Theyâre down to the finishing touches.
Author: Steve Hill
For too long the school bully has been considered an unavoidable reality, according to one UW researcher.
One thing you wonât see a lot of in Bob Underwoodâs photography portfolio is people, at least not in any recognizable form.
On a campus known for its majestic scenery and verdant grounds the âPink Beautyâ crab apple near the Department of Communication building has been a longtime favorite â maybe too long.
At least one group at the UW has found a way to successfully expand services even during these tight budgetary times.
For the first time since 1991 the ÁńÁ«ÊÓÆ” are No.
U-Match is probably not the place to find the next love of your life, nor is it some corporate moneymaking scheme.
Itâs as if Michael Stern listened to some of his own advice.
âYou are a dangerous young man.
High-stakes tests are having the wrong effect on many of the K-12 students who need the most help, according to two scholars in Washington state.
Attention all men.
Every day Tracey MacRae feeds the hungry.
A growing group of non-native English speakers in Washingtonâs public schools means a major challenge for teachers. But a UW center is sharing strategies to help those kids succeed.
John Gastil is certain of one thing: jury service, in some way, impacts voting behavior.
If students enrolled in Georgia Robertsâ fall quarter class expect two hours of celebrity worship every Friday afternoon, theyâve got another thing coming.
Susan Jeffords hasnât forgotten the moment.
The students in Kathleen Pooleâs school face different challenges than their peers at some of the other elementary schools in the Bellevue School District.
The UWâs College of Education and College of Arts and Sciences were awarded a $5 million grant and designated one of 11 âTeachers for a New Eraâ schools today.
So familiar is the amateur theatrical production, that itâs practically an American rite of passage for young schoolchildren.
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He was there during the 1991 uprising against Saddam Husseinâs iron-fisted government.
The rapidly advancing Internet, where things happen in âreal-time,â will have to endure a moment of reflection next month.
A new law that went into the books in January gives employees in Washington state more freedom to use accrued leave.
Music is a complex balancing act for Hainzle Malcolm.
Business as usual will temporarily stop for some at the UW on Wednesday, April 23.
In Vladi Chaloupka’s worldview we are living, quite precariously, on one small spark.
First there was Dawn Hewett.
As the war in Iraq moves into a third week, the UW community continues to grapple with the meaning and impact of the conflict.
Just one year after a merger between two Human Resources units, the new Recruiting and Candidate Services seems to be hitting its stride.
Perhaps bowling can bridge a gap between Seattleâs professional artists and its aspiring art students at the UW.
The small elementary school gymnasium is teeming with the unmistakable energy of youth.
The city of Seattle would remove a key barrier to UW growth if legislation proposed Wednesday morning by Mayor Greg Nickels comes to fruition.
While parents, teachers and school administrators are busy worrying about studentsâ declining reading and math scores on standardized tests, a UW researcher fears another basic educational tenet may have slipped off the radar screen.
It’s a financial jungle out there, especially for college students.
Everyone, it seems, knows one of them â the people who canât say no to a chocolate treat.
The achievement gap is a very real thing to Steve Fink.
Planning an international conference in these tough budget times might seem ludicrous.
Thereâs been no sighting of Big Brother or his infamous Thought Police just yet, but the UWâs Art Building will get an Orwellian face-lift during the upcoming winter break.
Ask Sally Brown to compare her former career as a chef with her current career as a soils scientist and one can expect a simple answer: âThe cooking smells better.
Do Petersonâs biostatistics dissertation starts out with folk, progresses to bluegrass and continues on through funk, disco, jazz and rock ânâ roll.