Abby Hickcox wins 2025 Cogswell Award for Inspirational Instruction
Hickcox, a CU Boulder teaching associate professor of geography, is recognized for empowering students to think of themselves as creators of knowledge
Abby Hickcox, a teaching associate professor of geography and associate director of the Arts and Sciences Honors Program, has been named the 2025 Cogswell Award for Inspirational Instruction winner.
Supported by a generous donation from Craig Cogswell, a three-time alumnus of CU Boulder, the award recognizes outstanding instruction in the college, honoring individuals for their inspirational qualities and teaching abilities.
Hickcox, who also is co-principal investigator of the听CU Boulder Affordable Housing Research Initiative, earned a BA in peace and global studies from Earlham College in 2000.听In 2006, she received an MS from the Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies at the University of Wisconsin in Madison. Her master鈥檚 research investigated the privatization of common property (the Mexican听ejido) in a national protected area in western Mexico. She earned her PhD in geography from the University of Colorado in 2012 and joined the honors faculty that year.
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Abby Hickcox (second from right, with faculty colleagues in the Arts and Sciences Honors Program) has won the 2025 Cogswell Award for Inspirational Instruction.
鈥淚 am so honored to be selected for the Cogswell Award!鈥 Hickcox says. 鈥淭eaching is what I love most about my role in the Honors Program. To be selected for the Cogswell Award, which recognizes inspirational instruction, is heartwarming and affirming. I am honored that my colleagues and peers took the time to nominate me, and I am so grateful for the community I have at CU, especially my students.鈥
In nominating Hickcox for the award, her colleagues and students noted her innovative teaching practices, interdisciplinary focus and genuine care for students.
鈥(Hickcox) excels at creating an inclusive classroom where students feel safe to share their thoughts, ideas and opinions,鈥 noted Amy Palmer, a professor of biochemistry and the 2024 Cogswell Award winner. 鈥淪he challenges students to take ownership of their own learning and empowers them to think of themselves as creators of knowledge.鈥
A former student who took Hickcox鈥檚 Environment Society Geography class as a freshman detailed how Hickcox combines an 鈥渋rresistible passion for geography and learning with an unparalleled care and respect for students and their experiences.鈥
The student added, 鈥淔rom the first day, Dr. Hickcox had us questioning what can even define the line between nature and the human world, and from this philosophical beginning we extrapolated from questions into frameworks into analysis of lawns and wolves. It rocked.
鈥淒r. Hickcox鈥檚 excitement permeates through the classroom with geographical jokes and contagious interest in people and places. She almost got me; I almost considered changing my major鈥擨 might still add a minor. One thing will stick with me forever: a deeper appreciation of our interaction as humans with the world.鈥
Focusing on human geography
"From the first day, Dr. Hickcox had us questioning what can even define the line between nature and the human world, and from this philosophical beginning we extrapolated from questions into frameworks into analysis of lawns and wolves. It rocked."
Hickcox also is faculty advisor for the Honors Journal, an interdisciplinary, student-run journal published annually by the Arts and Sciences Honors Program. A student who worked on the journal praised the community that Hickcox helped them cultivate as they worked on the journal鈥斺渢he friendships, memories, creativity and mutual respect that was intentional and significant,鈥 the student noted.
鈥淭here is one moment that will last with me for a long time: Towards the end of the semester, we had finished the stressful process of planning the release event for the journal. After we had finished tasks for the day, Dr. Hickcox told us that she wanted to take a moment to talk about what she had observed this semester and what she valued in each of us. I have not felt the same depth of honesty and genuine thoughtfulness from a professor before or since.鈥
Hickcox teaches five honors courses per year鈥攂oth lower division and upper division鈥攚hich include Sustainable Futures (GEOG 1972); Place, Power and Contemporary Culture (GEOG 3742); Environmental Justice (HONR 4075); and Racism in American Culture (HONR 4000). She recently overhauled the Honors Diversity Seminar (HONR 1810) and created a new Advanced Writing Seminar鈥擧onors Journal Section (HONR 3220).
Her research expertise is in human geography and focuses on the relationship between people and the environment. Her areas of research include parks and protected areas, environmentalism, environmental justice, racism, racialization, white racial privilege and the politics of belonging and exclusion. Specifically, through examination of historical and contemporary data, her research addresses the complicated overlap between environmentalism, progressive politics and racism in Boulder.
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