A mighty village

Many partnerships help WWU prepare students for successful, Christ-focused lives

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On June 11, 346 graduates marched across our Centennial Green stage to receive their hard-earned diplomas. We celebrate their success with an extensive community who helped Walla Walla University in preparing them for lives of curiosity, community, and connection.

Faith in God
Exceptional education at WWU has always begun with the integration of faith and learning. Today, this integration is supported in many ways by our partnership with the Council for Christian Colleges & Universities, an association of 150 higher education institutions across the nation, and more around the world. The CCCU invests in professional development and scholarship to ensure Christ-centered leadership excels in classrooms and boardrooms at WWU. It publicly highlights the contributions of its member institutions to the common good, and supports our efforts to offer quality education in an environment that fosters our sincerely held religious beliefs.

WWU is also blessed with purposeful investment in our students from our own denominational organizations, including the North Pacific Union Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, the Upper Columbia Conference, and our very own Walla Walla University Church. The University Church graciously provides a space of both worship and learning where students are involved in running sound, setting lighting, performing music, and volunteering in the church’s food pantry, Eden’s Pantry. They organize and present weekly vespers programs and are encouraged to enter into the blessings of serving others.

Excellence in thought
Our many partnerships help WWU students expand their learning to the world outside the classroom. For example, the M.J. Murdock Charitable Trust has invested in our students and faculty by supporting research ideas and science facilities. Among other things, their funding has helped students study seagrass wasting disease in the Salish Sea, significantly expanded our campus bioengineering lab capabilities, and allowed undergraduate students to present research at regional conferences.

Another partner, Enactus, helps students connect with excellent thinkers. This global network of young leaders harnesses business skills to catalyze positive social and environmental change, and WWU’s active chapter encourages students to take action for the greater good.

Successful lives and careers are launched thanks to a long list of opportunities such as the global study programs offered through Adventist Colleges Abroad, hands-on teaching experiences provided by our local elementary and high schools, rigorous internships with Adventist Health, and clinical preparation from partners like Providence Health to prepare nursing students to act with confidence and compassion.

Beauty in expression
An important part of the WWU experience is encouraging our students to celebrate beauty through seasonal music programs, art gallery shows, presentations from speakers who visit campus as part of the CommUnity program and academic colloquia series, and student life events highlighting the diversity of our community. We appreciate the many bright, creative, and successful alumni and professionals who provide this programing.

We also appreciate partners like the Cascade Collegiate Conference, which encourages our students to engage in beauty through sport, and the American Association of Colleges and Universities, which supports our university’s pursuit of equity, innovation, and excellence.

Generosity in service
Here at WWU, students are prepared not just for their career, but also for their calling. And our partnerships ensure that compassion for others is imbued through classroom experiences and in-person initiatives meeting real needs in local and global communities. For example, students can join Engineers without Borders to build long-lasting engineering solutions around the world. Blue Zones Project Walla Walla Valley helps our students invest in the well-being of our neighbors. Students respond to service calls affiliated with the General Conference of Seventh-day Adventists or Adventist Frontier Missions. The CARE Project places students on projects throughout the Pacific Northwest through Adventist Community Services. Another partner, the Washington Campus Coalition for the Public Good, recognizes our students every year for their passionate commitment to service and leadership.

These partners and many others are part of a mighty village that helps WWU pursue its mission to convey to students a wisdom that translates academic achievement into responsible citizenship, generous service, a deep respect for the beauty in God’s creation, and the promise of recreation through Jesus Christ. We deeply appreciate their investment in our students and our mission. And we are confident that their support will continue to be bless the lives of our students long after our yearly graduation celebrations end. 

 

Posted June 20, 2023.

Graduates march past administration building in regalia.
Three hundred forty-six graduates received their hard-earned diplomas during the June 11 Commencement service.
Woman helps female student adjust graduation cap