A tiny worm can tell scientists much about genetics. And recently, the worm, Caenorhabditis elegans, helped teachers from Atlanta metro area schools learn ways to bring science, mathematics and English together to make a difference in the classroom.
More »
Results from a study conducted at Georgia State University suggest that a “fight” between bacteria normally living in the intestines and the immune system, kicked off by another type of bacteria, may be linked to two types of chronic disease.
More »
The U.S. Department of Education has awarded Georgia State University with a five-year $10 million grant to establish a new research center that will support research focusing on ways to improve adult literacy in the United States
More »
Student-athletes from 10 Georgia State teams will have the opportunity to participate in postseason play in the Sun Belt Conference in 2012-13, GSU Director of Athletics Cheryl L. Levick and Sun Belt Commissioner Karl Benson announced.
More »
Nineteen faculty members from the University of Baghdad will complete a month of classes at Georgia State University this week focused on improving their country’s universities and teaching methods.
More »
The Georgia Food Policy Council recently hosted a statewide meeting in Macon, Ga., to reinvigorate the conversation around food policy in the state. The Georgia Health Policy Center, in Georgia State University’s Andrew Young School of Policy Studies, coordinates the council.
More »
Business students get a hands-on preview of the 2012 Summer Olympic Games in London.
More »
The clock was ticking this summer as Honors College sophomore Fernando Furtado Mattos directed a crew from Georgia State University in short films he wrote and premiered at local film competitions: “Writer’s Block” and and “One Memory.”
More »
Georgia State University will become the new headquarters of the Oral History Association, a national organization dedicated to gathering and preserving historical information through recorded interviews.
More »
Georgia State University’s commitment to diversity is being recognized in
Diverse: Issues in Higher Education magazine this week, with GSU ranking No. 44 in the nation and No. 1 in Georgia for awarding graduate degrees to minority students.
More »
One night when he was 7, Art Vandenberg dreamed he was on a long ladder that reached into infinity, and all around him were stacks and shelves that stretched further than he could see.
More »
A GSU researcher discovers that the humble sweet potato plant may lead to kinder, gentler ways to fight cancer.
More »