Posted on March 30, 2026

A conductor leads student musicians in rehearsal at UNCG.
UNCG Professor Eric Willie.
Willie

Here at UNCG, student success is viewed through a holistic perspective that recognizes the connection between well-being, learning, and community engagement. Through the University’s wellness initiative Spartans Thrive, new projects are helping students connect wellness with their academic and personal lives. Among these efforts are the Spartans Thrive Engagement Grants, led by Provost Fellow Dr. Eric Willie and the Division of Student Success, which support innovative programs designed to integrate wellness into the academic and co-curricular experience.

This year, six innovative initiatives were selected as recipients of the Spartans Thrive Engagement Grants. These grants support programs to assist students in connecting wellness concepts with their academic work and everyday lives. For this academic year, these grants are focusing on three of UNCG’s Eight Dimensions of Wellness: career, environmental, and intellectual wellness.

Together, the projects highlight the creativity and commitment of UNCG educators and staff who are building a campus culture where students can thrive in their personal and professional lives.

Expanding Leadership Through Music

UNCG's Dr. Scott Glasser.
Glasser

In the School of Music, Dr. Scott Glasser’s Peer Artist Leadership Program (PAL) offers undergraduate music students an opportunity to progress their career readiness through teaching. Through PAL, string music education majors provide weekly lessons to middle and high school students from Guilford County Schools, hands‑on experience that prepares them for careers in music education.

The program operates through a multi‑layered mentorship model: graduate students mentor undergraduate instructors, and undergraduate instructors mentor younger musicians. This structure allows UNCG students to refine their teaching skills while serving the broader community.

“Programs like PAL give students a chance to practice leadership in real educational settings,” Glasser explains. “They learn how to communicate, plan lessons, and reflect on their own teaching while making a meaningful difference for local students.”

Beyond strengthening pedagogical skills, the program also encourages reflection on time management, professional growth, and personal well‑being, which are crucial elements for students preparing for demanding careers in education.

For more information on PAL events, please download the flyer here.

PAL Recital
Saturday, April 25
1 p.m.
School of Music Room 110

Student Leaders Promoting Wellness

UNCG's Dr. Joi Bulls.
Bulls
UNCG's Larissa Witmer.
Witmer

In the School of Health and Human Sciences, the Health & Wellness Event Series places leadership directly in the hands of students. Developed through the HHS Student Leadership Program led by Dr. Joi Bulls and Larissa Witmer, this initiative features a series of events designed and led by undergraduate students.

Activities such as Pilates sessions, nature walks, run clubs, and workshops about health and career initiatives encourage students to explore multiple dimensions of wellness.Each event includes concise educational components which translate how wellness practices can directly support their academic success.

The program allows student leaders to gain experience in project management, communication, and event planning while helping their peers discover new ways to manage stress, build and retain relationships, and remain active.

Building Resilient Leaders

UNCG's Dr. Jarrod Rudd.
Rudd
UNCG's Jordan Farmer.
Farmer

Another project focuses on leadership development through dialogue and reflection. The Office of Leadership and Civic Engagement Director Jarrod Rudd and Associate Director for Leadership Jordan Farmer will expand their Empower Hour programming by incorporating two nationally recognized LeaderShape workshops: “Courageous Dialogue” and “Resilience.”

These workshops are designed to help students develop emotional agility, strengthen communication skills, and navigate difficult conversations with empathy and respect.

Through guided discussions and interactive exercises, participants are exploring strategies for managing stress, adapting to change, and building stronger communities.

By embedding these workshops into an already existing leadership program, the initiative ensures that wellness‑focused leadership development becomes a recurring part of the student experience at UNCG.

For more information on “Building Resilient Leaders” events, please download the flyer here.

QR code.

Supporting Community Health and Mentorship

UNCG's Dr. Jaclyn Maher.
Maher

At the Center for Women’s Health and Wellness, Dr. Jaclyn Maher’s Active Girls–Healthy Girls program connects UNCG students with local youth in a powerful example of community engagement.

The program hosts a free spring break camp for elementary‑aged girls from Greensboro, focusing on physical activity, nutrition, confidence building, and mental wellness. This grant has enabled the development of a comprehensive training program for UNCG students who serve as camp counselors.

Through training sessions focused on teamwork, youth development, and leadership, undergraduate participants gain valuable experience in mentoring and health promotion. In turn, they will help create a positive and empowering environment for attendees.

Maher notes that the program benefits both groups. “Our students gain hands‑on leadership experience while the campers see role models who encourage healthy, active lifestyles,” she says.

Learn more about how “Active Girls-Healthy Girls” gets girls moving.

Encouraging Exploration Through Movement

UNCG's Dr. Hamid Nadir.
Nadir

For first‑year students adjusting to college life, maintaining healthy routines can be challenging. The “Spartans Walk for Wellness Challenge” aims to make physical activity both accessible and engaging for students living in residence halls.

Led by Dr. Hamid Nadir, assistant professor of information, library, and research sciences, the program encourages students to walk five miles per week across campus while documenting their journeys through photos of campus landmarks.

Participants log their progress through Spartan Connect.

The challenge promotes physical activity, helping students explore the campus environment while connecting with peers. By turning movement into a social and collaborative experience, this initiative is encouraging students to develop healthy habits during their first year at UNCG.

For more information on the “Spartans Walk for Wellness Challenge” events, please download the flyer here.

April 6–10: Jackson Library

April 13–17: Our Secretaries’ Garden

April 20–24: Peabody Park Woods Bridge

Exploring Belonging Through Dialogue and Storytelling

UNCG's Dr. Ana Hontanilla.
Hontanilla

The “Exploring Belonging Through Dialogue and Storytelling” initiative explores wellness through the lens of dialogue, culture, and community storytelling. Led by Dr. Ana Hontanilla and Dominick Hand, the project brings together students from courses in Languages, Literatures, and Cultures and African American and African Diaspora Studies.

Through a five‑week dialogue series, facilitated in conjunction with the Office of Intercultural Engagement, students will explore how language, history, and identity shape experiences of belonging.

Participants learn oral‑history techniques and collaborate with community partners to document local stories for the University’s Digital Greensboro archive.

By combining dialogue, scholarship, and community engagement, the project helps students develop empathy, communication skills, and a deeper understanding of cultural perspectives.

Holding Space for Many Languages
Wednesday, April 1, 5–6 p.m.
Weatherspoon Art Museum

A Shared Vision for Student Well‑Being

While each of the six projects approaches wellness in a different way, they share a common goal: empowering students to succeed academically while developing the habits, skills, and relationships that support long‑term well‑being.

Through mentorship, leadership opportunities, creative scholarship, and community engagement, the Spartans Thrive Engagement Grants demonstrate how wellness can be woven into the fabric of the University experience.

As these initiatives unfold throughout the year, they will continue to highlight the many ways UNCG faculty, staff, and students are working together to build a campus community where every Spartan has the opportunity to grow, connect, and thrive.

Latest News

May 22, 2026

Bassoon Professor Retools Concert To Help Young Musicians

A comment made by an alum to his former UNCG professor, Dr. Ryan Reynolds, got the latter thinking how he might put instruments in t...

May 21, 2026

How Bryan School Professor is Rewriting Narrative on Workplace Trauma

Inspired by stories from her loved ones and coworkers, Dr. Madelynn Stackhouse now helps businesses better understand how stress and...

May 20, 2026

UNCG Graduate Student Excels in Science and Leadership

UNCG graduate student Nooshin KianvashRad advances nanoscience research while leading campus initiatives and inspiring others throug...

What's Trending

Connect with Us

Subscribe to our Top 5

Subscribe today to our Top 5 Weekly email

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Share Your Story

For the Media

Posted on March 30, 2026

Chancellor Franklin D. Gilliam, Jr. with Greensboro Mayor Marikay Abuzuaiter, and Chef Aarti Sequeira.
Chancellor Franklin D. Gilliam, Jr. with Greensboro Mayor Marikay Abuzuaiter, and Food Network Chef Aarti Sequeira.

Food Network star leads teaching kitchen, judges Battle of the Chefs

Chef Aarti Sequeira traveled about an hour from her home in Raleigh to appear at UNC Greensboro on March 3. She also brought culinary inspiration from faraway lands: India and the Middle East, blended with American influences. 

Sequeira worked as a producer at CNN until 2003 before beginning her career in food television. Her first foray was on YouTube, where she perfected both her cooking techniques and on-camera persona in the first version of her show, “Aarti Paarti,” a name that has followed her since then. 

“It was before YouTube had ads,” she told the assembled crew of students at the Fountain View Dining Hall Teaching Kitchen. “Can you believe that?” 

They could not. 

In 2010 she became a contestant on the TV show “The Next Food Network Star,” and she won. She tells the students that winning the show helped launch her television career — and ultimately brought her to the UNCG campus to teach this cooking class and to judge Spartan Dining’s Spring 2026 Battle of the Chefs alongside Greensboro Mayor Marikay Abuzuaiter and UNCG Chancellor Franklin D. Gilliam, Jr. 

“It’s such a cool opportunity to talk about food. I will talk to anybody about Indian flavors and spices and dishes because I’m just so passionate about it,” she says. 

“When I was growing up, Indian food was seen as something that you only ate when you had a hangover, or the kind of thing that you only got as a buffet, and you ate as much as you could,” she says. “I spent so much of my life shaving off the edges of Indian culture and trying to make myself fit. So I am so grateful to be in this position, where I had the first Indian cooking show on the Food Network.” 

Chef Aarti Sequeira, Food Network star, hosted a cooking class at Fountain View Dining before judging the Battle of the Chefs.

In the teaching kitchen 

The hot plate is warming while old clips of the Food Network version of “Aarti Paarti” play on a TV screen mounted to the wall behind her.  

She’s here today, she tells them, to give a crash course in how to make a tomato chutney, pronouncing it “to-mah-toe” in her light British lilt. “Once you start making chutney,” she says, “people will think you are really fancy.” 

Though it sounds highbrow, Sequeira explains that chutney is a staple in Indian cuisine, coming in many forms. And it’s not unique to that part of the world. Ketchup, she says, is a form of chutney. 

The lessons continue as she expounds on the three kinds of mustard seeds and why we heat the oil before adding spices directly to it. “Spices are the introverts,” she explains. “They take a little more time and attention.” Then come the aromatics: onion, garlic, and ginger — the Indian trinity, she calls it. She extolls the virtues of black pepper, noting that at one time it was more expensive than gold. 

When the flavors start to come out, she tilts the pot toward the audience so they can smell it, then catches a glimpse of her younger self on the TV screen. 

“That was my favorite dress!” she says, gesturing to the old footage. “It was from Costco, you guys.” 

After the chutney bubbles to completion, she serves it to the students with grilled cheese sandwiches.  

“And that,” she says, “is baby’s first chutney.” 

The Battle of the Chefs 

The afternoon battle pits UNCG Police against UNCG Athletics and the Office of Student Affairs, with heavyweight competitors including Police Chief Chris JassoDirector of Athletics Brian Mackin, and Executive Director for Housing and Student Life Tim Johnson.  

Chancellor Gilliam said the event captured what makes UNCG unique. “What I love about tonight is that it reflects the richness of who we are at UNCG — a community that celebrates different cultures, traditions, and flavors,” he said. “Having Chef Aarti here to share her heritage through food is exactly the kind of experience we want our students to have.” 

More students arrive in the Fountain View Dining Hall as each team prepares three dishes under the theme of Elevated Tailgate Food, with the assistance of a chef mentor from Spartan Dining. Spartan Dining donated one meal to the UNCG Safe Food Fund for every attendee. 

“Battle of the Chefs is about more than cooking,” said Des St. Cyr, Marketing Manager for Spartan Dining. “It’s an opportunity to bring together campus departments, UNCG students, and the greater Greensboro community in a fun and engaging way that celebrates creativity, connection, and school spirit.” 

In the end, the UNCG Police emerged victorious under the tutelage of Spartan Dining Campus Executive Chef Darelle Bey. The team prepared an appetizer of prosciutto-wrapped jalapeño poppers stuffed with brie, a grilled ribeye sandwich entrée with chimichurri, and smashed lemon potatoes. People continued to talk about their dessert, a caramel-apple cheesecake eggroll, for days. 

Story by Brian Clarey, University Communications 
Photos by Sean Norona, University Communications 

Students line up in the UNCG dining hall to scoop food onto their plates.

We know what you’re hungry for.

Latest News

May 22, 2026

Bassoon Professor Retools Concert To Help Young Musicians

A comment made by an alum to his former UNCG professor, Dr. Ryan Reynolds, got the latter thinking how he might put instruments in t...

May 21, 2026

How Bryan School Professor is Rewriting Narrative on Workplace Trauma

Inspired by stories from her loved ones and coworkers, Dr. Madelynn Stackhouse now helps businesses better understand how stress and...

May 20, 2026

UNCG Graduate Student Excels in Science and Leadership

UNCG graduate student Nooshin KianvashRad advances nanoscience research while leading campus initiatives and inspiring others throug...

What's Trending

Connect with Us

Subscribe to our Top 5

Subscribe today to our Top 5 Weekly email

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Share Your Story

For the Media

Posted on April 08, 2026

Sunflowers on UNCG campus.

The Office of Sustainability and campus partners are hosting a number of events in the coming weeks to celebrate Earth Day on April 22 and Arbor Day on April 24.

  • April 15: Celebrate the 15th anniversary of the UNCG Community Garden with the Garden Club. It will be held 5–7 p.m. at the garden on 123 McIver Street.
  • April 17: Help the ongoing project to restore the native habit of Peabody Park Woods with a meeting to help clear invasive plant species. Community service hours can be registered via GivePulse. Volunteers should meet at 11 a.m. under the pedestrian bridge near the Music Building.
  • April 17: Join prize-winning Brazilian historian and Geography, Environment, and Sustainability (GES) graduate student Travis Knoll as he connects his United Nations climate change policy experience to environmental justice organizing since the 1980s. Join the conversation with UNCG and international collaborators virtually or over sustainably-sourced vegetables and pão-de-queixo, a Brazilian delicacy.
  • April 21: Attend an Environmental Justice Film and Discussion Panel from 5–7 p.m. in EUC Claxton. The film Unbreathable: The Fight For Healthy Air by Maggie Burnette Stogner details the challenges to ensure healthy air for everyone, weaving historical milestones of 50 years of the Clean Air Act with current day stories of environmental injustice.
  • April 22: Celebrate Earth Day on College Avenue. Campus clubs and programs, and community advocacy groups will gather from 11 a.m.–1 p.m. with information on how to get active in the community.
  • April 23: Attend a tree-planting and a walking tour from 1–2 p.m. Meet on the lawn on the south side of the Mossman Administration Building (near Spring Garden Street). After the tree planting, Dr. Paul Knapp of GES will lead a walk tour of UNCG’s edible landscape.

More details about all events can be found on the Office of Sustainability’s calendar.

Latest News

May 22, 2026

Bassoon Professor Retools Concert To Help Young Musicians

A comment made by an alum to his former UNCG professor, Dr. Ryan Reynolds, got the latter thinking how he might put instruments in t...

May 21, 2026

How Bryan School Professor is Rewriting Narrative on Workplace Trauma

Inspired by stories from her loved ones and coworkers, Dr. Madelynn Stackhouse now helps businesses better understand how stress and...

May 20, 2026

UNCG Graduate Student Excels in Science and Leadership

UNCG graduate student Nooshin KianvashRad advances nanoscience research while leading campus initiatives and inspiring others throug...

What's Trending

Connect with Us

Subscribe to our Top 5

Subscribe today to our Top 5 Weekly email

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Share Your Story

For the Media

Posted on May 18, 2026

UNCG audiology student Autumn McNeill takes hearing readings.

Students in the Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders conducted annual hearing screenings on School of Music students to ensure they are properly protecting their hearing. The cross-campus collaboration provides hands-on experience for audiology students while conducting a valuable service to UNCG musicians.

Latest News

May 22, 2026

Bassoon Professor Retools Concert To Help Young Musicians

A comment made by an alum to his former UNCG professor, Dr. Ryan Reynolds, got the latter thinking how he might put instruments in t...

May 21, 2026

How Bryan School Professor is Rewriting Narrative on Workplace Trauma

Inspired by stories from her loved ones and coworkers, Dr. Madelynn Stackhouse now helps businesses better understand how stress and...

May 20, 2026

UNCG Graduate Student Excels in Science and Leadership

UNCG graduate student Nooshin KianvashRad advances nanoscience research while leading campus initiatives and inspiring others throug...

What's Trending

Connect with Us

Subscribe to our Top 5

Subscribe today to our Top 5 Weekly email

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Share Your Story

For the Media

Posted on March 31, 2026

ResearchCON 2026 runs April 6–11 and showcases the full arc of research at UNCG from early discovery to global influence and community impact. Across these six days of programming, faculty, students, industry leaders, and community partners explore how research moves beyond the lab to shape healthcare, business, policy, and public life.

Latest News

May 22, 2026

Bassoon Professor Retools Concert To Help Young Musicians

A comment made by an alum to his former UNCG professor, Dr. Ryan Reynolds, got the latter thinking how he might put instruments in t...

May 21, 2026

How Bryan School Professor is Rewriting Narrative on Workplace Trauma

Inspired by stories from her loved ones and coworkers, Dr. Madelynn Stackhouse now helps businesses better understand how stress and...

May 20, 2026

UNCG Graduate Student Excels in Science and Leadership

UNCG graduate student Nooshin KianvashRad advances nanoscience research while leading campus initiatives and inspiring others throug...

What's Trending

Connect with Us

Subscribe to our Top 5

Subscribe today to our Top 5 Weekly email

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Share Your Story

For the Media

Posted on March 23, 2026

Smiling young male engineer wearing glasses and a navy sweater sits at a computer workstation in a modern laboratory, displaying 3D imaging scans and technical analysis on dual monitors; advanced manufacturing equipment and diagnostic machinery visible in the background.

When Jonah Tatsapaugh walked into the UNCG Human Diversity Lab in the Sullivan Building, he wasn’t just logging hours toward graduation. He was stepping into what he calls the highlight of his day — a space where he could ask questions, build solutions, and contribute to a project that is pushing the boundaries of what scientists know about human bone development.

A biology major with a minor in chemistry, Jonah spent the last three semesters developing an innovative method to analyze the microstructural growth of thigh bones of individuals aged 3 months to 18 years.

His project, titled “Filling in the Holes: An In-Depth Look at Microstructural Variation in Subadult Femurs,” uses cutting-edge imaging technology to build the first comprehensive 3D model of normal bone growth patterns in children and adolescents.

“Studying biology in the classroom is one thing, but researching — finding problems and looking for solutions — that’s what really excites me,” he says.

Jonah’s work uses fragile, historically-sourced bone samples from Jordan. Many of these samples come from archaeological contexts such as church ossuaries or burial pits, where they’ve been preserved long enough for detailed study.

Cutting-edge Tech

At UNCG, Jonah scanned these samples with the University’s high-resolution micro-CT machine, a sophisticated imaging tool that produces detailed 3D renderings at a level impossible to see on living humans due to radiation limitations.

UNCG acquired this machine only a few years ago, and Jonah is part of the first generation of researchers to build protocols around it.

Using the software program Dragonfly, Jonah analyzes porosity, thickness, and microstructural patterns within the bones — data that forms the foundation for understanding how healthy bones grow over time.

Baselines for Healthy Bones

While 2D bone histology has existed for decades, this is among the first attempts to establish a fully 3D developmental standard for subadult bone microstructure.

“We’re developing a baseline for what normal bone growth should look like,” Jonah explains.

Smiling young male engineer wearing glasses and a navy sweater sits at a computer workstation in a modern laboratory, displaying 3D imaging scans and technical analysis on dual monitors.

“Once we have that standard, we can compare it to bones affected by things like vitamin deficiencies, mineral deficiencies, or diseases that alter bone growth.”

One disease Jonah is particularly interested in is leprosy, a chronic infection that still exists today in South America, Asia, and Africa. The lab has access to one of the oldest physical specimens of leprosy in the world — an invaluable sample for studying how the disease has changed over centuries.

Jonah’s fascination with bone biology unfolded somewhat unexpectedly.

“I’m pre-dental, so I wanted something biological, something related to the body,” he says. “This project stood out because I could actually learn to use micro-CT technology and do the scans myself.”

What began as a technical curiosity quickly deepened into a passion. Working hands-on with specimens, refining imaging techniques, and troubleshooting complex questions in bone biology reshaped the way Jonah approaches science.

“It’s so exciting to come across something we don’t have an explanation for yet and then get to go find that explanation,” he says.

That excitement has been nurtured by his mentor, Dr. Gwen Robbins Schug.

“Working with Dr. Robbins Schug has been great!” he says. “She loves teaching and cultivating students’ interests. She guides me when needed but also gives me room to explore questions on my own. Having the freedom to ask my own questions and find their answers is extremely fulfilling.”

Inspiring Curiosity

When asked what he would tell other UNCG students who are considering getting involved in research, Jonah doesn’t hesitate.

“Get in there,” he says. “Look up professors and the research they’re doing, then go talk to them in person. It shows you’re interested and professors love talking about their research.”

He emphasizes that curiosity is one of the most important qualities an undergraduate researcher can have.

“If something doesn’t seem right or you have a question, look for answers,” he says. “A lot of the work I’m doing in this lab came from noticing things that didn’t have explanations. Now those answers are what I’m planning to publish at the end of the semester.”

He will carry his research experience into his next steps, whether in dental school or a future scientific career.

But for now, he is proud to have contributed something new to the field of bone biology, and to have done it as an undergraduate researcher at UNCG.

“This experience has shaped the way I think about biology,” he says. “Being in the lab, learning how to ask questions, and being part of something that hasn’t been done before — it’s been an incredible opportunity.”


by Sierra Collins, Division of Research and Engagement
photography by Sean Norona, University Communications

Smiling young male engineer wearing glasses and a navy sweater sits at a computer workstation in a modern laboratory, displaying 3D imaging scans and technical analysis on dual monitors; advanced manufacturing equipment and diagnostic machinery visible in the background.

Look beneath the surface

Latest News

May 22, 2026

Bassoon Professor Retools Concert To Help Young Musicians

A comment made by an alum to his former UNCG professor, Dr. Ryan Reynolds, got the latter thinking how he might put instruments in t...

May 21, 2026

How Bryan School Professor is Rewriting Narrative on Workplace Trauma

Inspired by stories from her loved ones and coworkers, Dr. Madelynn Stackhouse now helps businesses better understand how stress and...

May 20, 2026

UNCG Graduate Student Excels in Science and Leadership

UNCG graduate student Nooshin KianvashRad advances nanoscience research while leading campus initiatives and inspiring others throug...

What's Trending

Connect with Us

Subscribe to our Top 5

Subscribe today to our Top 5 Weekly email

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Share Your Story

For the Media

Posted on March 26, 2026

Promotional photo of Cat Keen Hock.
Cat Keen Hock

Throughout the year, faculty and staff share their expertise in talks, panels, conferences, and performances open to all their colleagues, students, and the community. The line-up for April will bring thought-provoking conversation starters about artificial intelligence and a month-long exhibition by School of Art faculty that sheds light on creative research and artistic inquiry.

ResearchCon

ResearchCON 2026 showcases the full arc of research at UNCG from early discovery to global influence and community impact. Across six days of programming, faculty, students, industry leaders, and community partners explore how research moves beyond the lab to shape healthcare, business, policy, and public life. With artificial intelligence as a cross-cutting force and engagement at its core, ResearchCON highlights a research ecosystem that is connected, innovative, and built for impact. It runs April 6–11.

Register and browse the schedule for topics of interest.

Presentations, Performances, and Exhibitions

Transforming Bach: QueerPassion, Pride and Community-Building at Bachfest LeipZig
April 1, Noon–1 p.m.
Curry Building, Room 231

Dr. Kailan Rubinoff, associate professor of musicology in the School of Music and cross-appointed faculty in Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, talks about how she used the Linda Arnold Carlisle Faculty Grant to support her ethnographic research among the QueerPassion musicians and audience who reimagined J.S. Bach’s St. John Passion.

Holding Space for Many Languages. Community Work with Multilingual Families
April 1, 5–6 p.m.
Weatherspoon Art Museum

This roundtable will explore stories, challenges, and practical strategies to build trust across languages and systems within our communities. Clinical Assistant Professor Doris Kroiss of the School of Education.

WEDOIT Accessibility Incubator
April 7, 11 a.m.–1 p.m.
School of Education Building, Room 302

This hands-on event is designed to help you enhance your course materials for better accessibility. Bring your syllabus, assignments, or any course content, and we’ll provide expert guidance and technical support! Whether you’re making small tweaks or big changes, we’re here to make the process easier.

Rethinking How We Talk About And Work With A.I.
April 9, 4 p.m.
School of Education Building, Room 206

Anthropomorphizing language can obscure the fact that replacing humans with machines does not lead to equivalent actions or interactions. In this session by Dr. Cristiane Damasceno, Communication Studies, presents a framework for understanding how technology changes the nature of tasks and prescribes behaviors. This is part of the Ashby Dialogues.

Science Everywhere
April 11, Noon–4 p.m.
Campus-wide

Kids and adults will participate in hands-on STEM activities hosted by multiple UNCG departments and programs. They can visit with scientists and connect with local groups to see how to get involved as a citizen scientist in the Triad.

Poster for art exhibition "New Frequencies" at Greensboro's Gatewood Gallery.

New Frequencies
March 26–April 24
The Gatewood Gallery, 527 Highland Avenue, Greensboro, NC 27412

New Frequencies presents a selection of works by Sandra Andrade, Rodgers Dameron, Blas Isasi, Kasia Ozga, Varun Saxena, and Leilei Xia. Over the past three years the UNCG School of Art has welcomed these six artists as new members of its Studio Art faculty. This group exhibition highlights a dynamic range of practices across sculpture, new media and design, animation, and interdisciplinary media, offering insight into the creative research and artistic inquiry shaping the work of these recently appointed faculty members.

Concert Band
April 22, 7:30–9 p.m.
UNCG Auditorium

School of Music’s Cat Keen Hock will serenade everyone with her clarinet in this show conducted by Patty Saunders.

Wind Ensemble
April 23, 7:30–9 p.m.
UNCG Auditorium

Wind down for the evening with a performance of Bach, Stravinsky, Edwin Franko Goldman, and more famous pieces by Ryan Reynolds on bassoon and conductor Jonathan Caldwell.

Latest News

May 22, 2026

Bassoon Professor Retools Concert To Help Young Musicians

A comment made by an alum to his former UNCG professor, Dr. Ryan Reynolds, got the latter thinking how he might put instruments in t...

May 21, 2026

How Bryan School Professor is Rewriting Narrative on Workplace Trauma

Inspired by stories from her loved ones and coworkers, Dr. Madelynn Stackhouse now helps businesses better understand how stress and...

May 20, 2026

UNCG Graduate Student Excels in Science and Leadership

UNCG graduate student Nooshin KianvashRad advances nanoscience research while leading campus initiatives and inspiring others throug...

What's Trending

Connect with Us

Subscribe to our Top 5

Subscribe today to our Top 5 Weekly email

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Share Your Story

For the Media

Posted on March 31, 2026

Outside of the UNCG Johnson Alumni House.

The Marcus T. Johnson Alumni House reservation books for the 2026-27 academic and fiscal year opened on Monday, March 30. Please submit all requests through the “Alumni House Reservation” inquiry form located on the Alumni House webpage.

It includes information about the building’s event spaces as well as rental policies and prices for campus departments and organizations.

If you have any questions, please contact Alumni House Manager John Comer at 336.256.1466 or jfcomer@uncg.edu.

Latest News

May 22, 2026

Bassoon Professor Retools Concert To Help Young Musicians

A comment made by an alum to his former UNCG professor, Dr. Ryan Reynolds, got the latter thinking how he might put instruments in t...

May 21, 2026

How Bryan School Professor is Rewriting Narrative on Workplace Trauma

Inspired by stories from her loved ones and coworkers, Dr. Madelynn Stackhouse now helps businesses better understand how stress and...

May 20, 2026

UNCG Graduate Student Excels in Science and Leadership

UNCG graduate student Nooshin KianvashRad advances nanoscience research while leading campus initiatives and inspiring others throug...

What's Trending

Connect with Us

Subscribe to our Top 5

Subscribe today to our Top 5 Weekly email

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Share Your Story

For the Media

Posted on March 25, 2026

as student walks up the steps to a building

Before seniors Ava Hall and Cameron Dupree graduate in May, they’ll have accomplished a significant feat. The two presented at the Honors Symposium sponsored by UNC Greensboro’s Lloyd International Honors College on March 20.

The hybrid conference requires students to compile research papers in any discipline but written for a general audience. Both Hall and Dupree are excited for the opportunity to present their research to non-experts and are in the process of rehearsing and receiving feedback.

The Art of the Written Word

An internship at the North Carolina Museum of Art inspired Hall to examine how the HIV/AIDS epidemic shaped the gay arts community in the United States. The studio art major was working on a pop-art exhibition, which included artists such as Andy Warhol and the group General Idea, who were active during the 1980s and ’90s.

That summer Faculty Emeritus Dr. Omar Ali suggested she conduct undergraduate research. Hall was already making connections between the art she was studying and the artists influential during the AIDS crisis. For her paper, “Silence = Death,” she evaluated how their work responded to the epidemic.

Hall’s paper emphasizes how artwork as a form of protest drew attention to the queer community and the epidemic at a time when both were stigmatized and even ignored by the Reagan administration. Hall presented slides of the artwork addressing how it functioned as activism.

“I’m definitely feel very proud of what I’ve done to get this far and by committing to a symposium, because it’s a little nerve-wracking at first to present your own research and your own ideas to an audience, but it’s a great opportunity,” says Hall. “It will make me feel more confident when other opportunities arise.”

Hall has been an Honors ambassador since her sophomore year and served as the committee chair of admissions events during her junior year. She cited her trip to Denmark, which expanded her “perspective on art, history, and culture,” as another consequential opportunity.

“I’m very grateful to the Honors College for creating opportunities for students to explore their interests through research and creative work,” says Hall. “If there’s any opportunity that’s available during your time at UNCG, I always say try and seize it. It will help you professionally grow into what you want to become and give you those next steps.”

Emphasizing the Importance of Good Communication

Like Hall, Dupree is an arts enthusiast, but biochemistry is his chosen professional path. He conducted a literature review resulting in a paper titled “Testosterone: Gender-affirming HRT for Transgender Men and Trans Masculine Non-Binary Individuals.”

“So, basically anybody who has a transgender identity and wants to go on hormone intervention to masculinize their appearance,” says Dupree.

Writing for his medicinal chemistry course, Dupree explored the development of testosterone formulations used in patients and how those came to be. He said it was a lot of “getting into the weeds” of the chemistry and biochemistry of how these drugs create the effects they do.

His desire to serve transgender patients as a physician assistant drew Dupree to the topic. “I think the transgender patient population deserves more support,” he said.

Once he graduates, he’ll apply to physician assistant school. In the meantime, he says his medical assistant and phlebotomy certifications will provide him with opportunities to work in a doctor’s office.

“Any public speaking experience is good and helping me improve my communication is important because obviously when I’m working in a medical setting, communication is the most important thing,” says Dupree. “Finding a way to gather ideas and present information clearly and concisely is really valuable.”

He’s enthusiastic about research because it allows one to apply class content to an area of interest or can pave the way for other undergraduate research opportunities.

“It also aids in general curiosity,” says Dupree “Being able to form questions and figure out the way to get answers, because it’s hard to formulate search queries and find the specific answer that you’re looking for. And sometimes you have a question, and you realize that nobody’s figured out the answer yet, and so it just becomes more fire to promote more research in the area as well.”

Dupree also enjoys Honors College book hikes and getting out in nature. In addition to reading and creating art, he’s a teaching assistant for Chem 101 and works drawing blood at North Carolina A&T State University for their research studies. He says studying abroad in Sweden was “the best opportunity that [he] ever seized!”

“The Honors College has been amazing! They’ve given me so much!”

Written by Alexis Richardson

Photography by Sean Norona

Two students walk outside of a red brick building.

Immerse Yourself in Opportunity & Excellence

Latest News

May 22, 2026

Bassoon Professor Retools Concert To Help Young Musicians

A comment made by an alum to his former UNCG professor, Dr. Ryan Reynolds, got the latter thinking how he might put instruments in t...

May 21, 2026

How Bryan School Professor is Rewriting Narrative on Workplace Trauma

Inspired by stories from her loved ones and coworkers, Dr. Madelynn Stackhouse now helps businesses better understand how stress and...

May 20, 2026

UNCG Graduate Student Excels in Science and Leadership

UNCG graduate student Nooshin KianvashRad advances nanoscience research while leading campus initiatives and inspiring others throug...

What's Trending

Connect with Us

Subscribe to our Top 5

Subscribe today to our Top 5 Weekly email

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Share Your Story

For the Media

Posted on March 26, 2026

Drone light show over UNCG reads

Thanks to the generosity of donors, the campaign exceeded its goal by 33 percent. Students are already feeling the impact, with more than 1,000 having received scholarships, and thousands more will follow in the years to come.

Latest News

May 22, 2026

Bassoon Professor Retools Concert To Help Young Musicians

A comment made by an alum to his former UNCG professor, Dr. Ryan Reynolds, got the latter thinking how he might put instruments in t...

May 21, 2026

How Bryan School Professor is Rewriting Narrative on Workplace Trauma

Inspired by stories from her loved ones and coworkers, Dr. Madelynn Stackhouse now helps businesses better understand how stress and...

May 20, 2026

UNCG Graduate Student Excels in Science and Leadership

UNCG graduate student Nooshin KianvashRad advances nanoscience research while leading campus initiatives and inspiring others throug...

What's Trending

Connect with Us

Subscribe to our Top 5

Subscribe today to our Top 5 Weekly email

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Share Your Story

For the Media