Washington Scholarship

Called to the Classroom

Mary Washington alumna’s commitment to elementary education helps aspiring teachers launch their careers 

Barbara Bishop Mann ’66 discovered her calling to become an elementary school teacher when she was in fifth grade. Earning a bachelor’s degree from Mary Washington helped her reach that goal – and dedicate her life to supporting future educators and public education in Virginia.

An alumna from the Class of 1966.
Barbara Bishop Mann ’66 spent nearly four decades as an elementary school educator and advocate for public schools. She has supported UMW education students by establishing a teaching scholarship and award. She recently endowed the Barbara Bishop Mann ’66 Washington Scholarship.

“It was a career that I knew I could do well,” said Barbara, who taught students in second through fifth grade in Richmond area public schools for nearly four decades.

Barbara wanted to ensure that education students at the University of Mary Washington could reach their own goals of becoming teachers, so she created the Mann College of Education Scholarship and the Barbara Bishop Mann ’66 Virginia Educator Award. For years, she’d return to campus each spring to bestow the award on a promising student in UMW’s College of Education (COE). Barbara also recently established the Barbara Bishop Mann ’66 Washington Scholarship, which will provide full tuition, fees, and housing and dining to a selected student and is renewable up to four years.

“I’ve always loved reading and learning, and I hope to share that passion with my future students,” said McKayla Steeves ’27, who earned the Mann College of Education Scholarship, one of nearly 30 students who’ve benefited from Barbara’s gifts to Mary Washington over the years. “This contribution makes a real difference in my education and allows me to continue working toward my dream of making a positive impact in the lives of students.”

Barbara decided on her career at an early age because of the wonderful teachers who made an impact on her, including her grandmother and her father, who taught high school chemistry and mathematics before enlisting in the Army and becoming a career officer.

Photo of a student from 1966 Battlefield Yearbook.
Barbara Bishop Mann ’66 in Mary Washington’s Battlefield Yearbook. Photo courtesy of UMW Special Collections and University Archives.

Her family moved across the country and overseas throughout her childhood, leading Barbara to attend 12 different schools. She met longtime friend and Mary Washington classmate Anne Meade Clagett ’66, whose family was also in the military, when they both enrolled at McLean High School in Virginia during their junior year.

“We knew what it was like to always be the new kid,” said Anne, recalling that Barbara’s parents and her brother, Jim, moved to Italy around the time they started college. “When she got to Mary Washington, she truly felt like it was home.”

Barbara took several education and psychology courses in college but never had the chance to manage a classroom until her first job. She began her career in rural and inner-city schools in Alabama, and moved to Virginia Beach when she got married, where she was granted a provisional teaching license.

Determined, she spent the next nine years working evenings and weekends to earn a master’s degree in elementary education, with a concentration in reading diagnosis and remediation, and a post-graduate collegiate professional certificate through Old Dominion University. She then took a job with the public school system in Chesterfield County, Virginia, where she spent the rest of her career.

“My principal saw me coming and said, ‘Have I got a class for you!’” Barbara told UMW students when she came to campus as COE’s Educator-in-Residence in 2013.

She recalled how she helped her third graders who were struggling with reading by borrowing resources from colleagues and the school library and spending hours copying reading materials every night after work. With the help of parents and classroom aides, she and her students wrote and illustrated stories and created their own books. She read to them every day and met them at their level, helping to increase their confidence to become better readers.

“If you work hard and do what you love, the kids can feel it,” Barbara said. “And they’ll learn. If you have expertise, and it’s meaningful, you can teach anything with nothing.”

But she realized educators required more resources and support to help their students thrive. Her own first-grade teacher became a mentor, encouraging Barbara to get involved in the Virginia Education Association. She served on the organization’s board for many years, advocating for teachers across the Commonwealth, and later joined VEA Retired.

She has also remained committed to her alma mater through her generous gifts and as a past member of the Alumni Association Board of Directors and numerous reunion committees, which earned her the Frances Liebenow Armstrong ’36 Service Award in 2016.

“Barbara has been a fierce advocate for Virginia teachers,” said College of Education Dean Pete Kelly, who worked with Barbara when she served on the COE Advisory Board. “I greatly benefited from her wise counsel, and our students have truly benefited from her generosity over the years.”

Like the ones she spoke with as COE’s Educator-in-Residence. When she summed up her lifetime of dedication and advocacy more than a decade ago, she wished them similar success in their own careers.

“You’re smart, you’re educated,” she said, “and you’re going to make those who came before you proud.”

Learn more about establishing scholarships, including Washington and Alvey scholarships, and how private support makes a difference in the lives of UMW students who receive scholarships, research fellowships, and internship grants. Find scholarship opportunities that are available to UMW students, including Washington and Alvey scholarships

-Article written by Assistant Director of Advancement Communications Jill Graziano Laiacona ’04

Paths Made Possible

Scholarships Power Student’s Journey, From Cancer Research to Celtic Culture

Biomedical sciences major Mallory Thompson '26 received the Rae Elizabeth Smith ’59 Washington Scholarship, providing her full tuition, fees, and housing and dining to attend UMW, as well as the Grellet C. Simpson International Scholarship, giving her the opportunity to study abroad in Ireland.
Biomedical sciences major Mallory Thompson ’26 received the Rae Elizabeth Smith ’59 Washington Scholarship, providing her full tuition, fees, and housing and dining to attend UMW, as well as the Grellet C. Simpson International Scholarship, giving her the opportunity to study abroad in Ireland.

When Mallory Thompson ’26 was interviewed for the Rae Elizabeth Smith ’59 Washington Scholarship, she asked the committee what experiences she shouldn’t miss out on as a University of Mary Washington student.

“They told me, unanimously, that I should study abroad,” said Mallory, a senior biomedical sciences major from Spotsylvania who went on to earn the prestigious award that provides full tuition, fees, and housing and dining for in-state students. “Receiving that scholarship totally changed my college experience.”

Mallory also recently earned the Grellet C. Simpson International Scholarship, which is supporting her studies this semester at the University College Cork in Ireland. At this world-class research institution, she’s taking courses in anatomy and philosophy for her practical ethics minor, along with Celtic cultural classes like Irish mythology and step-dancing, as well as a lesser known form of traditional folk dancing known as “Irish sets.”

“I’m so grateful to my donors for providing me with these experiences,” Mallory said. An aspiring physician, she joined UMW’s Pre-Health Society, volunteers with Red Cross blood drives and Mary Washington Healthcare’s emergency department, and traveled with Global Medical Brigades to treat patients in rural Panama – and dances with the Performing Arts Company for fun.

She has also conducted trailblazing research with Assistant Professor of Biological Sciences Laura Sipe. “We’re trying to engage and alert the immune system to search for leftover breast cancer cells after a patient has undergone chemotherapy,” said Mallory, who presented her findings at a student showcase hosted by the Network for Undergraduate Research in Virginia, held in Richmond last spring.

“Mallory uses her strong foundation from biomedical sciences courses to ask insightful questions and make new connections,” said Dr. Sipe. “Because of her intellectual curiosity and diligence, she will move our understanding of cancer recurrence forward.”

With a cancer research center near her apartment in Cork, she hopes to shadow doctors and learn more about the Irish healthcare system while exploring the country. She especially enjoyed visiting the Titanic Experience museum in Cobh, where the last passengers departed in 1912, she said. “It’s one of my favorite films!”

A UMW Honors Program scholar, Mallory will continue her studies at The George Washington University School of Medicine, where she was accepted through Mary Washington’s Early Selection Program, along with several of her peers.

“Being a part of the UMW community will make acclimating to medical school easier,” said Mallory, who plans to practice oncology or dermatology. “I’m so grateful for all Mary Washington has given me.”

For information about supporting student success through scholarships now and through your estate plans, contact Jeremy Vaughn at jvaughn@umw.edu or 540-654-2063.

This story originally ran in the fall 2025 Gift Planning Connections Newsletter.

-Article written by Assistant Director of Advancement Communications Jill Graziano Laiacona ’04