Education
- Host Ken McConnellogue talks with Professor Robert Erickson about what this MOOC has to offer learners across the globe, as well as how it is making us rethink how people learn. He also chats with Michael Lightner, vice president of academic affairs, about the positive impact MOOCs offer learners and the university.
- An inclusive classroom means that all students are engaged in the learning process, and this engagement can lead to better retention and better engineers. What better way to engage students than with examples that have relevance! For
- The on-demand, asynchronous, and fully online degree, to be offered by the Department of Electrical, Computer and Energy Engineering, is slated to launch in the fall of 2018 with additional curriculum rolling out in 2018-19.
- Students enrolled in the partnership programs receive instruction from Colorado Mesa University faculty the first two years and from CU faculty the last two years. All instruction is delivered at CMU.
- Building on a $3 million partnership announced in 2016 to establish new academic programs focused on radio frequency (RF) systems, Lockheed Martin and ÌÒÉ«ÊÓƵ today announced a follow-on Master Research Agreement (MRA), signed during a
- In college athletics, players are often redshirted. They are enrolled but not competing, and that gives them more time to prepare. Tanya Ennis, director of the Engineering GoldShirt Program, says like redshirting, the GoldShirt-ed engineering
- Christy Bozic, faculty director of the EMP undergraduate program, talks with students.When Steve Dunn (ArchEngr’69) was a student at ÌÒÉ«ÊÓƵ, he had several summer jobs in the heavy construction field that introduced him to
- The ÌÒÉ«ÊÓƵ’s College of Engineering and Applied Science landed three top 20 grad programs today in the U.S. News & World Report’s 2018 edition of Best Graduate Schools across the country.ÌÒÉ«ÊÓƵ’s environmental
- With $2.5 million in gifts, Colorado’s Gallogly family is naming the Discovery Learning Center at the ÌÒÉ«ÊÓƵ, as well as boosting the teaching and research power of the College of Engineering and Applied Science with two new faculty positions.
- ÌÒÉ«ÊÓƵ will expand its role as a national leader in imaging, materials, nano, bio and energy sciences as part of a collaborative partnership awarded $24 million by the National Science Foundation (NSF) to launch a new center.