights in a greenhouse laboratory.

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Posted on May 01, 2026

Featured Image for IPSE Day celebrates education and inclusion for students with IDD 

At the beginning of the April 20 High Point City Council meeting, Sam Antkowiak and his mother, Stephanie, arranged themselves in front of the dais alongside High Point Mayor Cyril Jefferson. With them was Lisa Pluff, director of UNC Greensboro’s Office of Comprehensive Transition and Postsecondary Education (CTP).

As the group found their places, Mayor Jefferson began his proclamation that centered a transformative education model that both expands and fulfills the University mission.

Lisa Pluff

“Whereas college students with and without intellectual disabilities can attend college together,” he began, “and whereas today there are about 5,000 colleges and universities in the United States, and just over 300 have options for students with intellectual disabilities….”

In the jargon of higher education, Jefferson was talking about Inclusive Post-Secondary Education (IPSE). In essence, he was describing an advanced practical and academic curriculum for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD), like the program administered by Pluff and her team at UNCG.

She and her companions all have a vested interest here. In addition to her duties as UNCG’s IPSE champion, Pluff is president of The Arc of North Carolina, which helps people with IDD achieve their life goals. Stephanie Antkowiak is the Arc of High Point’s executive director. And her son Sam is a graduate of UNCG’s Integrative Community Studies program, the University’s inclusive academic pathway for students with IDD.

IPSE can be challenging to describe in words, but this collection of people define the program aptly: a government official, representatives from education and the nonprofit sector, and someone whose life was changed because of everyone’s commitment and dedication to the cause.

A national day of recognition

Jefferson’s proclamation, along with one signed by Greensboro Mayor Marikay Abuzuaiter, celebrates May 1 as IPSE Day in the Triad, as it is everywhere else in the United States.

IPSE Day articulates the pressing need to support those with IDD as they become more independent and productive. It is an initiative spearheaded by Think College, a national center that promotes infrastructure to enrich the lives of people with IDD after they age out of primary education.

Zion Turner graduated from the Integrative Community Studies Program in May 2025. He took business courses and worked in ITS.

UNCG has been a part of this enterprise since 2007, a year before the federal government began recognizing programs like this with grants and initiatives. This makes UNCG the first university in North Carolina to launch a 4-year IPSE program. Before then, there was little in the way of education or training after high school for people with IDD in the state.

UNCG’s program is housed under ICS, also known as Beyond Academics, with a mission to provide both real-life and academic experiences that engage students and encourage them to develop to their full potential.

Three pillars of learning

UNCG’s ICS program supports and guides individuals with IDD in three vital areas, Pluff says. “Our three pillars are career development, autonomy and agency, and life planning. The goal is for them to live as independently as possible after graduation.”

Students graduate with a certificate in Integrative Community Studies, issued by the Office of the Provost.

“The ICS Program is just one of the ways that UNCG advances the University mission beyond traditional academics,” said University Provost and Executive Vice Chancellor Alan Boyette. “Like all our graduates, IPSE students make us proud as they turn their potential into achievement.”

While they are at UNCG, the students attend classes, take meals in the dining hall, and live in University housing.

“We use a purposeful housing model, which supports the students in transitioning through different opportunities of living,” Pluff says. “They start on campus typically, and then move into a more traditional type of housing to gain those skills of how to cook and clean, pay the bills, and all of that.”

The career development piece is accomplished through classwork and electives. “Students take a variety of coursework,” Pluff says. “Some are courses that we developed specifically for the certificate, but there are courses available to them from all over the University, depending on their interests and career desires. For example, some students might take some courses in education if they want to go into a teaching support role.”

‘Like any other student’

IPSE students have been diagnosed with a range of IDD such as Down syndrome, Williams syndrome, or cerebral palsy. Autism, Pluff says, is a developmental disability as opposed to an intellectual disability, “so if our students have autism, they also have a co-occurring intellectual disability. But that common denominator is the cognitive or intellectual disability.”

The heart of the program, Pluff says, is inclusion and access.

“There is the idea of inclusion, which is just having a seat at the table,” she says. “But what we are looking for is for our students to truly be part of the community, and a reciprocal part of the community. It’s about true and deep inclusion of folks with varying abilities. UNCG is a very inclusive place. And our students want to make friends and be a part of the community, just like any other student.”

Story by Brian Clarey, University Communications
Photos courtesy UNCG Office of Comprehensive Transition and Postsecondary Education

Practical skills and campus life

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Posted on May 06, 2026

UNCG student Janae Wofford smiles while working in the lab.
Janae Wofford, one of the 2026 Provost Student Excellence Awardees.

On behalf of the Provost and the Honors Council of Lloyd International Honors College, UNCG delighted to announce the recipients of the 2026 Provost Student Excellence Awards. This is the highest academic honor for undergraduate students at UNCG, recognizing excellence both in and out of the classroom.

Congratulations!

AnnaGrace Berry, Specialized Education Services
Peyton Bowditch, School of Music
Caden Brady, Biology
Hailey Burnett, Dance
Elle Burnette, Consumer, Apparel, and Retail Studies
Rachel Clanton, Chemistry and Biochemistry
Jay Clarkson, Political Science
Annelise Eidt, Languages, Literatures, and Cultures
Elisabeth Eleazer, Biology
Bella Estrada, School of Art
Amber Fairchild, Biology
Isatou Suwad Fall, School of Art
Eileen Galdamez, Nutrition
Taylor Gettings, Interior Architecture
Jolie Hauser, Accounting and Finance
Edgar Hernandez, Management
Mac Hoffa, Dance
Hanna Husseini, Interior Architecture
Sabrina Ibrahim, Social Work
Remi JeanMarie-Jennings, Public Health Education
Malcolm Johnson, Public Health Education
Gracen Long, School of Music
Maya McCall, School of Theatre
Samantha McInturff, School of Theatre
Iyana Mercado, Political Science
Ana Mosqueda, Community and Therapeutic Recreation
Holland Shay Pankey, Accounting and Finance 
Kristina Perdue, Ancient Mediterranean Studies & Archaeology
Zion Raczenski, Psychology
Sebastian Rodriguez, Nursing
Mya Snell, Nursing
Sasha Steffey, Computer Science
Nikolai Tassin, Psychology
Manodnya Vaidya, Management
Peyton Valla, Nursing
Raquel Walton, School of Art
Jacey Ward, Consumer, Apparel, and Retail Studies
Leah Wehrly, Nutrition
Janae Wofford, Chemistry and Biochemistry
Arianna Young, Social Work
Libby Zou, Computer Science

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Posted on May 11, 2026

Randall Kaplan and Susan Safran stand on steps of UNCG Marcus T. Johnson Alumni house.

Susan Safran ’77 received an honorary doctor of science degree for her exceptional guidance in advanced learning in health care, emergency training, and higher education. Randall Kaplan received an honorary doctor of laws degree for his visionary leadership, public service, and philanthropy, establishing a transformative impact across North Carolina.

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Posted on April 30, 2026

UNCG nursing students take a group selfie with Dean Barksdale.

UNC Greensboro has launched Minerva’s Health Chariot, a mobile health unit operated by the School of Nursing that offers primary and preventive care in Guilford, Forsyth, Alamance, Rockingham, Randolph, Davidson, Davie, and Caswell counties.

Dr. Debra Barksdale, dean of the School of Nursing; Chancellor Franklin D. Gilliam, Jr.; Anita Bachmann, CEO of UnitedHealthcare Community Plan of North Carolina; were joined by other trustees, faculty members, and community representatives to unveil Minerva’s Health Chariot outside the Nursing and Instructional Building on April 29.

The new unit was made possible by a $715,000 investment from UnitedHealthcare Community Plan of North Carolina.

The addition of Minerva’s Health Chariot is an expansion of services first initiated with the launch of Minerva’s Mobile Health Unit (MHU) in 2023. The MHU, a repurposed RV, has delivered screenings, vaccinations, primary and preventive care to housing communities, recreation centers, and other local sites, particularly in areas where demand for medical services often exceeds available resources.

Since its launch, the MHU has delivered care to over 3,000 people in the Triad who might not have received medical attention otherwise. The second unit will further increase access to essential health services in the region.

Minerva’s Health Chariot introduces a new feature to the fleet: integrated telehealth technology. This lets patients connect with a primary care provider in real time during their visit, making follow-up and ongoing care easier. The unit is a repurposed transit van, and its smaller size means it can reach more locations.

Tiffany Gibson, Ph.D., RN, a faculty member and dually certified family and women’s health nurse practitioner, has been a key part of the School of Nursing’s mobile health efforts since the MHU went into service. She sees patients on the unit several times a week and serves as its director.

“What sets Minerva’s Health Chariot apart is its ability to turn a routine screening or test result into a same-day primary care, telehealth visit. This is an essential service for rural and underserved communities where access to medical care may be limited,” said Gibson.

Both mobile health units also give UNCG nursing students valuable real-world training. Nursing students and graduate nurse practitioner students get real-world, hands-on experience working with patients through the Minerva Mobile Health Scholars program.

“Remarkable change doesn’t happen without the right tools, the right people, and partners who believe in the work. Minerva’s Health Chariot brings all of that together — giving our nurse practitioners and students the platform they need to meet our neighbors where they are and deliver care that truly transforms lives,” said Barksdale.

Bachmann, who also serves on the UNCG Board of Trustees, said, “At UnitedHealthcare Community Plan of North Carolina, we believe that everyone deserves access to quality healthcare, no matter where they live, and Minerva’s Health Chariot will help increase access said Anita Bachmann, CEO, UnitedHealthcare Community Plan of North Carolina. “By bringing telehealth-enabled, preventive care directly into neighborhoods across the Triad, this mobile unit breaks down barriers that have kept too many people from getting the care they need.”

Minerva’s Health Chariot is one part of UNCG’s growing service to underserved communities. At the ribbon-cutting, Chancellor Gilliam announced UNCG’s recent approval to participate in the Rural Residency Medical Education and Training Fund. With this funding from the UNC System, UNCG will help increase the healthcare workforce in rural communities. The School of Nursing will receive $200,000. Another $200,000 was awarded to be shared by the Department of Social Work in the School of Health and Human Sciences and Psychology in the College of Arts and Sciences.

To learn more or find out when Minerva’s Mobile Health Unit will be in your area, visit nursing.uncg.edu.

Story by Debbie Fuchs, School of Nursing
Photography by Sean Norona, University Communications

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Posted on May 04, 2026

A group of UNCG grads in cap and gowns celebrate on steps outside the Johnson Alumni House.
Seania Burnett (front row, center) leads members of her Class of 2026 in a cheer on the steps of Marcus T. Johnson Alumni House.

As UNC Greensboro’s newest alumni get ready for Commencement Day, many add flourishes to their mortarboards. These decorations tell the stories of what brought them to this point, the people who inspired them, the doubts they quashed, and the dreams they’re ready to bring into reality.

But the matching blue of the undergraduates’ robes on May 8 — and the black of the graduates’ robes on May 7 — will speak to another truth: Wherever their futures take them, they stand united as Spartans.

Degrees in hand, our graduates move forward having already changed the trajectory of their own lives. They seized opportunities, built real-world skills, and persevered through challenges that open the door to economic stability, social mobility, and meaningful work.

Words of wisdom to carry forth

This semester’s undergraduate ceremonies will be led by performance-minded UNCG students with a knack for building excitement in audiences.

Jiyah McLaughlin will deliver the Undergraduate Commencement speech at First Horizon Coliseum. She will describe her expectations when she first set foot on campus and what surprised her along the way. She will talk about what goes beyond her paper degree and describe the community, the commitments, and the moments that shaped her.

McLaughlin earned her bachelor of arts in media studies with minors in sociology, new media and design, and photography. She represents the excellence of UNCG students as president of its Alpha Lambda Delta National Honor Society chapter.

Before Chancellor Gilliam and the faculty process to their seats, drama major Seania Burnett will welcome everyone in the traditional hype video.

Once all the names have been read, fellow theatre classmate Christian Bartney will lead the turning of the tassels. Then Fatima Galvan-Ruiz, also of media studies, will deliver the send-off, with the customary ringing of the bell, alongside alumna Jana Welch Wagenseller ’76.

Honors by the thousands

Nearly 3,000 diplomas will mark the accomplishments that culminate this semester. UNCG will confer 2,030 undergraduate degrees, 704 masters’ degrees, and 79 doctoral degrees.

The undergraduates studied in 67 different majors with 255 different advisors. More than 800 of all the graduates will do so with honors.

Forty-two of the grads are aged 50 years or older. Among them, Dr. Andra James, an ob-gyn and professor emeritus at Duke University, who returned to school 30 years after earning her MD. She will leave UNCG with a bachelor of arts in history. James plans to do volunteer work in public service.

The youngest is Lael Metzger, an 18-year-old psychology major who transferred to UNCG from Guilford Technical Community College. Her faculty mentor, Dr. Jessica Caporaso, is one of this year’s Thomas Undergraduate Research Mentor Awardees.

Another standout is Janae Wofford. The Goldwater Scholar has already logged hours in the lab as an undergraduate, discovering plant-based antibiotic alternatives with Dr. Nadja Cech. Wofford was accepted into every graduate school she applied to. She’ll continue her education and research at Emory University in Atlanta, Ga., with support from a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship. It is the oldest fellowship of its kind and is awarded to only 16% of its applicants.

Special guests prove Spartan success

Brian Hall is the Master’s and Doctoral Commencement speaker. The president of real estate at Samet Corporation earned his master of business administration from UNCG. Over a 17-year-long real estate career, Hall has developed more than 5 million square feet of industrial and medical spaces across the Carolinas.

Dr. Jeff Sarbaum, Sue W. Cole Distinguished Senior Lecturer of Economics, will also demonstrate the excellence formulated in the Bryan School of Business and Economics. He will receive the prestigious UNC Board of Governors Excellence in Teaching Award.

This semester, UNCG will confer two honorary degrees to philanthropists responsible for two professorships. Healthcare entrepreneur Susan Morris Safran ’77 has supported health education at her alma mater. Her $1 million gift in 2023 established the Susan Morris Safran Endowed Professorship in Nursing. The second, Randall Kaplan, created the Randall R. Kaplan Distinguished Professorship in Innovation, elevating Bryan School faculty who advance the workforce’s most in-demand skills.

After the commencement ceremonies conclude and the caps and gowns are put away, McLaughlin, Bartney, Galvan‑Ruiz, and Burnett will seek other stages for displaying their talents. Other Spartans will put their skills to work by serving patients and communities, leading in their own classrooms, or launching careers built with hands‑on experience. Some, including Wofford, will continue their momentum in graduate study and research.

Because being a Spartan means graduating ready to work and to uplift the community while doing it.

Story by Janet Imrick, University Communications
Photography by Sean Norona, University Communications

CELEBRATE OUR GRADS!

Graduates and their families are encouraged to share their accomplishments on social media by tagging the University accounts and using the hashtag #UNCGGrad. Visit UNCG’s digital swag page for Commencement-themed graphics and templates.

Mention @UNCG in celebratory posts on Instagram and X and @uncgreensboro on TikTok.

Three masters graduates pose for a selfie in cap and gown.