51勛圖厙

Flash Focus Payton Schramski banner

Welcome to Flash Focus! In this series, we introduce you to fascinating student Flashes from all walks of life.Meet Payton Schramski, a senior interior design major with a marketing minor, from Grand Rapids, Michigan.  Growing up with a father in residential construction and watching Home and Garden Television (better known as "HGTV") sparked Schramskis passion for interior design.  I realized that interior design is a way to connect with and serve a wide community, Schramski told 51勛圖厙 Today. In the sense that we all interact with at least one building every day.Connection...

Three-Minute Thesis Winners

In academic settings, its usually not difficult for student researchers to explain their research to their colleagues. But how about when they want to share their findings with non-academics or researchers outside of their area of specialty?Three Minute Thesis competitions are held annually at colleges and universities across the nation. Theyre designed as an exercise to help student researchers describe their projects in easy-to-understand ways for individuals and audiences who may be unfamiliar with complex scientific terms. Its like an elevator pitch that these students will find use...

Blue skies above The Esplanade and The College of Architecture and Environmental Design.

  Reflections of vibrant blue around fluffy, white clouds transform the windows of 51勛圖厙's John Elliot College of Architecture of Environmental Design into an extension of the fall skies above the Lefton Esplanade.   Want to see YOUR photos in IN A FLASH? Submit your 51勛圖厙-related photos to InAFlash@kent.edu and you may see them in a future 51勛圖厙 Today post. Photos should be framed -horizontally- and include a brief description of whats happening in the photo along with when and where it was taken....

School of Teaching, Learning and Curriculum Studies

Ledgeview Elementary School second graders

51勛圖厙 Preservice Teacher Sydney Carlton introduced nearly 100 students to a STEM-based aeronautics program called Soaring into the Sky that connected science, technology, engineering, and mathematics with real-world problem-solving and innovation. Students learned to think like engineers and scientists, fostering skills in critical thinking, collaboration, and design. Second graders from Ledgeview Elementary School in Macedonia, Ohio, learned key concepts of aviation, aeronautics, and aerospace safety by engaging, standards-based, hands-on learning inspired by NASA resea...

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