Friends, partners, family members, boss, coworkers—maintaining relationships is challenging, but healthy relationships all share a few core traits. Read about relationship red and green flags in three key areas.
Recent events have prompted a lively discussion about if and how content on streaming platforms should be moderated. CU Boulder Today spoke with an expert in Colorado Law about Spotify, Joe Rogan and this new frontier in content moderation.
Open to all, Staff Council's next blood drive is taking place at two locations, one on Main Campus and one on East Campus. Appointments are encouraged but not required. Explore making a difference in this way!
Compassion practices offer a way to extend care to ourselves and others, to replenish our energy and inspiration, and to help build resilience as we grapple with the impacts of life. This virtual session includes a guided practice and group discussion.
T9Hacks kicks off this year with an in-person event. The seventh-annual hackathon promotes interest in creative technologies, coding, design and making among college women, nonbinary individuals and other groups that are underrepresented in technical fields.
Ernesto Acevedo-Muñoz, cinema studies chair—and man who’s “morally opposed” to remakes—gives a thumbs-up to Steven Spielberg’s Oscar Award-nominated version of “West Side Story.”
After nine weeks immersed in a research experience at CU Boulder, undergraduate students could analyze scientific papers and graphs more like experts, according to a new CIRES-led study.
Digging deeply into the nation’s past can help illuminate the racial setbacks facing the U.S. today. Anthony Siracusa, senior director of inclusive culture and initiatives, shares on The Conversation.
Nearly 18,000 CU Boulder community members participated in the Campus Culture Survey this past fall, and university staff who administered the survey are analyzing anonymized responses from students, faculty and staff in preparation for the public release of the survey results in early April.