UA Little Rock Alumna and Husband Establish Endowed Scholarship for Biology Students

The University of Arkansas at Little Rock has received a generous $30,000 donation from alumna Zongping Yu and her husband, Tianmiao Hu, to establish an endowed scholarship that will support biology students for generations to come.
The Zongping Yu and Tianmiao Hu Endowed Biology Scholarship will benefit both full- and part-time students majoring in biology. The funds can be used for tuition, books, fees, and room and board, and recipients may be selected based on financial need and/or academic merit.
Yu, a 2000 graduate of UA Little Rock with a master’s degree in computer science, said the gift was her way of giving back to the university that helped her pursue a new career while raising a young family.
“If UA Little Rock didn’t give me a scholarship at the time, it would have been hard to finish my degree,” Yu said. “I was an international student, and it was expensive for us. I got support from UA Little Rock as a graduate assistant, and I want to give it back to someone who also needs financial help.”
Originally from China, Yu now lives in Frisco, Texas, where she works as a computer programmer at JPMorgan Chase. Her husband, also a computer programmer, graduated from Tulane University. After previously creating a scholarship for computer science students in 2019, the couple decided to create a second scholarship to help more students in need.
Yu’s time at UA Little Rock was filled with both challenge and purpose. She arrived in 1998 and juggled full-time coursework, a graduate assistantship, and the birth of her two oldest children during her time as a student. Support from her professors, neighbors, and the university community helped her succeed.
“It was a very busy time,” she said. “I had two kids while I was in school, and the graduate assistantship made a big difference financially. I’m grateful for the people, including my husband, who helped and supported me along the way.”
Yu hopes the scholarship will ease the burden on students who might otherwise have to work long hours to pay for school.
“I knew students who had to work full time while going to school, and they couldn’t spend as much time studying,” she said. “I want to help students focus on learning so they can do better in school. If they are in school, that means they want to learn, and I want to help them learn to the best of their ability.”
Now a proud mother of three, Yu said that giving back to students is a meaningful way to invest in the next generation.
“My kids are grown now, and I don’t need to worry about their future. If I have money, I want to invest in other people’s children who need help,” she said. “My husband supported me in this, and we’re happy to help others get the kind of opportunity we had.”
The scholarship is part of UA Little Rock’s Centennial Campaign, which is working to expand access to higher education, create more scholarships, and support student success across campus.To learn more about supporting scholarships at UA Little Rock, visit ualr.edu/centennial.