A work by visual arts major Angelina Kirincic now hangs in the University’s Welcome Centre.
A work by visual arts major Angelina Kirincic now hangs in the University’s Welcome Centre.
Instructors Vanessa Mio-Quiring and Michael Karloff lead the UWindsor Lab School summer programs for strings and jazz.
“Tranquil Horizons?” a work by Madeline Malmberg on exhibit this week and next as part of a show by digital photography students.
Incubator Art Lab is hosting a workshop on creating animation using AI tools on April 26.
Incubator Art Lab is hosting a workshop on creating animation using AI tools on April 26.
Nursing sessional instructor Katherine Beaumont, second from left, and third-year students Bailey Packet, Robynne Hay, Josh Taylor, Rachel Weston, Kamsiyochukwu Otue, Olivia Mouawad, and Ghadi Treki prepare personal care product donations. Absent: Mackenzie Pawluk.
For Faculty of Nursing sessional instructor Katherine Beaumont, her third-year students, and Grade 6 teachers at West Gate Public School, providing self-care teachings along with essential personal hygiene products for pre-teens in need reaffirms the idea that great things happen when you work together for a common good.
As part of the BScN students’ school health education placement program, lessons included fun and immersive games intended to engage and punctuate the importance of personal hygiene, oral health, hand washing, bathing, and self-esteem.
Learn about the Rhodes Scholarship during a webinar May 7.
Saran Kumar Saravanan and Dev Prajapati showed their project to help corn farmers identify crop diseases at Computer Science Demo Day, April 10.
Continuing Education has opened new sections for its course “Indigenous People of Southwestern Ontario.”
Continuing Education has opened new sections for its course “Indigenous People of Southwestern Ontario.”
Civil engineering professor Tirupati Bolisetti and Kwaku Gyau Gyamfi discuss the student’s project on resilience of water supplies in Arctic communities on World Water Day.
The next time you look at the Great Lakes or wonder about Arctic communities, you will think about them a little differently because of the research of engineering students Vrashesh Vipul Karkar and Kwaku Gyau Gyamfi.
Karkar examined the water in Great Lakes Basin watersheds to assess the amount of microplastics that are present in the water. His research focuses on the quantities of microplastics humans are releasing into rivers and the Great Lakes, developing cutting edge modelling tools to quantify the microplastics being released.
The CAW Student Centre offers a place to relax, socialize, and study during final examinations.