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OHIO Auxiliaries recognizes and thanks milestone service employees for the 2020 calendar year.
This is a reminder message that Executive Vice President and Provost Elizabeth SayrsĀ invited all interested faculty and staff to attend the Academic Planning and Strategy Group open session tonight.
Members of the 51ĀŅĀ× humanities faculty are invited to apply for a distinguished teaching professorship in the institute. Applications are due by March 15.
Activities and programs recognize OHIO's 217th birthday
The new advisory community will examine various survey tools that support University-wide initiatives and invites new members to begin discussions that will help guide the future of the group. Ā
To gauge demand for the COVID-19 vaccine, COVID Operations has launched a vaccine interest survey for OHIO students, faculty and staff.
The presentation will provide resources for antiracism strategies to effectively combat institutional racism, as well as social justice advocacy and action strategies that go beyond research evidence.
Information about mental health, testing site volunteers, and experiential opportunities for students are available.
As we move past the holiday surge, COVID-19 case numbers have declined nationally and in the state. Unfortunately, our numbers on the Athens campus continue to increase.
51ĀŅĀ× has more than doubled its alumni engagement, according to one of the worldās largest nonprofit education associations.
To motivate students to adhere to mandatory COVID-19 testing, COVID Operations has launched the COVID-19 Testing Incentive Program with drawings for prizes all semester long.Ā
Executive Vice President and Provost Elizabeth Sayrs invites all interested OHIO faculty and staff to attend the Academic Planning and Strategy Group open session on Thursday, February 11.
51ĀŅĀ× Army ROTC cadets gathered on Jan. 20 for their Change of Command ceremony.
The 5th Annual ECO Challenge brought together several student teams that worked to identify solutions to sustainability issues.
The College of Arts and Sciences has unveiled a new undergraduate and graduate course called The History of Now that focuses on the most significant historical events from 1989 until present day.