
Opportunities for Students
David G. Pollart Center for Arts and Humanities seeks to support any student—undergraduate or graduate—who seeks to pursue introductory or advanced experiences in the arts and humanities and how those disciplines engage and work with the public. In the near future, look for opportunities to meet and network with faculty and to learn how to do work with not only academic but also public meaning.
Publicly Engaged Fellows (PEF) Program
For graduate students, the David G. Pollart Center for Arts and Humanities sponsors with the WSU Graduate School’s Publicly Engaged Fellows (PEF) program. Created with the assistant of a National Endowment for the Humanities NextGen grant, the PEF helps students (and faculty) re-imagine doctoral education at a land-grant research university. In particular, it trains students in the mindset and skills necessary to work equitably with community partners, and then offers those students opportunities to develop an independent, funded summer project of engaged scholarship. Meet our previous PEF fellows.
Apply now to be part of the 2026 Publicly Engaged Fellows cohort. Applications are due March 13, 2026 at 5 PM PST.
Learn more about the NextGen grant and PEF program
Arts and Humanities Scholarships
The David G. Pollart Center for Arts and Humanities offers several arts and humanities scholarships through the College of Arts and Sciences each year. The scholarships support full-time undergraduate and graduate students in the arts and humanities disciplines whose interests and activities (such as coursework or extracurricular volunteering) demonstrate a clear commitment to the arts and humanities. There is a preference for applicants with an interdisciplinary focus that spans one or more areas of the arts and humanities. Students should complete the WSU General Scholarship Application to be considered. For more information, please visit CAS Scholarships.
CAH Seminar Series for First-Gen Graduate Students
CAH Graduate Research Assistant Nazua Idris organized a seminar series in Spring 2023 to support first-generation graduate students in the Arts and Humanities at WSU. The objective of this series is to provide first-gen grad students with a space where they can share the challenges that they are facing in graduate school. In addition, these meetings are meant to help the first-gen students from various Arts and Humanities departments at WSU build a community across disciplines.
Each of the seminars was facilitated by a panel of 3-4 speakers including both graduate students and faculty members from various arts and humanities departments. The grad student facilitators are first-generation graduate students who are currently at an advanced level in their graduate careers. The faculty facilitators were also first-generation graduate students. The facilitators shared resources and their experiences of navigating graduate school and answered the questions that the participating first-generation graduate students had.