Read the plaques posted along Turtle Island Walk to find the answers to today’s quiz contest.
Read the plaques posted along Turtle Island Walk to find the answers to today’s quiz contest.
Friday, September 22, is the deadline for faculty and staff to post an opening to the Ignite work-study program.
Young. Passionate. Ready to take on the world.
University of Windsor’s Youshaa El-Abed recently returned from the 8th annual University Scholars Leadership Symposium in Bangkok, Thailand, inspired to step forward as a young leader in Windsor-Essex.
He was one of more than 900 students who took part in the week-long conference aimed at motivating the next generation of leaders working towards arising humanitarian issues.
A UWindsor computer science student has a lot to say following a year-long internship with a German manufacturing company.
Jai Priyadarshi recently completed his placement at Schaeffler Group in Herzogenaurach, Germany where he worked as a software developer.
“For the first month, I had a couple of training sessions with my supervisor Dr. Andrei Degtiarev for better understanding the software I had to develop,” the 22-year-old international student said.
The official dedication of Turtle Island Walk will take place on Thursday, Sept. 21, but the campus community got an early glimpse of the vibrant banners that will anchor the six prominent seating areas along the pedestrian thoroughfare this week.
The art featured on the banners is the work of First Nations artist Teresa Altiman who grew up on Walpole Island and draws inspiration from both the landscape and her indigenous heritage.
A UWindsor professor is looking to give children with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder the greater self-control through meditation.
Psychology professor Carlin Miller is hosting the Mindful Living for Kids meditation program this fall and is seeking 24 to 30 children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in grades 4 and 5 to participate.
“School changes a lot for children in grades 3 and 4 and there are more expectations of independence,” said Dr. Miller.
Doctoral students from UWindsor’s clinical psychology program are gearing up to complete the final leg of their exhaustive educational pursuits.
The one-year internship will be the culmination of six years of study, researching for their master’s thesis and PhD dissertation and more than 2,300 hours of supervised clinical practicums.
This September will see 14 students from the program fan out across the continent to begin internships following a highly-competitive selection process.
Buried beneath the surface of China’s plateau lakes could lie the solutions to some of the challenges currently facing the Great Lakes.
It’s one of the topics that will be discussed in Windsor this week at the 2017 Canada-China Water Science Workshop hosted by the University of Windsor’s Great Lakes Institute for Environmental Research.
UWindsor students will have a chance to discuss designs for the Lancer Sport and Recreation Centre on Wednesday, August 16.
Members of the public are invited to participate in the WE Dig History Project at Assumption Park. A group of geoscientists, historians, archaeologists, and librarians are set out to take a closer look at local history and possibly unearth some new information about buildings once located on the site.