Yakima Valley to Global Diplomacy: David H. Shinn’s PTK Success Story

June 24, 2025
Ambassador David H. Shinn

Reporting by Dustin Wunderlich, Yakima Valley College

Ambassador David H. Shinn has traveled the world following assignments in Lebanon, Kenya, Tanzania, Mauritania, Cameroon, Sudan, Burkina Faso, and Ethiopia.

Shinn received three State Department Superior Honor awards for his work, which included responding to famines, enhancing food security, peacekeeping efforts and initiating a public campaign against HIV/AIDS. 

In 2001, Shinn joined the faculty of GWU’s Elliott School of International Affairs, where he continues to teach courses on African affairs and China-Africa relations.

Before starting his 37-year career in U.S. Foreign Service, David H. Shinn earned his bachelor’s, master’s, and doctoral degrees at George Washington University.

But, before even that, Shinn was a community college student and a Phi Theta Kappa member at Yakima Valley College.

“Phi Theta Kappa offers an enormous amount of guidance for all categories of community college students and a range of scholarships for those who are continuing with their education. It has courses on employment preparation, guidance on transferring to a four-year college, leadership development and improving research skills,” Shinn said.

Shinn joined PTK in his sophomore year at YVC. Years later he became one of Phi Theta Kappa’s Most Distinguished Alumni in 1995. In 2007, he joined the Phi Theta Kappa Board of Trustees, a position he held for more than a decade.

Shinn found his membership and his board position meaningful and came to learn much about community colleges and how they can help students complete their first two years of schools at a lower cost than immediately enrolling in a transfer institution.

“I was surprised by the number of community college students who were the first members of their family to attend college. I gained an appreciation for the different emphases that community colleges place on education,” Shinn said. “Some have an academic focus, some vocational and some adult education. Others do all three. But they all offer a two-year degree and a low-cost option to complete the first two years of a four-year degree, which was my reason for attending YVC.”

Read the full piece, From Yakima to the Foreign Service, at Yakima Valley College Voice Magazine.

Related Articles

Dr. George and Ann Boggs

George and Ann Boggs Advance Educational Opportunity with PTK Foundation Endowment

The Phi Theta Kappa (PTK) Foundation has announced the establishment of the George and Ann Boggs Family Endowment, a permanent fund created to support high-achieving community college students and advance the mission of expanding educational opportunity and student success. Dr. Boggs, one of the most influential leaders in American higher education, and his wife, Ann,…

The 2026-2027 International Officer Team

Meet the 2026-2027 International Officers

Each year, Phi Theta Kappa chapters elect five students to represent more than 220,000 active members in 11 nations.  This year’s International Officers bring more than leadership experience—they bring powerful stories of resilience, connection, and a deep commitment to expanding opportunity for others.  Here’s a closer look at the students who will be serving and representing you this year. …

Alpha Psi Sigma Chapter receiving Most Distinguished Chapter Award.

A Cinderella Story, Rewritten: From One-Star to PTK’s Most Distinguished Chapter 

Having spent more than a decade as a largely one-star chapter, the Alpha Psi Sigma Chapter at Springfield Technical Community College in Springfield, Massachusetts, has undergone a remarkable transformation, one that reflects not just renewed leadership, but a complete reimagining of what chapter engagement can look like.  Since the arrival of advisors Dr. Reena Randhir and Dr. Nayanna…