UW-Milwaukee to award more than 3,600 degrees May 19

MILWAUKEE _ The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee will award more than 3,600 degrees at its 120th commencement on Sunday, May 19, at the UW-Milwaukee Panther Arena, 400 W. Kilbourn Ave.

Degrees will be awarded at two ceremonies, one in the morning and one in the afternoon. Mark Attanasio, chairman and principal owner of the Milwaukee Brewers, will be the featured speaker at both the 9 a.m. “black” ceremony and the 1:30 p.m. “gold” ceremony. Honorary degrees will be awarded to philanthropist Mary Kellner and Duke University Professor Marion Broome, both at the black ceremony.

The university will present 2,470 bachelor’s degrees, 668 master’s degrees and 139 doctoral degrees. New this year: Graduates from UWM at Waukesha and UWM at Washington County are invited to walk in the gold commencement ceremony. To those graduates, 376 associate degrees will be awarded.

The oldest degree degree recipient this spring is 85, while the youngest is 18.

COMMENCEMENT SPEAKER: Mark Attanasio

Attanasio is credited with turning around the Milwaukee Brewers and building the team into one of the better organizations in major league baseball. When Attanasio took over in 2005, the Brewers hadn’t made the playoffs in 22 years. Since then, the team has qualified three times, making it to within one game of the World Series last year and being named Baseball America’s organization of the year.

Attanasio also is the co-founder and managing partner of Crescent Capital Group, an employee-owned alternative investment advisor with approximately $25 billion in managed assets and over 160 employees.

Attanasio holds positions on several not-for-profit boards, including Heal the Bay, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and Harvard-Westlake School. He served on the President′s Leadership Council at Brown University for a decade and is currently a member of Major League Baseball’s Compensation, Investment, Revenue Sharing, and Labor Policy Committees and Executive Council.

HONORARY DEGREES: Mary Kellner and Marion Broome

Mary Kellner will receive an honorary doctorate of educational psychology. A philanthropist, educator and community volunteer in the Milwaukee area, she is being honored for her longtime work in helping to improve the education of students from preschool through college.

Kellner, who received her master’s degree in educational psychology from UWM in 1978, taught elementary school and worked as an elementary guidance counselor before spending the past 20 years volunteering and doing board work at numerous not-for-profit organizations such as Next Door, UWM Foundation, the Nehemiah Project, Schools That Can Milwaukee, the I Have A Dream program and, most recently, Pathways High, a new project-based high school in Milwaukee. She was a trustee for the Faye McBeath Foundation for 10 years and is a trustee of Cardinal Stritch University.

The Kelben Foundation, which Kellner and her husband, Ted, established, has provided support to business and education programs as well as scholarships at both UWM and UW-Madison. In 2007, the foundation donated $5 million to UWM to establish an endowed professorship in early childhood education, along with scholarships in early childhood education and business. In 2016, the foundation donated another $5 million toward an endowed professorship in educational psychology, additional early childhood education scholarships and a fund for the Lubar Entrepreneurship Center. The Kelben Foundation also has funded thousands of scholarships for low-income students. Kellner is a co-chair of the university’s comprehensive campaign – Made in Milwaukee, Shaping the World: The Campaign for UWM.

Marion Broome, the Dean and Ruby F. Wilson Professor of Nursing and vice chancellor for nursing affairs at Duke University, will receive an honorary doctorate of science. An expert in pediatric nursing research and practice, she also is associate vice president for academic affairs for nursing at Duke University Health System.

Broome’s research has explored issues including interventions to help children cope with pain, informed consent and assent for children in research, research misconduct in clinical trials, and ethical dilemmas in publishing and leadership of nurse executives. She has published more than 119 papers in 58 refereed nursing, medicine and interdisciplinary journals. She also has written seven books and 20 chapters.

Broome’s leadership positions in her field include being president of the Society for Pediatric Nurses, a member of the Nursing Science Study Section at the National Institutes of Health, and served on governing boards of the Association for the Care of Children’s Health and the Midwest Nursing Research Society.

SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES

The numbers of degrees awarded by UWM schools and colleges are below. The numbers include bachelor’s, master’s, doctoral, associate and flex degrees.

College of Letters and Science: 909

Lubar School of Business: 655

College of General Studies: 376

College of Health Sciences: 284

College of Engineering & Applied Science: 266

School of Education: 228

College of Nursing: 222

Peck School of the Arts: 201

Helen Bader School of Social Welfare: 195

School of Information Studies: 176

School of Architecture & Urban Planning: 99

Zilber School of Public Health: 15

Global Studies Interdisciplinary: 11

School of Freshwater Sciences: 10

Joint Programs L&S and CEAS: 6

MEDIA ACCESS

Members of the media wishing to cover the commencement ceremonies should enter through the Panther Arena’s main doors and ask for assistance from an usher.

For more information, contact: John Schumacher, schuma63@uwm.edu, 414-229-6778, or Michelle Johnson, john3453@uwm.edu, 414-229-7490.

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