Computer gaming skills opening career paths
ASU’s Computer Gaming Certificate Program teaches technical and creative skills applicable to careers ranging from business, law and education to environmentalism, engineering and medicine.
Read MoreASU’s Computer Gaming Certificate Program teaches technical and creative skills applicable to careers ranging from business, law and education to environmentalism, engineering and medicine.
Read MoreASU researchers propose an answer to mysteries about how the world of our sensory experience emerges from the cloudy realm of atoms.
Read MoreJohn Wheatley, who helped make ASU a leading center for microscopy, is honored posthumously with the dedication of a special research and education facility.
Read MoreThe government of China has honored ASU engineering student Kai He, as outstanding among his peers.
Read MoreThe industry education arm of ASU’s Del E. Webb School of Construction is collaborating with the Arizona Department of Transportation to educate small businesses about how to grow.
Read MoreThe semiconductor industry may be able to more efficiently and inexpensively manufacture silicon chips with new technology that an ASU electrical engineering professor helped to develop.
Read MoreASU’s Paul Johnson has been named dean of the Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering, effective Jan. 1, 2011. He succeeds Deirdre Meldrum, who has been promoted to senior scientist.
Read MoreA group of ASU engineering students are preparing for the National Chem-E-Car Competition to test their chemical-powered vehicle against similar vehicles designed and built by student engineering teams from around the country.
Read MoreASU bioengineering students have won an international award for a presentation on their research into treatment of congenita1 heart disease.
Read MoreASU engineering students are getting opportunities to put their education to use by taking the lead on community projects through the EPICS program.
Read MoreNikhilesh Chawla, a professor in the School of Mechanical, Aerospace, Chemical and Materials Engineering, a part of ASU’s Ira A Fulton Schools of Engineering, and Rajen Sidhu, now a senior engineer with Intel Corporation, were presented the best research paper award on Feb. 16 from the American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers (AIME) during the annual Minerals, Metals and Materials Society (TMS) Meeting and Exhibition in Seattle.
Read MoreThree faculty members in Arizona State University’s Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering are leading a project to improve the effectiveness of solar energy technology.
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