CU-Boulder Science Workshop For Secondary School Teachers Convenes Through June 27

June 22, 2003

Earthworks, a professional development workshop for secondary school science teachers sponsored by CU-Boulder's Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences, or CIRES, will run through June 27. "The goal of our program is to help middle and high school teachers design Earth science curriculum for their students," says Genny Healy, CIRES' Earthworks coordinator. "Our philosophy is that people learn science by doing science. We teach scientific inquiry using a hands-on approach and help teachers find new strategies for bringing science into the classroom."

CU-Boulder, Boulder County Health Department Team Up on Immunization Exercise

June 18, 2003

PHOTO OPPORTUNITY June 20, 2003 Representatives of the Boulder County Health Department will test a mass immunization plan in a simulated exercise at the University of Colorado at Boulder today at 11 a.m. The test of a simulated mass immunization of 8,000 students and several hundred CU-Boulder staff members will be at the Coors Events/Conference Center on campus.

CU-Boulder Sources on U.S. Supreme Court Affirmative Action Decisions

June 17, 2003

NEWS TIP SHEET Key campus administrators, faculty, staff and students at the University of Colorado at Boulder are available for comment regarding the forthcoming U.S. Supreme Court decisions on affirmative action in the University of Michigan cases. Responses to the Supreme Court's decisions by CU-Boulder Chancellor Richard L. Byyny and Ofelia Miramontes, associate vice chancellor for diversity and equity, will be available soon after the decisions are announced.

New CU-Boulder Program Links Engineering And Heart Health

June 17, 2003

The mechanical engineering department at the University of Colorado at Boulder has been awarded a five-year, $900,000 grant from the National Institutes of Health to establish a new program where graduate students will research and design devices for improved treatment of heart disease.

Energy Technology, Policy Is Focus Of New Graduate Curriculum At CU-Boulder

June 16, 2003

Surging student interest in energy issues has sparked the creation of a unique new environmental studies graduate curriculum set to begin this fall at the University of Colorado at Boulder. The energy specialization within the environmental studies master's degree program will include core courses and electives in classes such as "Solar Technology," "Environmental Economics" and "Renewable Energy Policy."

CU-Boulder McNair Program Awarded $960,000 Federal Grant

June 16, 2003

The Ronald E. McNair Postbaccalaureate Achievement Program at the University of Colorado at Boulder has received a $960,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Education to continue the program through 2007. The McNair Program prepares selected CU-Boulder undergraduates to study at the doctoral level. It is a federally funded program primarily designed to prepare low-income, first-generation college students to pursue a Ph.D. Colorado Congressman Mark Udall's office recently notified McNair Director Ramona Beal of the welcome news.

Trash From Favorite Places Part Of CU-Boulder Students' Ecological Art Exhibit

June 15, 2003

University of Colorado at Boulder student artists are hoping their class project, a work comprised of miscellaneous trash collected from students' favorite Boulder walkways, will send a message to those inclined to litter. "We hope that others might be made aware of the trash people have thrown away in Boulder along some beautiful places to walk," said Professor George Rivera, instructor of CU-Boulder's "Art and Contemporary Society" Maymester course.

CU-Boulder Scientists Awarded $1.5 Million For Science Education

June 15, 2003

The National Science Foundation has granted $1.5 million to a team of CU-Boulder scientists and graduate students who are working with the Boulder Valley School district on a program designed to improve science, math and literacy in area schools.

CU-Boulder Engineering Outreach Programs Provide Access To Students Across Colorado

June 15, 2003

Some of the University of Colorado at Boulder's engineering outreach programs will be leaving campus this summer to provide better access for K-12 students and teachers across the state. Presented by the acclaimed Integrated Teaching and Learning Program, the weeklong "Kids Invent Toys" workshop will be offered at Alicia Sanchez Elementary in Lafayette today through June 20, and then at the Western Colorado Math and Science Center in Grand Junction July 14-18.

Summer CU Science Discovery Program For Kids Still Has Space Available

June 15, 2003

Kids age four to 16 can still get in on the fun of the University of Colorado at Boulder's CU Science Discovery summer program of classes and wilderness camps. Space is still available in a number of the nearly 200 weeklong classes offered, including "Kids Chemistry," "Lego Structures," "High-Tech Expeditions," "Marble Madness," "Science Magic," "Physics for Fun," "Model Rockets," "Kid Pix," "Electronics for Girls," and many others.

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