October 30th, 2019
Recognizing outstanding achievement: 2019 Alumni Awards
The College of Science is pleased to announce its outstanding 2019 Alumni Award recipients.
The College of Science is pleased to announce its outstanding 2019 Alumni Award recipients.
More progress is urgently needed to protect the ocean, OSU scientists reported at the Our Ocean Conference.
The Department of Chemistry hosts 6th International Frontiers in Metal Oxide Cluster Science Meeting, attracting attendees from around the world to OSU’s campus.
Mathematics Professor Juan Restrepo has been elected a 2019 Fellow of the American Physical Society.
Chemistry Ph.D. student Ana Arteaga was one of three graduate students at OSU to receive a prestigious GEM Fellowship in 2019.
The $438K NSF grant has the potential to cause a fundamental shift in how faculty are incentivized and rewarded for their research endeavors.
The Alexei Lubchenco Menge fellowship introduced in 2019 is opening new opportunities for biology and zoology students interested in ecology and field work.
Mathematician is part of a $141K, one-year grant from Google to enhance and increase integration between computer science education and mathematics teacher education.
The findings by entomologist George Poinar Jr. give a rare look at a heretofore unknown clade of invertebrates.
Mathematics senior Rachel Sousa found her passion in mathematical biology, motivated to work harder and break barriers in the notoriously male-dominated field.
Biochemists find that the brains of people with congenital deafness may be rewiring themselves in ways that affect how those people learn.
Alumnus Ben Lyons (Ph.D. ’97) has taken his passion for biostatistics far, carving out a successful career in biotechnology and the pharmaceutical industry.
The Wei Family Foundation receives the 2019 Distinguished Service Award for its extraordinary commitment to the College of Science and its legacy of Chinese stewardship.
Pioneering climate scientist and alumnus Warren Washington to present the 2019 Distinguished Lecture on October 11, 2019.
The College of Science welcomed 748 new first-year students to its class of 2023, 27% of whom are first-generation college students.
The National Science Foundation has selected Mathematics Professor Malgo Peszynska to serve as rotating Program Director within its Division of Mathematical Sciences.
Zelma Long (’65) is one of America’s best-known winemakers. Considered a pioneer in California wines, she is known for cultivating premium wines with scientific rigor.
Ocean-based actions have greater potential to fill in gaps in climate change mitigation than previously appreciated, marine ecologist Jane Lubchenco explains in a paper published […]