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Top award to member of UW Bothell research group
Christine Ye, a local high school senior who credits Dr. Joey Key as the “one person who has been most influential in the development of my scientific career,” received $250,000 in the Regeneron Science Talent Search.
March 24, 2022
Designing inclusive intelligence
Dr. Afra Mashhadi, assistant professor at the University of Washington Bothell’s School of STEM, emphasizes the importance of equity in machine learning.
March 24, 2022
A literary lens on gender, race and power
Dr. Julie Shayne, teaching professor in the School of IAS, debuts a class — and passion project — on the power of feminist writing.
March 24, 2022
Alumnus proves the distance between a dream and reality is action
What do mechanical engineering and the sport of curling have in common? Ask Colin Hufman, UW Bothell STEM graduate and Olympic athlete.
March 17, 2022
The legal case: Making evidence persuasive
Students in the Discovery Core course The Legal Case researched and prepared for a fictional trial judged by members of the Law Society. And the verdict is …
March 14, 2022
Q&A: Je Salvador
Je Salvador, research and instruction librarian, talks about work in the library, shares current favorite books and suggests some you might enjoy.
March 10, 2022
Residential Village will enrich Husky Experience
The new Residential Village at UW Bothell has broken ground. In three years, it will rise up to three buildings housing more than 1,000 students, event and office space, and a dining facility with a variety of food stations.
March 10, 2022
Hacking your brain for life
In this first-year class, students learn about college life, neuro-engineering and how science can change the way people experience the world.
March 10, 2022
Teaching the history of pandemics while living through one
Dr. Stefanie Iverson Cabral teaches Disease, Human History, Society & Civilization, a course that examines the implications infectious diseases have had on our society and the way we live — and how they have altered the course of history
March 3, 2022
See the person, not the disability
Dr. Mo West, associate teaching professor in the School of Nursing & Health Studies, teaches a Discovery Core class on critical disability studies — a growing, multi-disciplinary field that investigates, critiques and enhances Western society’s understanding of disability.
March 2, 2022
Crow passes test flight
On New Year’s Day an injured crow was spotted on campus. PAWS flew in to rescue the bird and it went through a thorough rehabilitation process. The Herald tells the story of patient 20220004.
February 25, 2022
New book centers Indigenous worldviews
Audubon reviews “Fresh Banana Leaves: Healing Indigenous Landscapes Through Indigenous Science,” a new book by Dr. Jessica Hernandez in which she shares her personal history as a Maya Ch’orti’ and Binnizá woman and her lived experience as a lifelong learner and scholar of Indigenous science.
February 24, 2022