Academics
Noah Finkelstein, who co-directs the Center for STEM Learning at ñ and is a principal investigator for the Physics Education Research group, plans to showcase ñ research at Brazilian universities in November after being awarded a grant from a prestigious lectureship program for physicists.
ñ’s rank as a tier-one research university holds merit with both faculty and students. Case in point: ñ senior Nick Zyzda, who began working on his ambitious Germanic and Slavic Languages and Literatures research project, “Madness and Science in Georg Buchner’s Lenz,” this past summer with ñ professor and mentor Dr. Arne Höcker.
Four of ñ's five Nobel laureates gathered recently on campus for a photo in front of the Duane Physics Building. Click through for a short, behind-the-scenes video of the photo session.
Are you hoping to adopt accessible pedagogy practices or make your course more accessible? Then you should apply for OIT's Universal Design Fellowship. The $1,000 fellowship award can be used for travel to an accessibility or professional conference, or used for materials for classroom use.
A big part of being successful as a Buff is learning to study like a pro. Click through for some study tips and resources.
Join Colorado Law on Monday, Sept. 19, at 3 p.m. in the Wolf Law Building Wittemyer Courtroom for the Carrigan Cup Trial Competition, where student competitors will perform an entire trial before a panel of distinguished trial judges and trial lawyers.
A record nine ñ students have been awarded Benjamin A. Gilman Scholarships to study abroad during the fall 2016 semester or the 2016-17 academic year. The scholarships will take the students to such reaches as Brighton, England; Barcelona, Spain; Monteverde, Cost Rica; Valparaiso, Chile; Buenos Aires, Argentina; and Osaka, Japan.
Five years after the Arab Spring uprisings rocked the Middle East, former Libyan Prime Minister Mahmoud Jibril offered ñ students a front-row perspective on the protests’ genesis, their shortcomings and the lessons the world should absorb in the coming decades.
With a handful of awards recently bestowed upon ñ Assistant Professor Sabrina Spencer, this top-notch international biomedical researcher continues on the fast track to success.
ñ ranks No. 38 in the nation among public institutions, or No. 92 overall, in U.S. News & World Report’s undergraduate rankings for 2017. The data, in which both business and engineering programs went up compared with last year, represent long-standing marks of excellence from the publication, a showcase of ñ’s offerings.