Posted on February 25, 2026

Jarrod Rudd speaks at a podium.

Higher education not only introduces students to a more global view of the world; it also teaches them how their voices and efforts can have a ripple effect of impact. This is especially true of civic engagement, a practice that is learned, modeled, and encouraged at UNCG. Mentors play a critical role in helping students recognize their power to make a difference in their communities and beyond. 

Fortunately for Spartans, Jarrod Rudd ’13, director of the Office of Leadership and Civic Engagement (OLCE) in the Division of Student Affairs, is on the case. 

Starting with Service 

Rudd returned to his alma mater in 2021 with a passion to empower students to serve their community and be changemakers. By 2024, he was heading up OLCE, the office that students turn to for engagement in local service projects and leadership development. 

Service day T-shirts are emblazoned with the word “changemakers,” reflecting OLCE’s mission to turn Spartans into changemakers for their communities. “You don’t need to be the mayor to be a changemaker,” Rudd says. “I want students to understand their values and live through that. I truly believe in the motto of the University… service.” 

Under his direction, OLCE’s service days, which call for students to volunteer with local nonprofits on Spartan Service Day in September and MLK Day of Service in January, fill to capacity with waitlists. Now there are service days every other week, connecting students with volunteer work in Greensboro. This year, he also secured a grant to add a 9/11 Day of Service to the mix. 

“It was powerful,” he says about teaching students about 9/11’s impact on communities. “Even as we think about our current environment, we reflected on what happened on Sept. 11, 2001, and also what happened afterwards. How did people come together? What type of community did we build? How did we show up for one another?” 

Starting small and showing up for one another is how Rudd teaches students about civic engagement. When students are feeling discouraged by current events, he offers simple advice: “Advocate for what you believe in by starting small conversations within your friend group. This is how hope is inspired.”   

Vested in Voting 

Rudd’s hope and enthusiasm for civic engagement really comes alive when elections, like next week’s primaries, are happening: “Today’s debates are sparking curiosity in students, and I want to support that and encourage them to use their voice in many ways — whether that is voting, attending city council meetings, or writing to elected officials.” 

To prepare for the primary election on March 3, Rudd worked with student groups to demystify the election process and help them “make a plan” to vote. Asking questions like “Are you registered?” “Where are you registered?” “How will you get to the polls?” helps them craft a plan. In addition to meeting one-on-one with students, he also empowered student catalyst leaders to share election information with campus organizations and peer groups. 

Man addresses a classroom in front of a screen that says "I am well informed about the issues I care about."

Voting plans for students were further complicated when early voting polls closed at UNCG and across town at NC A&T State University. Convenient polling locations are important to students who may be casting their very first ballot while in college.  

Removing barriers to election participation is a priority for Rudd, who coordinated transportation for students wanting to vote early. On Feb. 25 and 26, shuttles will run from the EUC to the courthouse on Market Street so they can participate in early voting. Sign up here to join them

“This was an instance where we were truly listening to our students who were upset about the early voting poll closing,” he explains. “We knew that mandate wasn’t going to change, so our action was to get them there.” 

These may sound like extra measures for a primary election, but Rudd wants students to get involved early. “They have more power than they actually think,” he says. 

Deserving of Distinction 

Rudd was honored for his work when he was named the 2026 Civic Engagement Professional of the Year by North Carolina Campus Engagement . The award recognizes exceptional leadership in advancing civic learning, strengthening campus-community partnerships, and embedding civic engagement into institutional practice. 

UNCG staff member speaks to a student in front of an OLCE banner.

Rudd’s’ colleagues on the UNCG Community Engagement Council nominated him for his role in transforming civic engagement from a set of individual programs into a coordinated and mission-aligned institutional effort. His management of UNCG student leadership programs, voter education efforts, community-based career experiences, and campus-wide service events made him a clear choice.  

Students agree that his reach has real impact. Zainab Adamou-Mohamed is a recent UNCG graduate who now serves on his staff. She originally met Rudd when she served as an OLCE catalyst leader and has watched him welcome students to service-day events since she was a first-year.

“His upbeat and encouraging tone appeals to students who are unfamiliar or even nervous about participating in service,” she says. ”It reflects his ongoing commitment to empowering young people through acceptance, warmth, and encouragement, no matter where they are in their leadership journey.”   

Judd loves working with students like Adamou-Mohamed, but he is quick to credit UNCG staff and faculty cooperation. 

“Every day, I get to see UNCG students step into their power as changemakers, whether that is making a plan to vote, serving alongside someone with a different perspective, or building partnerships that create real impact in Greensboro,” he says. “This award is deeply meaningful because it reflects the collective commitment of our campus and community partners to civic engagement. It is not just recognition of my work, but of the incredible ways UNCG students show up to make their communities stronger.” 

Story by Becky Deakins, University Communications and Nicole Merritt, Student Affairs. 
Photos by Sean Norona, University Communications. 

A student wears a t-shirt that reads "We are changemakers" on the back.

Affect Change that Aligns with Your values

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Posted on February 23, 2026

UNCG grads turn their tassels while filming selfies with big smiles!

The Spring Commencement season is here once again, and all are cordially invited to join UNCG’s graduating class in these celebratory occasions.

Volunteers are an integral part of both the Doctoral and Master’s Commencement Ceremony and the University Commencement Ceremony. They play a key role in the success of these events each semester. Those ceremonies will be held on May 7 and 8 this year. Both are at First Horizon Coliseum.

The ceremonies begin at 10 a.m. Volunteers should report to the Coliseum by 8 a.m.

Volunteers will receive a continental breakfast the morning of the event, in addition to a volunteer thank-you event. For those that may be leery to commit to being a volunteer, we have a formal walkthrough with training and plan for virtual meet-ups. Volunteers will learn their team leads before the walkthrough.

Sign up here for the Doctoral and Master’s Commencement Ceremony, the University Commencement Ceremony, or both.

For more information about the ceremonies, please visit the Commencement Central website or email commence@uncg.edu.

UNCG very much appreciates everyone who contributes their time, expertise, and support in bringing these special events to life for graduating students and their families.

Why should you volunteer for Commencement ceremonies? You help make unforgettable moments like these from May 2025 that graduates and their loved ones will never forget.

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Posted on March 02, 2026

UNCG nursing student checks a man's blood pressure inside Minerva Mobile Health unit.

The $715,000 investment will go toward the School’s goals to grow its health care reach, particularly in rural and underserved areas of the state. It will go toward the purchase of a second Minerva’s Mobile Health van and hands-on training for even more students.

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Posted on February 16, 2026

Man in lab coat stands in front of incubator filled with flasks of fungi

With funding from NASA, a UNC Greensboro (UNCG) lab and Virginia-based technology company Luna Labs are exploring the use of fungus as a building material in space.  

The project, led at UNCG by chemistry professor Nicholas Oberlies, will investigate whether certain fungi can be combined with regolith—loose rock and soil found on the surface of the Moon and other planets—to create materials that could one day support construction in places other than Earth.  

“When you think about building on the Moon or Mars, you’re not going to fill up a rocket ship with bricks and mortar,” Oberlies says. “The goal is to explore whether we can create materials using what’s already available on-site.” 

Building with biology 

Instead of transporting heavy construction supplies across space, researchers are increasingly interested in in-situ resource utilization—using local materials to support exploration and long-term habitation. 

Oberlies’ research team will attempt to culture fungi—which grow on dead and decaying matter and form dense webs of thread-like structures called hyphae—on a mixture of regolith and simulated human waste. The goal is to cultivate the hyphae so they link the regolith together into a solid composite, which can be sterilized and compressed into something resembling a brick.    

“Astronauts will need to recycle as much as possible in space,” Oberlies says. “This is an early-stage exploration of whether mycology can help us turn limited resources into something useful.” 

The researchers are particularly interested in shelf fungi and other species known for their rigidity. 

“If you’re hiking in the woods and see fungi growing on the side of a tree in little steps, those fungi are actually pretty strong,” says Oberlies.  

Prototype fungus bricks developed using oyster mushrooms
Prototype fungus bricks developed using oyster mushrooms (Pleurotus ostreatus), photography provided by Luna Labs

New frontiers in fungal ecology 

The NASA funding was awarded to Luna Labs, a Charlottesville-based product development company with expertise in advanced materials testing and structural analysis.  

“Luna Labs brings the engineering side, measuring the strength and how much you can compress it,” Oberlies says. “Our expertise is in fungal ecology: which species are good candidates and how we can grow them.” 

While Oberlies’ laboratory is best known for studying fungi’s bioactive compounds, the NASA-supported project represents an exciting new application of their expertise. 

“This isn’t what we do every single day,” Oberlies says. “But as a geeky scientist who’s read The Martian, the idea of contributing something to NASA is cool.” 

The project is exploratory but reflects the growing reality that future missions to the Moon and Mars will require innovative, sustainable ways to live and build far from Earth.  


Feature photo by Sean Norona

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Posted on February 26, 2026

High school campers sit in UNCG Gatewood Studio lobby working on artwork.

Registration is now open for camps held each year at the College of Visual and Performing Arts. These camps are a big draw for kids who want a deep immersion into art and music and want to work with professionals in an art style of their choosing.

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Posted on March 18, 2026

Littlefoot Matcha owner Anna Sullivan with UNCG dining staff.

UNC Greensboro students walked out of Fountain View Dining Hall with matcha smoothies they knew they’d like. UNCG Spartan Dining hosted the vibrant Matcha Smoothie Bar Teaching Kitchen, serving more than 350 handcrafted matcha smoothies to students.

This special event on Feb. 18 came together thanks to Littlefoot Matcha, a Greensboro-based small business owned and operated by UNCG alumna Anna Sullivan ’14.

Coming back to UNCG felt like coming full circle for Sullivan, who earned a degree in consumer, apparel, and retail studies with a minor in business. “When I was in school, I drank a lot of coffee and Red Bulls,” she says. “It felt good to introduce something to students that I love, with a healthier version of caffeine.”

Jennifer Domingo Candelario, a double major in accounting and marketing, enjoyed the opportunity to add a twist to her usual menu. “I tried the mango smoothie, and I honestly loved it,” she says. “It was my first time trying a flavored smoothie, so it was a fun change from what I usually get.”

The collaboration brought more than just a refreshing, antioxidant-rich beverage to campus; it showcased the power of supporting local businesses and celebrating Spartan success beyond graduation.

Good Taste Meets Benefits

Through the interactive teaching kitchen experience, students came away with a high-quality product sourced from a local, woman-owned business and new knowledge about the origins and benefits of matcha. Sullivan explains, “Matcha has different properties similar to other teas, and it has more of a bell curve with your energy versus a ‘crash out’ you get with espresso.”

Spartan Dining’s partnership with this alumna-owned company is part of its commitment to fostering meaningful community connections while highlighting entrepreneurship within the UNCG network. The overwhelming turnout reflected the growing student interest in menu options and experiential dining events centered on wellness. Sullivan says she would have loved to have this kind of program when she was still a student.

“It seemed all the students really enjoyed it,” she says. “It’s nice to be able to teach that you can enjoy matcha in many different ways other than just a latte, which a lot of people are now ordering from Starbucks.”

Spartan Dining looks forward to continuing to elevate campus dining through collaborations that celebrate the Spartan community, both on campus and beyond.

Story by Des St. Cyr, Spartan Dining
Photography courtesy of Spartan Dining

Students sit at a table eating food in UNCG's Fountain View Dining Hall.

Spice up your menu.

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Posted on March 23, 2026

Portrait of UNCG business analyst Adwoa Arhin.

Education is a major investment for anyone. But the investment looks different when you have to factor in travel to another country.

Adwoa Arhin ’24 M.S., with UNC Greensboro’s Global Engagement Office (GEO), knows this firsthand. She went through the complex, sometimes nail-biting process of traveling from Ghana to Greensboro, playing the waiting game until she secured her seat in the Bryan School of Business and Economics.

She’s put her degree and her new job as a business analyst to use improving the workflow for incoming international students, work that has earned the praise of her colleagues in GEO as well as ITS.

Processing student applications in fewer steps

Arhin came to the U.S. for her master’s in information technology and management with a concentration in business analytics. She began working for GEO while she was still a graduate student.

“And once I became a business analyst, I was put in a position to change things,” says Arhin. “I was so happy that I could change so many manual steps in all these processes.”

After graduation, she proposed redesigning the international admission workflow. Before the redesign, processing applications depended on multiple handoffs across Slate, Banner, and the Terra Dotta System (TDS). Students would upload their documents in Slate, and their visa data would be updated in Banner. Synchronizing visa data in Banner with TDS could take up to 24 hours, and only then could staff proceed with student profile creation. GEO staff — primarily graduate student assistants — often had to download the documents and upload them into TDS.

“For each student, there were about five documents moving through the process,” Arhin adds for context. Teams messages signaled colleagues to begin the next step while spreadsheets tracked each student’s status. The designated school official (DSO) reviewed the documents, issued the I-20 form necessary for students to travel to the U.S. to study, and then graduate assistants downloaded and sent the I-20s to students

Even when everything went smoothly, the process typically took 7–10 days — and if a student missed the submit-to-enroll step, the workflow could stall.

Identifying Workflow improvements

Arhin worked directly with Terra Dotta to automate many of those steps and with ITS to implement changes. Since there are fewer undergraduate international students, Undergraduate Admissions agreed to run a pilot program.

In the new process, admitted students are loaded into TDS and profiles can be created in bulk rather than one at a time. Students submit their financial documents directly in the system, and once documents are submitted, the case moves through a structured review flow — first to graduate assistants for completeness checks and then to the DSO for I-20 issuance.

With fewer downloads and uploads and less back-and-forth messaging, staff can track each student’s status more easily. “Now the graduate assistants have a lot more time to do other meaningful tasks,” says Arhin. “The system also gives us built-in reporting. We no longer have to rely on spreadsheets for reporting — the data lives in one place, and Terra Dotta can generate weekly updates for leadership on students’ I-20 status and related milestones.”

Time makes the difference in college choice and funding

Arhin says international students will see the difference. It cuts the wait time for an I-20 from 7–10 days to 1–3 days. And time matters, she says, because they can’t make visa appointments and travel plans without an I-20. A delay may also cost them funding not guaranteed for a later term, and those students may defer enrollment or just go to another institution.

She speaks from personal experience. She applied for Fall 2022 and submitted her documents in March. She did not get feedback until July, and with no visa appointment available, she had to defer to Spring 2023. As a result, she lost her graduate assistantship.

Micah Chartier, ERP Developer student lead in ITS, says Arhin deserves to be congratulated by the University as a whole. “Her work helped remove delays, reduce manual handling, and improve consistency across systems,” he says.

Mark Silverthorn, lead business analyst for ITS, says, “Adwoa has been pivotal in implementing efficiency and data quality improvements for international student admissions processes.” He adds, “Not only have I seen an unprecedented level of dedication to the work, but she has displayed incredibly high levels of strategic thinking and kindness towards others.”

Arhin appreciates that her colleagues noticed the difference. “I’m just thankful for the recognition,” she said. “I value the work that improves services for students, that makes daily operations more effective for staff. It makes me happy and fulfilled that the work I’m doing is noticed by others.”

Arhin represents the passion and motivation of UNCG students. When confronted with a challenge, they immediately harness their skills to make the journey easier for those who come after them.

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For the Media

Posted on February 23, 2026

Steve Haines playing bass with ensemble
Steve Haines, interim director of the Miles Davis Jazz Music program.

UNCG faculty and staff can get a spring refresh this coming month thanks to incubators, jams, and other events provided by their colleagues for fun or professional development. There’s also a wide array of musical performances featuring Latin and Mongolian music, and the return of faculty member Steve Haines who is showing his gratitude for his health by dedicating a concert to his supporters.

WEDOIT Accessibility Incubator
March 2, 11 a.m.–1 p.m.
School of Education Building, Room 302

This hands-on event is designed to help instructors enhance their course materials for better accessibility. Bring syllabi, assignments, or any course content, and the SOE specialists will provide expert guidance and technical support, whether that be small tweaks or big changes.

Gale Archival Materials
March 3, 11 a.m.–Noon
Online

In 2025, the University Libraries increased its digital holdings with new Gale archival materials, providing access to more historical and contemporary voices with perspectives on social, political, and cultural events across time. This webinar led by Jenny Dale and Joshua Olsen discusses how these additions from Archives of Sexuality & Gender, British Library Newspapers, Indigenous Peoples of North America, and more complement the existing online library resources.

Three College Observatory Public Night
March 7, 7:30–9:30 p.m.
5106 Thompson Mill Road, Graham, NC 27253

Hosted by faculty volunteers from Physics & Astronomy, the public can take a closer look at objects through the observatory’s 32-inch telescope, including star clusters, nebulae, galaxies, double stars, planets, and the moon if available.

Reservations are required and all interested may sign up on the waiting list for upcoming public nights. On most nights prior to events, a decision will be made as to cloud conditions, sky suitability, and road conditions on the afternoon of the event. Participants are encouraged to check Is My TCO Public Night Cancelled before they arrive.

School of Education ATS Drop-in
March 13, 11 a.m.–Noon
Online

All SOE instructors — including faculty, lecturers, adjuncts, and teaching assistants, etc. — are invited to drop-in and receive the “just in time” assistance needed for their courses. They can receive assistance on such things as instructional design, course revisions & updates, as well as receive suggestions and recommendations for selecting and implementing learning tools like Canvas, Teams, and Microsoft Office 365. Register in advance.

New AI-powered Tools for Scholarly Literature Discovery
March 24, Noon–1 p.m.
Online

Learn about some of the AI-augmented databases for research discovery, citation analysis, and literature reviews. University Libraries’ Steve Cramer will go over tools including Scite, Research Rabbit, Consensus, Undermind, and Elicit, which allow researchers to search by semantics (concepts), map scholarly networks, provide context for citations, and evaluate citation patterns.

Governance Indexes
March 25, Noon–1 p.m.
Online

Governance indexes are composite measures that assess how effectively institutions govern, based on political, legal, and administrative indicators, but they are also complicated and sometimes controversial. This University Libraries session led by Rachel Olsen will go over different governance indexes and other index types and discuss how to evaluate and cite these tools. The free webinar is open to all regardless of their level of familiarity with these sources.

LLC Hands-on Culture Jam
March 30, Noon–3 p.m.
EUC, Cone Ballroom

Experience a wide-array of hands-on mini workshops presented by Language, Literatures, and Culture faculty, staff, students, and community members. Refreshments will be provided.

Music Performances

Her Piano, Her Voice: South American Women Composers
March 1, 7:30–9 p.m.
Tew Recital Hall

Enjoy the performance by Brazilian pianist, Dr. Alessandra Feris, assistant professor of piano and a scholar with a distinguished career as a performer, pedagogue, and advocate for Latin-American piano music.

Symphonic Band
March 3, 7:30–9 p.m.
UNCG Auditorium

Conductor Jonathan Caldwell is joined by Professor of Horn Abigail Peck among others with a musical selection featuring the works of Ralph Vaughan Williams, Catherine Likhuta, and Théo Schmitt.

Sympthony Orchestra
March 4, 7:30–9 p.m.
UNCG Auditorium

Dr. Jungho Kim, associate professor of conducting, welcomes acclaimed Mongolian artists for a collaborative presentation of Mongolian works: “Horqin Rhapsody” and the “Horsehead Fiddle Concerto.”

Steve Haines and Friends
March 21, 7:30–9 p.m.
School of Music Organ Hall

Steve Haines, interim director of the Miles Davis Jazz Studies program, gratefully returns to playing and teaching after the repair of a heart aneurysm in August. This concert is dedicated to the doctors at the Cleveland Clinic and to his incredibly supportive family. His fellow faculty, Janinah Burnett and Dr. Thomas Heflin, will provide vocals and trumpet respectively.

Tickets are free, but a reservation is requested.

Lorena Guillén Tango Ensemble: Música para Todos
March 22, 3:30–5 p.m.
Tew Recital Hall

The award-winning band features music faculty, Drs. Lorena Guillén, Alejandro Rutty, Guy Capuzzo, and Adam Ricci. They’ll perform a soul-filled selection based based on Argentine tango, jazz, classical and contemporary music, and other world and popular music styles.

Conferences hosted at UNCG

Harriet Elliott Lecture Series
March 24-25
EUC Auditorium and Kirkland Room
Hosted by Communication Studies

Brock’s Critical Conversations Conference (formerly the ELCCCC)
March 21
School of Education Building, Room 366
Hosted by Educational Leadership and Cultural Foundations

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Posted on February 23, 2026

UNCG cheerleaders with mascot Spiro pose with kids at basketball court.

University Communications (UC) has a tradition to “send off” our basketball teams to the Southern Conference Tournament with a good luck video shared on social media.

UC’s social media team invites all departments, offices, and units to email short video contributions by end of day Monday, March 2.

It will be distributed on Wednesday, March 4, with a call-to-action for other members of the Spartan community to share their messages and virtual cheers online.

How to make your video stand out

  1. Please email your cell phone videos, filmed in horizontal orientation, to social@uncg.edu or maream@uncg.edu.
  2. Use statements like “Let’s go G!,” “Good luck, Spartans!,” “Go Spartans!,” etc.
  3. Don’t forget to incorporate blue and gold!
  4. We plan to keep the video to about 60 seconds. Regardless of whether we use your contribution, we encourage you to share it on your own social media channels after we post ours.

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Posted on February 20, 2026

Students work on papers around a table.

North Carolina students can learn Spanish, French, Cherokee, Japanese, and more thanks to K-12 dual language programs. Dr. Ye “Jane” He is a key supportive pillar for more than 300 immersive initiatives statewide.

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April 10, 2026

Pubantz Artists in Residence Bring Bold Ideas to Life for Expo 

The Pubantz Artists in Residence program at UNC Greensboro’s Lloyd International Honors College asks students for bold ideas,...

April 9, 2026

Kids Foster Creativity, Confidence, and Community at Summer Camps

Young musicians rehearse with UNCG mentors; teen artists experiment across mediums; and future innovators dive into esports and STEM...

April 8, 2026

UNCG Names Dr. Morgan Chitiyo the New Dean of the School of Education

Chitiyo, who has served as interim dean, will assume the permanent role on May 1. The internationally recognized scholar was also ...

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