ASU to temporarily cancel in-person classes because of coronavirus
ASU has transitioned all in-person classes to online effective March 16, due to concerns of COVID-19, known as the new coronavirus.
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ASU has transitioned all in-person classes to online effective March 16, due to concerns of COVID-19, known as the new coronavirus.
ASU has limited University travel to California, a University official said, and has required that all international University-related travel be approved by ASU officials, ASU’s coronavirus update page said.
ASU transitioned the in-person classes of over a hundred professors to an online-only program Thursday as part of its efforts to plan for the possibility that students would have to work remotely due to the spread of COVID-19, commonly called coronavirus.
Arizona will receive $500,000 in initial federal funding to help support the state in its response to COVID-19, the Arizona Department of Health Services said in a press release Wednesday.
A new presumptive case of COVID-19, better known as coronavirus, was confirmed in Arizona Tuesday morning.
ASU has canceled all Spring 2020 study abroad programs in Italy and South Korea due to the spread of the COVID-19 virus, commonly called the coronavirus.
ASU will plant a carbon sink and learning forest on the West campus in the fall 2020 semester to minimize the university's carbon footprint as part of its sustainability goals.
ASU’s Creative Health Collaborations was awarded $150,000 from the National Endowment for the Arts to form a new lab called the Caregiving Research Lab, which will conduct research on the impact the arts have on individuals in three different caregiving situations.
Editors Note: This story contains strong language that has been censored throughout.
In an effort to improve the accessibility of online coursework for students with disabilities, ASU introduced a tool called Ally to Canvas that allows course documents to be downloaded in different ways.
The Sound and Well-Being Humanities Lab course hosted a sound bath Tuesday afternoon.
During the past two weeks, four candidates vying for the position of dean of the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication have visited with students and faculty, making cases for themselves and their plan for the school's future.
ASU faculty and students at the New College of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences have developed a new flu surveillance system using Twitter.
ASU President Michael Crow testified before the Arizona Senate Appropriations Committee Tuesday afternoon to discuss the state's budget and how increased higher education funding would benefit the state's economy.
A new garden on the Polytechnic campus will provide students with fresh fruits, vegetables and flowers.
A team of graduate students from the School of Sustainability was awarded $6,000 for their project, “The Circular Classroom” from Microsoft.
A new class is being introduced to the Humanities Lab this spring that will focus on the social justice issues surrounding energy sources and the energy industry.
On Nov. 2, the ASU student-built satellite "Phoenix" was one of seven student-made CubeSats launched into space by NASA aboard a rocket.
The Acoustic Ecology Lab at ASU is using sounds to further progress in the understanding of climate change while also bettering people's quality of life.
Nine ASU students were planning to attend the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Chile this December, but after the relocation of the conference due to protests in the country, students had to scramble to rebook flights and housing.
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