Tag Learning
Cookbook advice: Eat walnuts, live longer!
America's favorite nut can settle into our tummies in many different forms thanks to UW–Madison English professors and administrators Betsy Draine and Michael Hinden.
Stress reduction course draws harried students
For the past 20 years, Physical Education 134 - Relaxation Technique and Exercise has been a top draw in the physical education department, filling so quickly that freshmen and sophomores have difficulty getting in.
Back in the classroom
Scholars bridge the divide between campus and the world in many ways, and economist John Karl Scholz made the leap through a leave, spending nearly two years in the capital of the nation - and the capital of his specialty.
Community service fellowships available to undergraduates
Undergraduate students, faculty and staff have a new opportunity to forge community service partnerships with area nonprofit and government agencies through the university's Morgridge Center for Public Service.
Monograph explores the role of scholarship and teaching
The Coalition for Education in the Life Sciences (CELS), a UW–Madison-based national alliance of professional biology societies, is taking aim at undergraduate biology education.
ROSATED GUINEA HEN
Roasted Guinea Hen recipe
The wisdom behind WISE
A program at Elizabeth Waters Hall is countering a national trend that has seen more than half of all young women who begin pursuing a career in science or engineering change majors in the first two years.
UW students laud teacher education reform
As a new curriculum in the School of Education's secondary teacher education nears its two-year anniversary, payoffs are proceeding from a decision made long ago by UW–Madison planners: To transform, instead of tinker.
Student-led fusion project wows scientific community
A unique student-staffed fusion project in UW–Madison's College of Engineering is generating excitement in the physics community.
Religious studies offers undergrad certificate
A new certificate for undergraduate students interested in the Religious Studies Program at the UW–Madison caps a complete renovation of the program started three years ago.
Cloak and dagger stuff
Students learn staged swashbuckling from a master of fake fighting We might be on the deck of a pirate galleon as the…
Engineering creates professional masters program
A new World Wide Web-based master's degree created by College of Engineering is designed to help professionals advance their careers without interrupting them.
First business course offered on Internet
The School of Business is launching its first Internet course, a class on management fundamentals.
‘The Wisconsin boys’
They are some of Peru's most important government and legal officials. And they call themselves the Wisconsin Boys.
New web site focuses on parenthood
A new UW–Madison Web site examines the fundamental nature of the parent-child relationship in society.
Program to boost undergrad research
A new trend is emerging: providing research opportunities for beginning students. UW–Madison will move in this direction starting this spring, with its new Undergraduate Research Scholars Program.
Africana project awarded $173,000
The General Library System will help the African Studies Program preserve its slide, photograph and video collections through a National Leadership Grant from the Federal Institute of Museum and Library Services.
Poetry collection given to UW–Madison
An extensive collection of poetry has been donated to UW–Madison libraries.
Interdisciplinary conference honors visionary LeMoine
UW-Madison will host a conference in Fanny LeMoine's memory, 'Living with Divinity: The Place of the Spiritual in Academic Discourse' Oct. 30-31.
From cows to wows
A group of UW–Madison staff is working to generate excitement for transforming the aging UW–Madison Dairy Barn into a hands-on Museum of Living Sciences, giving the public a place to explore biology research in progress.