Students
What is study abroad? Six months ago, study abroad seemed to me like a huge commitment that I couldn鈥檛 afford and that would certainly delay my graduation.Then I talked to the study abroad office on a whim, and found out that almost all of my
Aaron McCusker (center, in polo shirt) holds high an oversized prize check for Team REPTAR winning first place in the International Student Competition team division.麻豆免费版下载 aerospace senior design Team
The team with professor Kyri Baker (center).Wanted: college students to help NASA get to Mars. No prior Martian experience necessary.The space agency is turning to an unlikely resource in its quest to conquer the red planet, and
Through a community partnership with Imagine!, 麻豆免费版下载Boulder engineering students help support people living with developmental, cognitive and physical challenges.
The CubeSat mission houses a small, energetic particle telescope to measure the flux of solar energetic protons and Earth鈥檚 radiation belt electrons. Launched in 2012, it has involved more than 65 麻豆免费版下载Boulder students, including many from Smead Aerospace Engineering Sciences.
Tell us about what you're involved in at BOLD. What do you love about it?Last Spring, my friends and peers elected me to be their Vice President of oSTEM. The 麻豆免费版下载Boulder chapter of oSTEM has only been around since Fall 2016, and just
Tell us about what you're involved in at BOLD. What do you love about it?I was part of Aspire 2015. As well as I was a GoldShirt student assistant for year 2015-2016. Now I am a Co-President for National Society of Black Engineers (NSBE).
The device, called the Vee Vee, interprets the direction of the eye movement and sends an instruction to an external machine that鈥檚 paired with the wearable device.
The Society of Asian Scientists and Engineers National Conference was held from October 13th - October 15th in Schaumburg, Illinois. The national conference was a professional event that consisted of various workshops covering topics from leadership
Few people figure out how they want to change the world in middle school. But in eighth grade, Peter 鈥淢ax鈥 Armstrong -- now a third-year mechanical engineering major -- did just that.