As we gear up for midterms, it’s important to remember to take care of ourselves and make sure we’re meeting our needs. Here are a few ways to practice self-care that may just improve your studying, too.
New science curriculum materials will spur students to ask and answer their own questions about topics like ocean acidification and antibiotic resistant bacteria.
This week brings sessions on gratitude, career and internship fairs, trivia night, a networking workshop, DSCC Dialogues: Black Joy, Triumph and Success; free fitness classes at The Rec and more.
Last year was historic in many ways and for many reasons. No one had the same year, and the Center of the American West wants to recognize people's different experiences through a new video competition for students. The entry period is open through March 15.
Michael Litos, an assistant professor of physics at CU Boulder, has won an Early Career Development Program (CAREER) Award from the National Science Foundation.
In a Jan. 29 letter, CU Boulder Provost Russ Moore and Chief Operating Officer Patrick O’Rourke asked the campus to prepare for continuing budget cuts in the upcoming fiscal year.
The Office of Information Technology has a service to help developers ensure they are meeting CU Boulder expectations and are able to get their applications onto the store(s) of their choice.
Join the Department of Information Science and the Center for Research Data and Digital Scholarship in an exploration of data feminism with Lauren Klein, an associate professor at Emory University.
You'll want to be "in the room" on March 1 for a live multidisciplinary faculty panel discussion about Alexander Hamilton in the context of Lin-Manuel Miranda's hit original Broadway production Hamilton. This virtual event is free and open to the public.
Joanna Lambert, who will be speaking at CU on the Weekend Feb. 6, reflects on how her research carries lessons for coexisting with coyotes, COVID-19 and each other.