A survey asks UWindsor faculty and staff about their experiences and challenges while working with international students.
A survey asks UWindsor faculty and staff about their experiences and challenges while working with international students.
Staff Appreciation Days offer savings for all UWindsor employees at the Campus Bookstore.
A pancake breakfast on Nov. 20 will kick off the Annual Giving campaign for UWindsor faculty, staff, and retirees.
Take Our Kids to Work Day will bring Grade 9 students to campus on November 14.
A session September 11 will offer training in the University’s web content management system.
Nick Hector faced a daunting challenge.
How do you take more than 500 terabytes of raw video footage and edit a documentary that honours the director’s legacy while holding true to his artistic vision?
“Rob Stewart was just so earnest and genuine and there was no artifice about him wanting to change the world,” Hector said, a University of Windsor assistant professor.
A trio of poets will be reading at the Storyteller Bookstore on Ottawa Street this Sunday.
Tom Gannon Hamilton, Sharon Berg and Laurie Smith from Windsor will be reading at the bookstore at 1473 Ottawa St. between 1 and 3 p.m. on Sunday.
Along with Lenore Langs (professor in the University of Windsor’s English department), Laurie Smith publishes and edits Windsor’s Cranberry Tree Press.
Smith is promoting her newest book, Said the Cannibal. She has an upcoming book on Charles Darwin.
Chances are you may have encountered Dylan Kristy in some capacity at the University of Windsor.
Whether Kristy reported on your research, engaged with you on social media, or stopped to talk on campus, he has been active on many fronts since joining the UWindsor staff in early 2017.
Describing himself as a “recovering newspaper reporter,” he spent eight years working as a reporter and senior copy editor at the Windsor Star before joining the University as its research communications co-ordinator.
Starting next week, the UWindsor payroll office will be closed Tuesdays and Wednesdays from 8:30 a.m. to 1 p.m.
The focused scope of research in Canada’s Arctic potentially leaves dozens of species at risk, says a UWindsor post-doctoral researcher.
Cody Dey, currently studying in the Process-Driven Predictive Ecology Lab at the Great Lakes Institute for Environmental Research, said conserving Arctic wildlife poses a challenge because 10 per cent of birds, fish and mammal species have never been the subject of a published study.