4486 Results
1

UC Answers: How do I hone digital skills during COVID?

September 18, 2020

COVID-19 accelerated the digital transformation and made industry-recognized credentials even more essential job-seeking tools. UC helps students and workers upskill to stay competitive in an evolving job market.

2

Goldwater scholars adapt amid crisis

April 27, 2020

Until the recent COVID-19 social distancing mandate, UC’s recent Barry Goldwater Scholarship and Excellence in Education Foundation recipients, Rishi Mehta and Zachary Thomas, were building success as undergraduate researchers in the medical sciences and biomedical engineering programs respectively. And they’re not slowing down.

4

UC Answers: Why should I choose UC?

June 29, 2020

Logan Lindsay, University of Cincinnati student body president and student in UC’s College of Engineering and Applied Science, shares why he chose UC and what the university offers students.

6

GE to invest $5M on next generation of Cincinnati engineers

October 13, 2021

GE will partner with UC to launch Next Engineers, a program to boost diversity among young engineers by reaching out to Cincinnati-area students ages 13 to 18. GE will invest $5 million locally as part of a $100 million commitment to improve opportunities in engineering for underrepresented groups around the world.

8

UC team wins first place in international ‘hackathon’

November 7, 2022

Combining their knowledge of economics and computer science, a University of Cincinnati professor and student won first place in an international hackathon competition with their solution to counter inflation's harmful effects.

9

UC leads demonstration project to improve Ohio streams

May 4, 2022

Biologists at the University of Cincinnati are studying low-cost ways to improve water quality and wildlife habitat in Greater Cincinnati’s creeks. UC biologists Stephen Matter and Michael Booth are examining whether water quality and wildlife habitat can be improved simply by adding logs and branches in select parts of the upper Cooper Creek. The addition of fallen timber could help slow periodic floodwaters, create more standing pools for fish during droughts and add nutrients for plants and fungus that support other aquatic life, researchers said.