Key initiatives include providing interpreters for students with limited English proficiency, modifying training for incoming students, and strengthening liaisons between CHS and units serving underrepresented students.
Virtual and face-to-face trainings to support faculty in adapting their courses to be delivered from a distance will be held three times daily, beginning Thursday, March 5.
Tsutakawa, a writer and editor who focuses on Asian/Pacific American history and arts, will discuss how female leaders throughout history inspired others and changed society.
Pharmacotherapy Academic Fellow Boris Zhang drew on his experience playing Dungeons and Dragons to create an educational game where students spent a class battling Medusa, identifying constellations and navigating a labyrinth; all to help prepare them for an exam.
The 40,000‑square‑foot building will house a suite of teaching laboratories, classrooms, collaborative meeting spaces, study spaces and a grand staircase with open seating for lectures and presentations.
Hussein M. Zbib, a professor in the School of Mechanical and Materials Engineering since 1988, passed away Feb. 10 at his home in Pullman. A memorial service will be held at 11 a.m. on Friday, March 6 at WSU Pullman.
WSU’s inaugural Student Veterans Symposium, scheduled for March 5 on the Tri‑Cities campus, will examine the unique needs of veterans and develop an action plan to help foster their success.
A spring semester test of the WSU Alert Pullman emergency alert system, including campus outdoor warning sirens, will be conducted at 11:45 a.m. Tuesday, March 3.
ASWSU will host its 16th annual Multicultural Fundraiser on March 11 for three conferences designed to encourage students from underrepresented populations to attend college.
Dreamer, UI Law School graduate, and Seattle immigration attorney Luis Cortes Romero will present “This Case is My Story: The Supreme Court Argument to Preserve DACA” at 7 p.m. Monday, March 2 in Pullman.