FSU College of Arts and Sciences set to honor new graduates Aug. 1
糖心vlog will celebrate its Summer 2025 graduates Friday, Aug. 1 with three commencement ceremonies at the Donald L. Tucker Civic Center.
College of Arts and Sciences graduates will participate in two ceremonies on Friday. Doctoral students will be hooded at the 9 a.m. ceremony while undergraduate and master鈥檚 students will cross the stage during the 7 p.m. ceremony. Nearly a quarter of the 2,855 degrees FSU will award this summer are to undergraduate and graduate students from arts and sciences disciplines.
The evening ceremony will feature a commencement address by Pamela Keel, a Distinguished Research Professor in the Department of Psychology and FSU鈥檚 2025-2026 Robert O. Lawton Distinguished Professor 鈥 the highest honor FSU faculty bestow upon their own. Since joining FSU in 2008, Keel has brought in more than $55 million in research funding and has led or co-led multiple National Institutes of Health initiatives.
鈥淕raduation is a milestone worth celebrating, and commencement ceremonies represent great venues for that,鈥 said Sam Huckaba, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences. 鈥淪ummer graduates will be joining the College of Arts and Sciences alumni base exceeding 100,000 people, a great network. Staying in touch with the college will enhance those networking opportunities while reinforcing the best memories of this outstanding institution. We鈥檙e pleased to celebrate the achievements of these newest alumni and wish them success as they pursue their goals.鈥
Gwen Niekamp, Jos茅 Mart铆nez, and Miya Luebke are among the college鈥檚 683 Summer 2025 graduates. Niekamp and Mart铆nez will be awarded doctorates, and Luebke will receive a bachelor鈥檚 degree.
Niekamp, a Louisville, Kentucky native, earned her doctorate in creative writing through the . She served as the graduate advisor for Sigma Tau Delta, an International English Honor Society, and assisted members in traveling to and presenting their work at the organization鈥檚 annual convention. Niekamp also connected writers through her role as a co-host of the Jerome Stern Reading Series. Her chapbook, 鈥淏y Way of Buenos Aires: A Memoir of an Early Twenties Friendship,鈥 was awarded the 2025 Prose Prize from the University of Indianapolis and is set to publish this fall through Etchings Press.
鈥淚 pursued a doctorate to become a university educator, but I鈥檝e always found joy in working within literature and language,鈥 Niekamp said. 鈥淲ithin the fields, there鈥檚 room to ask questions about identity, memory, history, genre and more.鈥
Niekamp was awarded three FSU teaching awards in 2023: the Robert O. Lawton Award for Excellence in Teaching First-Year Composition, the Fred L. Standley Award for Most Effective Teacher Among Graduate Assistants, and the Outstanding Teaching Assistant Award. Postgraduation, Niekamp has accepted a tenure-track position as assistant professor of creative writing at Belmont University in Nashville, Tennessee.
Mart铆nez, a Palm Beach Gardens, Florida native and two-time FSU alumnus, earned his bachelor鈥檚 from the in 2020 and his doctorate in social psychology this summer.
In support of his studies, Mart铆nez earned a Graduate Research Fellowship from the National Science Foundation to test the link between life history theory 鈥 a framework for understanding how people adapt their motivations and behavior in response to uncertainty in their environments 鈥 and goal setting. For seven years, Mart铆nez was an active part of the Evolutionary Social Psychology Lab, led by professor of psychology Jon Maner.
鈥淏ehavior isn鈥檛 neat or predictable, but there are patterns within the messiness,鈥 Mart铆nez said. 鈥淯ncovering psychological patterns through conversations with my advisor, collaborators, and research assistants when designing studies, collecting data, and translating those findings into writing has been a thrill.鈥
Mart铆nez served in many roles within FSU鈥檚 from student researcher to colloquium leader and graduate student mentor. In August, he鈥檒l begin a new role as a tenure-track assistant professor in the Department of Psychology at the University of Florida in Gainesville.
Luebke, who hails from Orlando, Florida, earned her bachelor鈥檚 degree in religion through the and participated in the . After receiving a certificate in teaching English as a foreign language, she worked as a TEFL intern in two English learning courses for the . In 2023, Luebke received the Allison E. Overholt Scholarship for her academic work and engagement.
鈥淎fter taking an introductory religion course, I was hooked,鈥 she said. 鈥淢y religious studies helped me develop life skills that have been applicable in every facet. What I enjoy most about the field is that it showcases how human we are: we鈥檙e all trying to find our place in the world.鈥
During her time at FSU, Luebke served as political chair for FSU鈥檚 Environmental Service Program and encouraged political environment education through her platform. She also participated in FSU鈥檚 non-major鈥檚 orchestra, part of the , in which she played cello for three semesters. Luebke plans to take a gap year to research graduate programs in religion and hopes to one day teach English as a second or foreign language in another country.
For more about FSU鈥檚 Summer 2025 commencement activities, a full schedule of events, and livestream links, visit .