Meet with a Continuing Education advisor soon if you plan to enroll in spring courses through the ACCESS program. The program allows non-degree students to enroll in CU courses for personal or professional development and more.
Take a closer look at what’s driving climate change and how scientists know CO2 is involved, in a series of charts examining the evidence in different ways. Senior Scientist Betsy Weatherhead shares on The Conversation.
Several new faculty hires in CU Engineering have a deep interest in bio-inspired engineering. While they are all looking at different forms, functions and problems, their shared interests in the natural world could drive exciting new interdisciplinary projects and research areas.
Your professional network can be instrumental when it comes to finding jobs and internships. Here are a few tips to help you maintain your connections and feel more comfortable making new ones.
Warm up with some easy comfort recipes. Whether you’re making a trip to the orchard or the supermarket, apples are great for creating fall flavors. Here are eight apple recipes to try this season.
As the United Nations Climate Change Conference of the Parties begins in Glasgow, Scotland, CU Boulder and U.N. Human Rights are announcing plans to co-host the Right Here, Right Now Global Climate Summit in 2022.
CU football and volleyball are back in action at home this week. Get out to Folsom Field and the CU Events Center and support your Buffs! Also, catch CU soccer's final game of the year against Utah in Salt Lake City on the Pac-12 Network.
The search for a permanent chief human resources officer is on temporary hold while university leadership further assess the needs of the campus. Jacobsen will continue to serve in the interim, and Landis has been appointed deputy chief.
Average temperatures in high-altitude areas have risen twice as fast as the global average, causing more river runoff and sediment flux, and the trend could get worse, scientists have found.