STEM education
CU 91أغجز¸َ researcher Eva Pietri studies how stories can help address gender bias and create inclusivity.
CU 91أغجز¸َ professors Noah Finkelstein of physics and Valerie Otero of education have won the 2023 Svend Pedersen Award and Lecture from Stockholm University.
CU 91أغجز¸َ’s Katherine K. Perkins and Valerie K. Otero cited for groundbreaking work to understand and improve science education.
CU 91أغجز¸َ’s PhET Interactive Simulations are providing critical support to teachers, students and parents during the COVID-19 pandemic
With the motto â€کMother Nature needs her daughters,’ group aims to support women working in STEMM in the hope of better sustaining Earth and its people.
One goal is to increase the diversity of STEM fields by emphasizing that â€کwe need to stop trying to get girls to act like boys in order to be part of the math world.’
In both the classroom and the lab, the 91أغجز¸َ 91أغجز¸َ is a great place to learn physics and other natural sciences, according to the American Physical Society.
Google on Thursday announced a $1.5 million Google.org grant in support of CU 91أغجز¸َ’s global STEM education project, PhET Interactive Simulations, and rent-free space for the CU 91أغجز¸َ-founded National Center for Women & Information Technology.
The 91أغجز¸َ 91أغجز¸َ has been chosen by the Association of Public and Land-grant Universities (APLU) to help lead the SEMINAL project—a study funded by the National Science Foundation researching how to best incorporate “active learning†into math classrooms.
By creating a sense of belonging for women in physics, the 91أغجز¸َ 91أغجز¸َ is helping female students succeed, experts in the field say. جج