Explore recent College of Engineering and Information Technology (COEIT) news highlights on UMBC News: Science & Technology and UMBC Magazine.
About UMBC [PDF] shares additional highlights of innovative teaching and research. COEIT department websites share additional news and events.
Showing items tagged cahss. Show All
From UMBC News and Magazine
Retrievers learn the art and heart of cooking Salvadoran food at True Grit’s Test Kitchen
“Recipes are like an address to a homeland, but they’re also very personal to your own story,” said Karla T. Vasquez, author of The SalviSoul Cookbook, in True Grit’s Test Kitchen. Celia Bonilla,...
Posted: November 5, 2024, 4:30 PM
Meet a Retriever—Emma Swartling ’10, prenatal and pediatric chiropractor
Meet Emma Swartling ‘10, anthropology, prenatal and pediatric chiropractor and owner of Lumos Chiropractic in Tacoma, Washington. She was drawn to UMBC to experience the East Coast after being...
Posted: October 31, 2024, 2:12 PM
Study shows natural regrowth of tropical forests has immense potential to address environmental concerns
Matthew Fagan led development of the forest patches database that the current study relied on. (Marlayna Demond ’11/UMBC) A new study in Naturefinds that up to 215 million hectares of land (an...
Posted: October 30, 2024, 12:22 PM
Alumna introduces horseshoe crabs to K-12 classrooms to raise these scientifically useful arthropods
Most people wouldn’t guess horseshoe crabs—ancient arthropods with hard, round carapaces and long, spiky tails—when asked what animals you might find in a K-12 classroom. But Jessica Baniak ’23,...
Posted: October 28, 2024, 10:14 AM
Alumna introduces horseshoe crabs to K-12 classrooms to raise these scientifically useful arthropods
Most people wouldn’t guess horseshoe crabs—ancient arthropods with hard, round carapaces and long, spiky tails—when asked what animals you might find in a K-12 classroom. But Jessica Baniak ’23,...
Posted: October 28, 2024, 10:14 AM
Colonialism’s legacy has left Caribbean nations much more vulnerable to hurricanes
Written by Farah Nibbs, assistant professor of emergency and disaster health systems at UMBC Long before colonialism brought slavery to the Caribbean, the native islanders saw hurricanes and...
Posted: October 22, 2024, 11:12 AM
GRIT-X talk series ushers in UMBC’s 2024 Homecoming activities
UMBC’s GRIT-X event is returning for its eighth year with a lineup of dynamic talks spanning a wide range of subjects, including insight into the university’s contributions to the next Moon...
Posted: October 17, 2024, 5:15 PM
For 15 consecutive years, UMBC‘s faculty and staff shine in the Great Colleges to Work For survey
In the early hours of the morning, as the windows of Albin O. Kuhn Library begin to reflect the sunrise, UMBC’s faculty and staff are making sure all the campus needs—technology, buildings,...
Posted: October 17, 2024, 4:55 PM
UMBC Poll, new election website, affirm UMBC commitment to civic engagement
UMBC has launched two exciting new Election 2024 resources that affirm the university’s commitment to civic engagement and benefit both our campus community and the greater Maryland region....
Posted: October 14, 2024, 9:46 AM
Baltimore-based international animation festival Sweaty Eyeballs returns with a visual feast
“Sweaty Eyeballs” was born out of a Baltimore summer. The humid words hung in the air when animator Phil Davis, M.F.A. ’07, imaging and digital arts, was putting his plans into place in summer...
Posted: October 10, 2024, 10:59 AM
- Go to page 1
- Go to page 2
- Go to page 3
- Go to page 4
- Go to page 5
- Go to page 6
- …
- Go to page 196