School of Integrative Studies Outstanding Graduate School of Integrative Studies
This award is given at our degree celebration each year to graduating students who have greatly contributed to the life of the college and university. These students embody the values and teachings of the School of Integrative Studies and show the promise of using what they’ve learned to make the world a better place. Students are nominated by faculty and staff in the spring semester each year.
2026 Awardees
Rebecca Grossi
2025 SIS Outstanding Graduating Student of the Year Award Recipient
LA-BA-EVSS
Susan V. Ricker
2026 BIS Outstanding Graduating Student of the Year Award Recipient
LA-BIS-INDV
Susan is from Waterford, VA, and she is a Bachelor of Individualized Study major.
What has been your favorite BIS course, and why?
BIS 490 - My capstone experience has been the most impactful. It challenged me to examine artificial intelligence not just as innovation, but as infrastructure; something that shapes access to resources, influences decision-making, and carries real societal consequences. Focusing on the intersection of AI and water systems made the work especially tangible. It became clear that ethical considerations are not abstract; they are embedded in the everyday systems people rely on. That realization has fundamentally shaped how I approach both my academic work and my professional role.
What are you the proudest of during your time here at Mason?
I am most proud of learning to be intentional with my education and allowing my curiosity to guide me. Rather than simply moving through courses, I learned to connect each experience to something larger and more meaningful. This shift allowed me to translate academic work into real-world impact, particularly at the intersection of technology, ethics, and infrastructure. I am also proud to have been recognized for my scholarship, which reflects not only my work, but the support and mentorship I received throughout my time at Mason. Most importantly, I came to value the strength of my own perspective. The intersection of lived experience and education is where meaningful insight begins, and it is something I will continue to carry forward.
James Stewart
2026 BIS Outstanding Graduating Student of the Year Award Recipient
LA-BIS-INDV
James is from Fontana, California, and is majoring in the Bachelor of Individualized Study with a concentration in Strategic Leadership Communication in Technology.
What has been your favorite INTS/BIS course, and why?
My favorite course was INTS 362: Social Justice and Human Rights. I took this course during the summer semester of 2024. Interestingly, I was so excited to take the class, I failed to notice it was condensed into 5-weeks that spanned my summer vacation travel plans. Looking back, I’m positive that it forced me to truly focus and dig deep into learning in that short time. Dr. Shayna Maskell made it fun, and the course allowed me to cover the spectrum of AI, art, and school policing. One assignment was to produce an info-graphic where, true to the condensed theme, I had to layer in several statistics, images, and narrative, in a small printable form.
What are you the proudest of during your time here at Mason?
Honestly, I’m most proud of just getting started on my academic journey this late in life. I am now 55 years old and have had a tremendous amount of success in my technology career and going to college to earn a degree was not in my plans. But my daughter, curious as she was, at 11 years old, started showing an interest in college. I felt I needed to demonstrate the importance of higher education and enrolled at George Mason to see how I could obtain a degree. 3 years later, I’m very excited to be the first person in my immediate family to be graduating with a bachelor's degree.
Taicia (Taya) Justine Taylor
2026 SIS Outstanding Graduating Student of the Year Award Recipient
LA-BA-INTS
Taicia is from Reston, VA and is majoring in Integrative Studies, with a Concentration in Leadership and Organizational Development, and a Minor in Industrial and Organizational Psychology.
What has been your favorite INTS course, and why?
My favorite INTS course was INTS 451, Leadership and Organizational Problem Solving. Prior to taking this course in Spring 2025, all of my leadership courses had been online and asynchronous. INTS 451 was the in-person, hands-on experience I needed to translate the leadership theory I had studied into practice. Taught by Dr. Graziella McCarron, the course included engaging group work and in-class activities that fostered strong connections among classmates and built friendships that continued beyond the semester. It was the most fun and memorable course I took while at Mason.
What accomplishment are you most proud of during your time at Mason?
What I am most proud of from my time at Mason is that I made it here. I was initially accepted to Mason during my senior year of high school in 2020. With Covid and financial constraints, I chose to postpone attending a four-year university. I took language courses at NOVA for a year and then enrolled in an online university to pursue my associate’s degree in Business Administration, planning to transfer to Mason in Spring 2024. However, when I met with admissions in summer 2023, I learned that none of my credits from the online university would transfer. This was devastating at the time and felt like a major disruption to my plans, but I quickly accepted the situation and created a new path forward. I returned to NOVA, completed additional coursework for a year, and applied to transfer to Mason for Fall 2024—and was accepted. My educational journey has not been a traditional one. I faced setbacks and unexpected challenges, but I am proud of the resilience and adaptability that brought me to where I am today, with my graduation from George Mason representing the culmination of it all.
Kaitlyn Michelle Tucker
LA-BA-HDFS