EMPOWERING WOMEN
Get your tickets as the MUSE Project hosts former chief scientist at NASA and author of “Hidden Figures” for keynote presentation on theme year of empowerment.
Read MoreGet your tickets as the MUSE Project hosts former chief scientist at NASA and author of “Hidden Figures” for keynote presentation on theme year of empowerment.
Read MoreKnatokie Ford, advocate for women in science, technology, engineering and math, shared her journey as the confident “female Steve Urkel” from her childhood, to feeling like a fraud as a grad student at Harvard, to conquering the imposter syndrome.
Read MoreMathematics student Scott Neville becomes third Churchill Scholar for the U.
Read MoreKnatokie Ford, advocate for women in STEM and personal growth, to speak at the U Feb. 27.
Read More“I landed at the U through my love of paragliding. In 2001 I was sitting on the side of Mt. Olympus, ready to launch one afternoon and I met a professor here in atmospheric science who was also flying paragliders. He said “I heard you’re into programming – Are you interested in working at a university?” I said sure.”
Read More“Being surrounded by mountains is not something I was used to, coming from the East Coast. Having the mountains and that sheer open sky opened my eyes, and having access to that kind of nature literally right behind my dormitory at the university was spectacular.”
Read MoreU and SLCC partner to build clear avenues for STEM transfer students.
Read MoreUtahns will join others around the world in a celebration of the many ways that science improves the quality of life in our communities and on our planet.
Read MorePoet, biologist and visual artist headline Utah Symposium in Science and Literature to explore human impact on earth.
Read MoreHonors mathematics student Michael Zhao is one of only 15 students nationally to receive this award and becomes the second Churchill Scholar for the U.
Read MorePublic science lecture series celebrates 50th anniversary.
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