Tag: "Walter Scott Jr. College of Engineering"
College of Engineering pilots student retention programs
Through the new bridge program at the College of Engineering, incoming students have the opportunity to gain insight on their freshman year before the semester starts.
Natural gas symposium to highlight research, regulations, clean energy
Colorado State University’s fifth annual Natural Gas Symposium, hosted by the CSU Energy Institute, will take place Oct. 27-28 in the Lory Student Center.
CSU gets $5 million grant to join VIP program at Georgia Tech
Colorado State University will join Georgia Tech’s Vertically Integrated Projects (VIP) Consortium through a $5 million grant from The Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust, in an effort to drive systemic reform of STEM education.
Heart valve research moves to next phase in India
Next-generation valves invented at CSU begin pre-clinical trials through U.S.-Indian consortium.
Synthetic bio student team turns fry oil into plant food, wins a medal
Colorado State University student researchers have invented a low-cost method for transforming used fry oil – dumped or recycled by restaurants by the gallon – into a valuable plant hormone chock-full of energy molecules.
GPS, Google maps and spatial computing
Shashi Shekhar, from the University of Minnesota, will present the next ISTeC Distinguished Lectures on Oct. 19.
High-powered supercomputer to boost Rocky Mountain research
Colorado State’s Information Science and Technology Center (ISTeC), in collaboration with the University of Colorado at Boulder, has received a $2.73 million National Science Foundation grant to purchase a state-of-the-art, high-performance computing system.
On the radar: CSU leads oceanic weather research
NSF award will fund advanced atmospheric research with Doppler radar to monitor rainfall at sea.
Engineering a solution: Training STEM teachers is focus of new CSU grant
"When the preparation of the next generation of STEM teachers is discussed in education circles, few think of engineering as a pathway to entering the teaching profession," said Michael De Miranda, professor in Colorado State University’s School of Education and Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering.