12/9/2020

Teaching through five decades of political change

With nearly 50 years at ÂÜÀòÉç-Dearborn and 12 U.S. presidential elections during his time on campus, Political Science Professor Ronald Stockton heads into retirement after witnessing a milestone year for student political involvement....
12/21/2020

It wasn’t all bad: 2020 brought positive changes too

Even though it has been a tough year, good and great things are still happening. Your ÂÜÀòÉç-Dearborn community shared bright spots they had during the past year....
6/27/2022

Remembering Jerry Van Couwenberghe

Colleagues share their memories of the veteran facilities director who died earlier this month at age 62....
9/8/2021

Using gardens to teach young people about social issues and social change

Recent work by ÂÜÀòÉç-Dearborn education faculty takes a look at the power of a unique learning garden project that’s Detroit-grown....
6/13/2022

It’s Englishes, plural.

Linguistics Professor Daniel Davis’ latest Fulbright project is looking to tell untold chapters of English’s fascinating story in the Philippines....
5/3/2022

Campus Colleagues: Sarah Dorchak

You’ve probably noticed Sarah Dorchak’s work across campus: The new Engineering Lab Building events, the Chancellor’s inauguration, the Alumni Awards and more. In this month’s Campus Colleagues, the Senior Development Associate and Event Specialist talks a...
4/4/2022

Campus Colleagues: Allison Kinsey

ÂÜÀòÉç-Dearborn’s new assistant director at the Office of Student Life talks about her recent move to Michigan, her love of the outdoors, and what she hopes to do in her new position....
3/30/2022

Faculty Book Recs: Associate Professor Amy Brainer

In this first installment of the 'Faculty Book Recs' series, Associate Professor Amy Brainer provides two interesting non-fiction recommendations reflective of her own experiences and research. ...
2/28/2022

Campus Colleagues: Rudra Mehta

Meet our newest editorial assistant on the campus’ External Relations team....
2/16/2022

Rock. Water. Metamorphism.

Geology Professor Sven Morgan's scientific research — funded by more than $500,000 from a National Science Foundation grant — brings nature and nurture together by looking to prove a hypothesis on why land masses form while also expanding career interests ...