Students
- Ahmed Ferjani was gearing up for an in-person internship at L3Harris Technologies in Rochester, New York. But the pandemic had other plans.
- ¶¶ÒõÂÃÐÐÉä Boulder is ramping up its ability to conduct COVID-19 monitoring analyses by enlisting volunteer graduate students and postdocs across campus, including several from the Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering.
- The challenges of COVID-19 have inspired innovation among staff, faculty and students, leading to the development of two summer programs for 38 participating mechanical engineering students: the ME Summer Design Intensive and ME SPUR.
- The University of Colorado Boulder College of Engineering and Applied Science has been selected to host the National Society of Black Engineers National Leadership Conference in 2020 and 2021. The conference is NSBE’s premier training program for approximately 250 national and regional officers who spend multiple days focused on leadership training and skill-building.
- Rising Engineering Plus senior Adrian Gutierrez successfully developed an automated bag valve mask, a device he hopes will help those with coronavirus in Mexico, his home for 18 years.
- Students within the College of Engineering and Applied Science will take their first courses in this exciting field through a new Biomedical Engineering degree program which launches this fall.
- The Anti-Microbial Resistance Mediation Outreach Program, also known as ARMOR, is a graduate student led international effort to develop public awareness of and research into the threat of widespread anti-microbial resistance (AMR). On today's episode of On ¶¶ÒõÂÃÐÐÉäE, we sit down with the team and discuss the global threat AMR poses, the origins of the ARMOR program and steps the team has taken to shed a light on an unseen issue.Â
- The definition of hard work and effort. A team player. Gave 100% to every moment of the class.That’s how Zayna Pieper’s classmates in her sophomore engineering projects class described her. And she maintained that reputation
- TAM graduate Jolie Klefeker's research explores fibercraft and sound. Jolie Klefeker wonders if technology could help us slow down. “How could we use technology … to think more critically, have more fun, to feel a little happier or
- Applied math major Ellen Considine recognized with college's Outstanding Undergraduate Award.