Community-Engaged Course Development Grant and Workshop
ICEE will be hosting a two-day, funded course focused on developing community-engaged courses for undergraduate and graduate students.
ICEE will be hosting a two-day, funded course focused on developing community-engaged courses for undergraduate and graduate students.
The Department of Educational Leadership and Cultural Foundations in the UNC Greensboro School of Education hosted the seventh annual Critical Conversations Conference on Saturday, March 1, 2025. This year’s theme was “Grounded and Growing: Collective Work to Strengthen Education and Communities.” The theme addressed the changing political, social, and cultural landscape in education and the increasing need for collaboration among educators, students, communities, and organizations.
The College of Arts & Sciences International Travel Fund (ITF) provides funding for tenured and tenure-track faculty to conduct research abroad or present at an international conference. The fund makes matching awards of up to $1000.
It’s new funding Friday! Check out some of the grants that recently came through our Office of Sponsored Programs AND find your next funding opportunity.
Vacc Counseling and Consulting Clinic director Alex Cammarano on training counselors and providing accessible mental health services to the UNC Greensboro community
The communication scholar, who explores storytelling and disability activism, has mentored undergraduates through coursework, independent studies, and internships.
The psychologist, who examines the cognition of reading and writing, has mentored 35 undergraduate students in his Cognitive and Neural Science of Learning lab since he arrived at UNCG in 2019, through the PSY433 Research Experience course.
The Department of Psychology’s annual Kendon Smith Lecture Series will be held in the School of Education Building Room 114 on March 27, 2025 from 1:30 – 4:30 p.m. and School of Education Building Room 120 on March 28, 2025 from 9 a.m. – 12:15 p.m. The theme of this… Continue reading…
Alyse Knorr explores the importance of interdisciplinary artistic collaboration and curiosity, drawing on her own experiences working with composers, painters, and singers that have resulted in a Carnegie Hall premiere, a public mural at the Harlem Public Library, and re-creations of 2,500-year-old archaic Greek songs.
Xhenet Aliu will be reading from her new book Everybody Says It’s Everything on March 24th at the Alumni House.