ÐÔÊӽ紫ý

  • Students discuss religion in Holly Gayley's First-Year Seminar Religious Studies course
    Looking for an alternative to large lecture courses? Want to fulfill a degree requirement by discussing superpowers, ghosts, "Lord of the Rings" or revolution? All freshmen and sophomores are invited to take a First-Year Seminar class this spring semester.
  • The Northern Lights over a glacier in the Arctic
    In the spring ÐÔÊӽ紫ý will become only the fourth higher education institute in the nation to offer an Arctic studies program, providing students with expertise on a long-neglected region gaining geopolitical importance due to climate change and its impacts.
  • Gerardo Gutierrez photographs the 18th century Lienzo of Petlacala
    Three ÐÔÊӽ紫ý professors have won prestigious fellowships from the American Council of Learned Societies. Gerardo Gutierrez, Rebecca Maloy and Mithi Mukherjee are among 69 fellows chosen from 1,100 applicants.
  • Portrait of CU student Matthew Hurst in front of monitors displaying his computer modeling graphics
    Engineering senior Matthew Hurst has been awarded the prestigious Marshall Scholarship, a full-ride scholarship to study in the United Kingdom for two years. A lifelong mathematician with a dream of being an astronaut someday, Hurst is developing computer models that could someday help engineers design aircraft and spacecraft more efficiently.
  • A college student gestures as she sits at a table and works with a young student in what appears to be a library setting.
    Two new undergraduate degrees are coming online in the fall, one designed to address teacher shortages particularly among high-needs communities, the other intended to turn out skilled, ethical leaders who can bridge differences and contribute to public work, be it in higher education, international development, urban planning or other areas.
  • zoe donaldson at the austin film festival
    Zoe Donaldson consults for the Science and Entertainment Exchange, a non-profit program that links filmmakers with scientists across the U.S.
  • A Be Boulder pin sits atop poster paper on a field on campus with people in the background.
    ÐÔÊӽ紫ý enrolled more international students during the 2015-16 academic year and sent more students abroad during the 2014-15 academic year than any other higher education institution in Colorado, according to data released in the national Open Doors Report.
  • An aerial view of Antarctica, the South Pole.
    For excellence in education and research — studying everything from flower pigmentation that can have nutritional value in fruits and vegetables, to how processes at the polar regions affect the world's climate — six of ÐÔÊӽ紫ý's own have received National Science Foundation awards.
  • Student in Wray, CO learns about the US Constitution
    ÐÔÊӽ紫ý law students and faculty work with schools across Colorado to share the Constitution and cultivate conversations with the generations that will one day lead our nation.
  • Mary Kraus
    Last month, we shared with you that the university is at the beginning of a faculty- and student-driven initiative to evaluate D2L and other learning management systems (LMS). We will be soliciting feedback via several mechanisms, the first of which is an upcoming survey that will be sent to all faculty and graduate teaching assistants next week.
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