AI (artificial intelligence) is an interesting new technology with things you should think about before and while you use it. Also, please check out the Crown Center and Dean's office AI statements.
KCME's Michael Campion recently interviewed Susan Grace about her experience as a musician, her work at Colorado College and the Summer Music Festival. Listen to the conversation here.
A community can only function if all of its members feel safe, heard, and valued. Throughout the last year, Interim President Manya Whitaker and Cabinet have received feedback from students, faculty, ...
Advisory Board for the Matrix Center for the Advancement of Social Equity and Inclusion, University of Colorado, Colorado Springs (October 2014-present) David and Lucile Packard Professor, Department ...
My fiction and non-fiction work often explores humans in the process of negotiating a reality that seems absurd, alien, or unconsciously constructed out of fear and insecurity. These voices must ...
Tamara Bentley teaches broadly in the arts of China and Japan. Her research concentrates on relationships between visual and literary values in 17th century and 18th century Chinese and Japanese ...
** Students in isolation/quarantine: If you wish to work with a tutor remotely, please click on the Individual Tutor button below.
Contact Chelsea at [email protected] to schedule an online appointment. Chelsea is offering online support to CLD students and faculty working with CLD students Monday-Friday, 9:00-5:00.
Scott Johnson is a sculptor, photographer and installation artist interested in the relationship between perceptual experience and the ways we map and understand space. He recently installed three ...
Hong Jiang teaches Chinese language, Chinese Literature in Translation, and Asian American Literature. She received her B.A. from Fudan University in China and her Ph.D. from the University of ...
In the English Department I teach courses on Shakespeare and his contemporaries, as well as Intro to Poetry and LGBTQ literature. Two of the classes closest to my early modern theatrical heart are ...