Regents urge state for funding to renovate campus buildings
With many of its buildings approaching middle age, the UW System has asked the state to establish a special fund for renovating campus facilities. Read More
Students hone tutoring skills in Madison classrooms
Twenty-five students enrolled in the School of Education course Curriculum and Instruction 375: Tutoring in the Schools mix lessons on how to tutor with experience tutoring minority students in Lincoln and Midvale elementary schools. Read More
Week’s activities urge awareness of your brain
Neuroscience faculty, students and staff will celebrate Brain Awareness Week, March 22- 28, with public lectures, tours of research laboratories and demonstrations in local schools. Read More
This land is our land
An impressive selection of John Steuart Curry's paintings, all evoking scenes that seem quintessentially Midwestern, is on display at 'John Steuart Curry: Inventing the Middle West,' on exhibition through May 17 at the Elvehjem Museum of Art. Read More
English skills: Not just for English class
Since 1996, the UW–Madison National Research Center for English Learning and Achievement has engaged in multidisciplinary research with several other universities in New York, Oklahoma and Washington to investigate the many complicated contexts in which students learn to write and read. Read More
Reading, writing and talking: Researcher discovers discussion is key to improving skills
A fictional (youâll see why in a few lines) ninth-grade English class has been assigned to write a paper predicting the outcome of the William Golding novel, Lord of the Flies. Read More
Commission seeks community input on Greek life
A UW–Madison group examining the future of Greek life on campus is asking for input from the community to inform its study. Read More
Innovation incubation
Since 1989 the MG&E Innovation Center has helped 23 of its 26 small-business tenants to successfully establish themselves. Read More
Ghosts in the machine
At age 60, George Cramer, professor in UW–Madison's art department, is working to create a new academic tradition on campus with a marriage of art and technology. Read More
Minority program reaches milestone
From its meek beginning as a pilot project with just six students enrolled in 1984, the Chancellor's Scholarship Program, a privately funded scholarship to attract and support talented minority and disadvantaged undergraduates, is now prospering. Read More
UW team asks how well NASA communicates during crises
How well do mission control crews communicate during a crisis? Itâs an important question that two UW–Madison faculty members will explore on behalf of NASA. Read More
School of Music instrument sale Mar. 20-21
There's that empty space in the den just begging for a harpsichord. You know you want one. And the University of Wisconsin–Madison School of Music will make it a reality for you at its first instrument surplus sale March 20 and 21. Read More
Park-and-ride option available for WIAA boys’ tourney
Fans planning to attend the Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association's State Boys' Basketball Tournament at the Kohl Center this week will be able to 'park and ride' from the Dane County Coliseum to the games and back. Read More
Midwest educators gather to discuss AIDS prevention
UW-Madison will host the third in a series of regional conferences on HIV/AIDS and college learning April 2-4 at the Monona Terrace Community and Convention Center. Read More
Anthropologist collaborates with study’s subjects
In a new book titled Mondays on the Dark Night of the Moon: Himalayan Folktales, cultural anthropologist Kirin Narayan contributes to a growing movement in anthropology to work out more equitable and collaborative relations with the people being studied. Read More
UW students earn ride on NASA’s zero-gravity plane
Four UW–Madison students have earned a research trip to NASA this spring to experience life in the queasy world of zero gravity. Read More
Dalai Lama to speak at UW–Madison
Nobel laureate Tenzin Gyatso, the 14th Dalai Lama of Tibet, will present a free public lecture at UW–Madison's Kohl Center May 13. Read More
Happy birthday to me
Next month, printmaker and small-press owner Bud Shark will help Tandem Press, the UW–Madison's fine-arts press, celebrate its 10th anniversary by taking part in a symposium on the current state of printmaking in America. Read More
Conference examines welfare’s new deals, new hopes
Keith Bradley, a leader of Britain's Labour Party and its spokesperson on welfare reform, will be the featured speaker at a UW–Madison conference March 19-20. Read More
Research zeros in on molecular destination of antidepressants
Side effects or not, Prozac and similar medications are helping millions of people live more satisfying lives. But scientists still aren't sure exactly how the drugs work at the most basic molecular levels. With a grant from the National Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia and Depression, UW Medical School researchers are aiming to find the answers. Read More