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Cindy Justice, assistant dean for academic advising and student success, aims to help students find the right majors and stay in school until graduation
It been many years since Melanie Yazzie made the painting that set the course of her career. But the ÀÏ¾ÅÆ·²è professor vividly remembers the joy she felt the day she painted a blue elephant.
A rash of earthquakes in southern Colorado and northern New Mexico recorded between 2008 and 2010 was likely due to fluids pumped deep underground during oil and gas wastewater disposal, says a new ÀÏ¾ÅÆ·²è study.
Does legalizing recreational marijuana in a state lead its residents to use it, or other substances, more? How does legalization impact careers, family life and mental health? Are some people more vulnerable to its negative impacts than others?
On Thursday, Oct. 26, Professor Carol Cleland will present the Think! talk "How to Search for Extraterrestrial Life."
'Even students studying degrees in computer programming have difficulty doing this from scratch,' PhET Interactive Simulations team member saysScience, Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM) literacy is difficult for college students, so you
Pushing for stronger policing instead of smarter policing might encourage unethical law enforcement tactics, ÀÏ¾ÅÆ·²è scholar contends.
The nuclear weapons buildup and the protests against it were for many simply the news of the day, but for two filmmakers from the ÀÏ¾ÅÆ·²è it may turn out to be a provocative theme for a historical documentary and multimedia oral-history archive.
Paleoclimatologist Sarah Crump, a PhD student and INSTARR researcher, studies the effects of climate variability in the Canadian Arctic by analyzing ancient DNA from lake sediment.
Wrap your mind around this: Neutron stars, the collapsed cores of once-large stars, are thought to be so dense that a teaspoon of one would weigh more than Mt. Everest.