Around Campus - S-STEM Seminar Session

Posted by Andy Cunningham on November 26, 2025 at 10:00 AM

The team of faculty and student mentors involved in the S-STEM Project recently met in Thompson Hall. The project is committed to improving  STEM majors in Biology, Chemistry, Computer Science, Computer Information System, Engineering Technology, and Mathematics student  experience. 

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Topics: Health and Natural Sciences, Engineering Technology, Environmental Science

Intro to Geospatial Technology - Scavenger Hunt

Posted by Andy Cunningham on October 29, 2025 at 1:15 PM

 It was Cache Me If You Can vs. Head Bosses In Charge in  Earth and Geographic Sciences Professor Jane Huang's Intro to Geospatial Technology class. On Monday,  each team hid small objects around campus and now have to find the other team's objects using GPS (Global Positioning System). This is a gateway course to theories, skills, and techniques of geospatial technologies, such as GPS, Google Earth, GIS (Geographic Information System), and remote sensing. Hands-on computer exercises based on a wide range of social and physical features are utilized to provide a solid foundation for further geospatial technologies classes.

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Topics: Health and Natural Sciences, Environmental Science

S.T.E.M. Week - Faculty Research Symposium - Professors, Posters, & Pizza

Posted by Andy Cunningham on October 24, 2025 at 9:15 AM

The BiologyChemistry, and Earth & Geographic Sciences departments held their annual science symposium Tuesday afternoon at the Lisciotti pavilion in the Antonucci Science Building as part of our S.T.E.M. Week events. This is an event where the science faculty present posters on their research to get students interested and involved in the sciences. The Bio Chem Club was there to celebrate Mole Day, which commemorates Avogadro's number , ( 6.02 × 1023 ) by making moles.

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Topics: Clubs and Organizations, Health and Natural Sciences, Environmental Science

Around Campus - Intro to Geospatial Technology

Posted by Andy Cunningham on October 10, 2025 at 8:45 AM

Earth and Geographic Sciences Professor Jane Huang discusses a project with students in her Intro to Geospatial Technology where, as teams, they will hide small objects around campus and find them using  GPS (Global Positioning System). This is a gateway course to theories, skills, and techniques of geospatial technologies, such as GPS, Google Earth, GIS (Geographic Information System), and remote sensing. Hands-on computer exercises based on a wide range of social and physical features are utilized to provide a solid foundation for further geospatial technologies classes.

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Topics: Environmental Science

Around Campus - Summer Undergraduate Researchers Presentations

Posted by Andy Cunningham on August 22, 2025 at 4:15 PM

This morning, Environmental, Geographic and Public Health Sciences Professor Reid Parsons welcomed other School of Health and Natural Sciences professors and staff as he introduced Student Researchers Sara Beaulac & Ethan Chaco in the Antonucci Science Complex. Sara and Ethan's projects relate to ice ages on Mars and some enigmatic features found on the Martian surface. They presented their work as practice for the December American Geophysical Union (AGU) conference they will be attending in New Orleans.

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Topics: Health and Natural Sciences, Environmental Science

Around Campus - General Physics I

Posted by Andy Cunningham on March 4, 2025 at 9:30 AM

Environmental, Geographic and Public Health Sciences Professor Jiang Yu helps students with an experiment in her General Physics I course. This first-semester general college physics course consists of studies in the principle and application of classical mechanics, waves, sound and heat. Typical topics include description of motions, Newton's laws of motion, Kepler's law of planetary motion, universal gravitation, work and energy, conservation laws, temperature, heat, and laws of thermodynamics.

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Topics: Health and Natural Sciences, Environmental Science

Annual Science Symposium

Posted by Andy Cunningham on October 16, 2024 at 9:15 AM

The Biology, Chemistry, and Earth & Geographic Sciences departments held their annual science symposium yesterday afternoon at the Lisciotti pavilion in the Antonucci Science Building. This is an event where the science faculty, and students, present posters on their research to get students interested and involved in the sciences.

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Topics: Health and Natural Sciences, Environmental Science

Around Campus - Geographic Information System (GIS) for Criminal Justice

Posted by Andy Cunningham on October 8, 2024 at 12:15 PM

 Earth and Geographic Sciences Professor Jane Huang works with Criminal Justice students in her GIS (Geographic Information System) for Criminal Justice course in the Antonucci Science Complex.  The course introduces students to the theory and application of crime mapping and analysis in a GIS (Geographic Information System) environment. Students will learn the criminological theories that supports crime analysis and place-based policing. Students will also learn the basic skills of using GIS to create crime maps and to analyze crime patterns. 

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Topics: Criminal Justice, Health and Natural Sciences, Environmental Science

Around Campus - Oceanography Lab

Posted by Andy Cunningham on October 4, 2024 at 3:45 PM

Students in Earth and Geographic Sciences Professor Elizabeth Gordon's Oceanography class learn about the density and salinity of seawater in the Antonucci Science Complex. This course is designed to provide students with an overview of fundamental scientific concepts that describe ocean processes. Topics include marine geology (ocean basins, sediments), marine chemistry (properties of seawater), and physical oceanography (waves, tides, currents), with some discussion of biological oceanography.

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Topics: Health and Natural Sciences, Environmental Science

Around Campus - Ecology Lab, Research Project

Posted by Andy Cunningham on November 17, 2023 at 9:45 AM

Students in Environmental and Earth Science Professor Christopher Picone's Ecology Lab wrapped up a week long experiment involving the tomato horn worm feeding and growth. The subjects were fed a certain amount of natural or manmade food, and then they, and their waste, was weighed and recorded. Some subjects' weight increased 10X their starting weight.

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Topics: Programs and Majors, Health and Natural Sciences, Environmental Science

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