The heckling is real, the riots just acknowledged, and they are part of an innovative teaching method called Reacting to the Past, which aims to help students learn by prompting them to assume historical roles.
One way to learn something well is to show others what you’ve learned—in this case, with an outreach project—according to June Gruber’s students in a recent ŔÖ˛Ą´«Ă˝ Boulder psychology course.
Recent advances in veterinary research have suggested that if your dog has cancer, it’s possible you might, too, thanks to toxins in your shared environment. But that research might not tell the whole story, according to new findings.
It’s easy enough to marvel at a tapestry of color in your local museum, but ŔÖ˛Ą´«Ă˝ Boulder students are getting a first-hand look at human history that only an ultra-close examination of color can provide.
“The Weight of Water” follows the blind adventurer Erik Weihenmayer as he kayaks the Grand Canyon. And, for Michael Brown, the sound is a vital element of that experience.
'The cool thing is that this was motivated by looking at the hogbacks right outside our windows; no one had explained their shape before,' says Rachel Glade
A first look at the intersection of climate change and the relatively good health of new migrants—or “healthy migrant effect”— suggests that the changing climate might propel less-healthy people to migrate from Mexico to the United States.
CU scholar's research found that the participation rate of women in philosophy was indeed affected by students feeling dissimilar to professional philosophers, perhaps even their instructors.
The U.S. decision to leave the Paris climate agreement provided some interesting data for scholars who study trends in the negotiations. One of those researchers is David Ciplet at CU Boulder.
The nuclear weapons buildup and the protests against it were for many simply the news of the day, but for two filmmakers from the ŔÖ˛Ą´«Ă˝ Boulder it may turn out to be a provocative theme for a historical documentary and multimedia oral-history archive.