Three candidates in running for enrollment management position
Three candidates have been chosen as finalists to be the University of Wisconsin–Madison’s vice provost for enrollment management.
Three candidates have been chosen as finalists to be the University of Wisconsin–Madison’s vice provost for enrollment management.
Dancers took to stilts for a Brooklyn Jumbies workshop in Lathrop Hall on Saturday, Feb. 28. Participants worked with the dance performance group, which teaches cultural elements of the African diaspora like stilt walking, and Chris Walker, a UW-Madison associate professor of dance, to learn new dance moves in preparation for “Strut!” — a university dance event scheduled for May 2. The workshop was hosted by the UW-Madison Arts Institute as part of Laura Anderson Barbata’s spring interdisciplinary arts residency.
Dietram Scheufele and colleagues in the Department of Life Sciences Communication (LSC) are partnering with the Morgridge Institute for Research to take a deeper look at what works — and why — in engaging the public on science. Morgridge provides a unique proving ground for the topic: In partnership with the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation, science outreach programs bring more than 30,000 participants to the Discovery Building each year.
A new study published today [Monday, March 2, 2015] in Nature Plants shows that hungry, plant-eating insects may limit the ability of forests to take up elevated levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, reducing their capacity to slow human-driven climate change.
UW-Madison photographer Jeff Miller is reflected in mirrored goggles worn by Hoofer Sailing Club instructor Kyle Heisler during a snow-kiting class on snow-covered, frozen Lake Mendota on Thursday, Feb. 26. Photos: Jeff Miller Hoofer Sailing Club instructor Kyle Heisler (right) directs undergraduate Ben Witman (left) on how to set up the rigging. The snow-kiting class …
More than 40 participants gathered for “Tools and Strategies for Cross-Racial Allyship,” a workshop hosted by the Multicultural Student Center on Feb. 26.
The Small Business Development Center at the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s Wisconsin School of Business released its 2014 annual report today, highlighting its efforts to promote business development and job growth in Dane, Columbia and Sauk counties.
The University of Wisconsin-Madison has been selected as the host site for the state of Wisconsin for First Folio! The Book that Gave Us Shakespeare, a national traveling exhibition of the Shakespeare First Folio, one of the world’s most treasured books. The Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, in partnership with Cincinnati Museum Center and the American Library Association, is touring a First Folio of Shakespeare in 2016 to all 50 states and Puerto Rico.
As a cheap and easy source of protein for humans, it might be hard to beat the mighty mealworm.
You won’t find mealworms at your local grocery – try a pet supply store.
The Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center (GLBRC), one of three bioenergy research centers established in 2007 by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), recently celebrated the filing of its 100th patent application.
Each month, the Wisconsin TechSearch handles an average of 3,500 information requests from engineering firms, manufacturers, small businesses, law firms and private citizens, both around the state, nationally and internationally.
Researchers at the University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Veterinary Medicine (SVM) have identified the biological mechanism that may give some cancer cells the ability to form tumors in dogs. The recent study uncovered an association between the increased expression of a particular gene in tumor cells and more aggressive behavior in a form of canine bone cancer. It may also have implications for human cancers by detailing a new pathway for tumor formation.
A promising method of immunotherapy to treat children with relapsed acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) is opening at the University of Wisconsin Carbone Cancer Center and American Family Children’s Hospital. The trial is open to relapsed/refractory pediatric ALL patients who have limited treatment options.
Student budget forum
Robert Vargas, an assistant professor of sociology at UW-Madison, didn’t set out to study gang violence in impoverished Chicago neighborhoods, but once he saw its power over the community, he quickly shifted his area of research.
Two University of Wisconsin-Madison professors have been selected for Alfred P. Sloan Research Fellowships – an honor awarded on a competitive basis to promising young researchers in the early stages of their careers.
In the heart of Wisconsin, a project is underway to produce energy from a resource in little danger of running low: cow manure, also known as “brown gold.”
Winter HR Design Info Sessions