News Archive

School of Psychology grad student takes on deceptive digital technology with the help of his advisor, an assortment of synthetic media, and the work of a renowned British scientist
A photo of Julia Kubanek with advice on how to read scientific journal articles. The advice reads the following: "When you’re reading a scientific article in an area that is new to you, do NOT assume that the authors are way smarter than you. They just know facts and words that you don’t yet know. But you can look up essential facts and words as you go, and build your own understanding of a paper, even outside of your area of expertise."
The social media campaign #StraightToTheSource answered the community's questions by directly examining scientific findings with Georgia Tech experts.
The Graduate Record Examination will not be required for fall 2021 application into any College of Sciences graduate program. Additionally, three Sciences schools and two graduate programs have opted to permanently #GRExit.
Meditation
School of Psychology’s Paul Verhaeghen and UNG's Shelley Aikman win funding to continue studies of the science behind mindfulness meditation — and its physical and mental health benefits
diversity, equity, council, inclusion
More than 50 representatives from across the campus have been appointed by President Ángel Cabrera to the newly formed Georgia Tech Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Council.
Keith Oden, longtime Director of Academic Diversity for the College of Sciences, will retire after serving and building the Georgia Tech community for 35 years.
College of Engineering and College of Sciences leverage grant to drive diversity across all graduate programs
School of Psychology researcher wins NSF subcontract for measuring AI’s effectiveness in classrooms, along with funding for a U.S. Air Force-related project studying team dynamics in training
Staff advocacy and advisory group gets ready to meet to address challenges, opportunities for growth
Although the pandemic and travel visas interrupted schedules for several first-years who planned to study on campus this fall, accommodations in Shenzhen, China and Metz, France are helping students start their academic careers on time, with their peers.

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