Faculty in Focus

  • Ricarose Roque works at a computer with young students.
    Ricarose Roque's research explores how to design inclusive learning experiences that enable young people to create and express themselves with new technologies and media.
  • Nobel laureate Thomas Cech
    Leading up to his Best Should Teach keynote Aug. 31, Nobel laureate Thomas Cech discusses working with scores of first-year students and how the experience makes him a better scientist.
  • Lynn R Wolfe
    The Art and Art History Department is celebrating the life, work and hundredth birthday of one of its formative faculty members, Lynn R. Wolfe. An exhibition of Wolfe's work runs through Aug. 31.
  • sabrina spencer
    A leading researcher in quantitative biology, Assistant Professor Sabrina Spencer has made a name for herself in her field through hard work and a dynamic view on cellular research.
  • Stevens and CMCI alumnus Christopher Bell pose with Stevens' son
    Rick Stevens shares his experiences from this year's Denver Comic Con, which saw the largest attendance since the initial event in 2012.
  • Bruce Lee
    Bruce Lee conquered generations of unflattering stereotypes about Asian men, and 蜜桃传媒破解版下载 professor Daryl Maeda says the martial arts star is overdue for a deeper analysis than he's received in existing biographical works.
  • CU English Professor Stephen Graham Jones holds ax over shoulder
    "The monster you can believe in is a scarier monster." CU English professor Stephen Graham Jones got hooked on werewolves as a boy in West Texas. Now he鈥檚 made them the stars of his latest novel.
  • Professor Albert Bartlett holds up bicycle wheel in classroom
    Iconic physics professor Albert A. Bartlett helped preserve the city he called home, and now Boulder City Council has moved to preserve his longtime home. The house, built in 1917, has been designated as an historic landmark.
  • Cynthia Banks poses in front of The Hub in downtown Boulder
    Cynthia Banks didn鈥檛 have the opportunity to study abroad as a student. The summer after graduating in 1989, she helped a marketing professor take a group of undergraduates to Australia to study at the University of Queensland in Brisbane. The Colorado native launched an international education organization a year later that would eventually send 30,000 students to 27 countries and offer 150 programs worldwide.
  • Lori Hunter demonstrates yoga pose in the steps of Norlin Library
    Sociology professor Lori Hunter takes yoga from the studio into the classroom, where her students practice mindfulness and assess yoga鈥檚 place in our culture 鈥 and its growing commercialism. She asks, 鈥淚s this version of yoga even 鈥榓uthentic?鈥 Does it matter?鈥
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