tam student
- Students proposed design solutions to bolster community interaction and pride in support of the Little Saigon neighborhood and local volunteering initiative, Give5 Mile High.
- Michelle Galetti had good reason to leave college. She chose to stay.
- TAM student Daniel Strangfeld and his team received funding from CU ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ's Get Seed Funding for the team's latest venture, Kegstand, a collapsible keg that the team designed which will reduce both shipping and rent costs. Get Seed Funding is a micro-funding opportunity for CU ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ students that provides up to $500 in funding for entrepreneurial ideas. Previously Strangfeld and Ted Thayer, CTD master's student also created an app together that sourced free food around campus.
- Aidan Rafferty has been dreaming about space for as long as he can remember, and that didn’t change when he became an engineering student at CU ºù«ÍÞÊÓƵ. This TAM grad’s trajectory brought towards his dream career.
- Jolie Klefeker was chosen as a Grace Hopper Research Scholar, a national program that aims to increase the number of undergraduate women with an interest in computing research. Â
- Emma Wu is graduating on time, having completed three majors in three different colleges, a minor and working two jobs. She built her academic program around her TAM major.
- TAM senior Emily Daub is fascinated by how people are changed by their relationships. In her ambitious dance performance, she explores these ideas, featuring a wide range of dance styles and dance costumes that she designed with embedded wearable technology.