ASEE
- CU «Ƶ's journey toward gender parity in engineering is a clear signal that diversity in STEM is achievable. In just two decades, CEAS has transformed its engineering landscape, growing its female undergraduate class from 18% in 2003 to 30% in 2023. CEAS’s fall 2023 class, includes 41% female students, up 27% from two decades ago. CU «Ƶ clinched a top spot in 2022 for the highest percentage of first-year female engineering students from the American Society for Engineering Education.
- Distinguished Professor Bernard Amadei was inducted into the American Society for Engineering Education Hall of Fame. The prestigious designation recognizes outstanding individuals in engineering and engineering technology education whose contributions have left a significant impact.
- The «Ƶ has started a graduate engineering program in robotics to fill a growing need in an in-demand field.
- The space economy is booming, and the «Ƶ is at the forefront of a major federal funding initiative aimed at expanding science and engineering knowledge and workforce development for projects centered on operations Beyond Geostationary Orbit (xGEO) and Space Domain Awareness (SDA).
- Sanghamitra Neogi has earned a key Department of Defense contract to tackle a big problem with tiny electronics: microchips crippled by heat.
- A team of «Ƶ researchers is leading a major military-oriented project for 5G wireless security. The National Science Foundation’s Convergence Accelerator program has awarded CU «Ƶ $5 million for “GHOST: 5G Hidden Operations through...
- Lattice Scholars aims to expand access to a CU «Ƶ engineering education to all first-generation Colorado students who are Pell-eligible and face financial or other barriers that might hinder a promising engineering career. Lattice scholarships will close the total cost-of-attendance gap for these students across four full years of study—an estimated value that could range up to $64,000 over the course of four years.
- Fulbright Scholar Awards are prestigious and competitive fellowships that provide unique opportunities for scholars to teach and conduct research abroad.
- Eight faculty members within the College of Engineering and Applied Science have received CAREER Awards from the National Science Foundation in 2023.
- Broadening participation in community college transfer pathways by building “college capital”