12/03/2025 | News release | Distributed by Public on 12/03/2025 12:31
Another year is about to wrap up at Georgetown, one filled with growth, change and opportunity. This year, our students reached new heights in and out of the classroom, our faculty pushed the envelope in their research and our staff and alumni used their gifts to serve their communities.
Here are a few of our favorite moments from this past year.
Georgetown sent the Class of 2025out into the world, a graduating class of nearly 5,700 strong who joined a community of over 230,000 alumni. We also welcomed the Class of 2029, who hail from 52 countries and are already making their mark as Hoyas.
In November, we applauded Fatima Yunusa (SFS'24), a 2026 recipient of the Rhodes Scholarship. Georgetown was once again named a top producer of Fulbright students, and our students excelled in research competitions.
In the spring, Abel Teffra (C'24, G'25) won the men's mile title at the 2025 NCAA Indoor Track & Field Championships. The men's lacrosse teamsecured its seventh-straight Big East title, while the women's cross country teamwon its sixth-straight Big East title. In February, the men's swimming and diving teamcaptured its fourth-straight conference title. In November, the Big East Conference also renamed its Presidents' Awardin honor of President Emeritus John J. DeGioia.
In October, Georgetown named Eduardo M. Peñalver, the president of Seattle University, a Rhodes Scholar and former dean of Cornell Law School, as the university's 49th president.
Georgetown introduced new deans for the College of Arts & Sciencesand the McCourt School of Public Policy. We also welcomed a new chief investment officerand a new vice president for public safety.
This year, Georgetown introduced three new residence halls, featuring apartment-style living for juniors and seniors. We also unveiled a new interdisciplinary building at 111 Massachusetts Ave.on the Capitol Campus, which is the new home for the School of Continuing Studies, the Earth Commons Institute and other programs from across the university. Over the summer, we announced an agreement with the National Park Service and the District of Columbia that will pave the way to build a new boathousealong the Potomac River.
This year, the Georgetown Storiescast members shared their lives as Hoyas in the Student Life Blog. Storytellers explored off-campus study spots, prepared for medical schooland made Georgetown feel more like home. Students also made the world their classroom, from Chinato the Camino in Spainand even under the sea in the Great Barrier Reef.
Our researchers made strides across their disciplines to showcase the importance of their work. They developed novel biomedical technology that could change disease diagnosticsand created a new blood test that could reduce liver transplant failures. The work of our scholars even made its way to the Supreme Court, while our humanities faculty explored topics such as Jane Austen's literature 250 years after her birth.
In Ask a Professor, Georgetown faculty leveraged their expertise to inform conversations on the craze for iced coffee, existential cosmic threatsand, of course, the 6-7 trend.
"I love doing this because this isn't just for the four years that you're here. It becomes part of who you are."
"The students call me Auntie Tracey … It's a little community, and the students in the community truly bring me joy. It is all about relationships."
"Everybody's got dignity, from the guy sleeping under the bridge to the person who thinks they ought to be mayor or representative. My drive is getting people to know people."
Our alumni have reported from the halls of poweraround the world, served the homeless here in our backyard and started their ministries as Jesuit priests. Wherever they've gone, the Hoya alumni community has strived to be people for others.