New evidence of health benefits from African grain teff
UNCG biology and chemistry researchers find that increasingly popular African grain exhibits antioxidant activity in human cells, adding to evidence of health benefits.
UNCG biology and chemistry researchers find that increasingly popular African grain exhibits antioxidant activity in human cells, adding to evidence of health benefits.
Steve Scott brings a prop—a bright, juicy orange—to the third week of Business 115, Blueprint for Personal Development. The class is first in the Blueprint Series, a personal and professional development curriculum unique to UNC Greensboro’s Bryan School of Business and Economics consisting of four credits designed to prepare students for the business world.
Shirin Alhroob (Information Systems and Supply Chain Management, M. S. in IT and Management) keeps reinventing what success means in her life.
Pitre-Martin has been named executive director of the UNCG SERVE center. The education research and evaluation center with $30M in active funding works with clients in North Carolina and across the nation in pursuit of positive educational outcomes for all learners.
Sophomore Zainab Adamou-Mohamed seizes opportunities at every turn at UNCG. The Lloyd International Honors College student opens up about becoming a campus and civic leader, scholar and artist.
New funding for UNCG research, scholarship, and creative activity – see some of the grants that recently came through our Office of Sponsored Programs.
Dr. John Kiss, dean of UNCG’s College of Arts and Sciences, was recently featured on The Space Show podcast to illuminate the realm of plant space biology and its implications for the future of space exploration.
Work by UNCG creative writing Professor Stuart Dischell is in 2023’s Best American Poetry, the anthology considered the gold standard for American poets.
Annual North Carolina Folk Festival provides opportunity for UNCG researchers in the office of assessment, evaluation, and research services.
Researchers at UNC Greensboro and High Point University are collaborating on two studies to improve treatments for concussion and burning mouth syndrome – a complex neuropathic condition that is often seen in cancer patients – also known as glossodynia.