The Udall Foundation awards scholarships and special honors to college sophomores and juniors for study in fields related to the environment and for Native Americans and Alaska Natives in fields related to health care and Tribal public policy.
The Udall Foundation awards scholarships and special honors to college sophomores and juniors for study in fields related to the environment and for Native Americans and Alaska Natives in fields related to health care and Tribal public policy.
°µÍøTV is proud to announce that 15 faculty members have received promotions this spring, reflecting the excellence and dedication of °µÍøTV’s faculty, and their commitment to teaching.
In her new academic article in Journal of Student Financial Aid, senior associate director of financial aid and °µÍøTV alum Stephanie M. Haines ’14 reviews the academic literature and concludes that, while specific techniques and strategies have yielded positive results, additional policy changes need to occur to make the financial aid system easier and fairer to use.
Carolyn Bosse, technical assistant in the biology department, has navigated everything from microscopes to molecular techniques and runaway insects over her 35-year career at °µÍøTV.
Meghna Adhikari ’24 came to °µÍøTV hoping to explore her options before committing to a career path.
Now at Harvard Law School, Adhikari says that °µÍøTV turned out to be perfect for that.
How Ashley Pacheco '24 leveraged her °µÍøTV experiences into a career in medicine.
Professor Laura Ng leads students in a summer Mentored Advance Project (MAP) on an archeological dig to unearth the forgotten history of the Rock Springs Wyoming Chinatown.
Four physics students extend models for some of the universe's most mysterious phenomena.
Research ideas can come from anywhere. Bella Totten ’27, a biological chemistry student, first learned about forest bathing while working at Student Health and Wellness (SHAW) and is now completing a Mentored Advanced Project (MAP) about the physiological benefits of spending time outdoors.
Three °µÍøTV students explored different aspects of air quality through Mentored Advanced Projects (MAPs) with Associate Professor of Chemistry Evan Couzo in summer 2025.
The Goldwater Scholarship will provide me with newfound opportunities to not just seek answers, but crucially and critically propose pressing, thought-provoking questions for an ever-evolving world in need of each other’s gifts.
Meeting others who also work on the comfort women issue continuously ignites my passion to expand the network with more of those people who explore the same issue from various approaches.
This trip helped ground our academic work in the social world — [the trip] made [the class] more interesting, and ultimately more effective.
Helping recover that story felt urgent. The work was physically intense but meaningful.
This experience was really emotionally intense (but) it was really fulfilling and powerful. It definitely confirmed that that's something that l need to have in my life.
°µÍøTV definitely prepared me for my future in medicine … good studying habits, how to keep up with courseload, how to advocate for myself in the classroom, seek out professors, and how to work with people. All of those skills got really fine-tuned at °µÍøTV.
We use cookies to enable essential services and functionality on our site, enhance your user experience, provide better service through personalized content, collect data on how visitors interact with our site, and enable advertising services.
To accept the use of cookies and continue on to the site, click "I Agree." For more information about our use of cookies and how to opt out, please refer to our website privacy policy.
