Outstanding Graduate Students: Baylor Graduate School Honors Top Students for Teaching, Research and Dissertation
The contributions of graduate students are invaluable to Baylor University. More than 5,000 graduate students research, teach and pursue their own post-graduate degrees in the field of their calling, sowing into the University as they grow through its instruction. To highlight those students' accomplishments each year, the Baylor University Graduate School bestows Outstanding Graduate Student Awards through a competitive process, made more challenging by the elite skills and service of Baylor graduate students.
On November 19, the Graduate School honored the Outstanding Graduate Student Award winners for 2024-25, celebrating 14 students from 11 departments whose scholarly work stood out in the Graduate School.
"Our graduate students are a cornerstone of Baylor University. Their support of undergraduate teaching and their contributions to research make them highly capable partners in the university’s mission to provide worldwide leadership through academic and research excellence," Michael Young, Ph.D., Vice Provost and Dean of the Baylor University Graduate School, said. "Graduate students work side-by-side with undergraduates in our laboratories, provide guidance and support, and serve as role models of faithful stewardship of God’s artistic and scholarly gifts."
Each year, three major awards are presented by the Graduate School: Outstanding Graduate School Instructors, Outstanding Graduate School Research and Outstanding Dissertation. To capture the diversity of disciplines across the institution, multiple versions of each award are presented for students in the humanities, STEM fields and social sciences. The Outstanding Graduate Instructor Award is presented for each semester, for a total of eight annual winners, while three are selected for the Research and Dissertation Awards.
Meet the 2024-25 Outstanding Graduate Student Honorees:
Outstanding Graduate School Instructor Honorees for Fall 2024 and Spring 2025
| Humanities: | Reilly Fitzpatrick Vines, English, Fall 2024 |
| Kristyn Drew Woytkewicz, Ph.D., English, Spring 2025 | |
| Social Sciences: | Heather Deal, Ph.D., Social Work, Fall 2024 |
| Xi Zhu, Ph.D., Sociology, Spring 2025 | |
| STEM-Classroom | Caroline Franks, Ph.D., Communication Sciences & Disorders, Fall 2024 |
| Megan Sturdivant, Communication Sciences & Disorders, Spring 2025 | |
| STEM-Laboratory | Rudhresh Manoharan, Physics & Astronomy, Fall 2024 |
| Kayla Haberman, Biology, Spring 2025 |
Winners were selected based on recommendations from their supervising faculty, letters from students in the classroom, teaching philosophy statements and record of participation in professional teaching development. Winners receive a plaque and travel award to attend a conference, or the purchase of the tam & hood portion of their doctoral regalia.
Outstanding Graduate School Research Honorees for 2024-25:
| Humanities: | Wemimo Jaiyesimi, Ph.D., Religion |
| Social Sciences: | Min Ou, Information Systems & Business Analytics |
| STEM: | Blanca Radillo Murguía, Mathematics |
Candidates are judged by their description of their completed and/or ongoing research projects, participation in research events and conferences, presentations and publications, future research plans, and a letter of recommendation from a faculty mentor. Winners receive a plaque and travel award to attend a conference, or the purchase of the tam and hood portion of their doctoral regalia.
Outstanding Dissertation for 2024-25:
| Humanities: | Matthew Reising, Ph.D., Political Science |
| Social Sciences: | Elizabeth “Liz” Harrelson Magill, Ph.D., Curriculum & Instruction |
| STEM: | Bikram Khanal, Ph.D., Computer Science |
Applicants must be nominated by their department. They are then judged on their description of their dissertation project and other elements of their CVs such as publications, presentations, and other awards. They also submit letters of recommendation from a faculty member who worked closely with them and from their GPD. This award comes with a plaque and a $1,000 cash prize.
Student faculty mentors attended the November 19 luncheon to celebrate along with their student mentees. Provost Nancy Brickhouse, Ph.D., presented the awards.
“It’s exciting to celebrate with the students and the mentors who have walked alongside them to help them achieve the highest levels of excellence,” Brickhouse said. “Great educators are made, and not born, and each of these students has begun the important work of developing the craft of teaching that will launch them well in academia.
To meet this year’s winners and discover their work, visit the Outstanding Graduate Student Award Winners website or follow the Baylor University Graduate School on Instagram. Learn more about Baylor’s investment in graduate education and Graduate School growth here.