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Friday, January 24

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24
Jan

Global Game Jam at USU

Student Activities

USU's Department of Computer Sciences hosts the 24-hour "Global Game Jam 2025" (GGJ25) on campus in ENGR 101 and 103, from Friday Jan. 24, at 3 pm until Saturday, Jan. 25, at 7 pm. All USU students are invited to this free event to create a brand new game with coding, art, music, video, logic and any other creative skills. Breakfast is provided. Bring your own team or come solo. The awards ceremony is Saturday, Jan. 25 at 6 p.m.

During the event all the resources from the Innovation Lab (https://library.usu.edu/innovation-hub/) will be available for free to the participants.

From 1/24 at 3:00 pm to 1/25 at 7:00 pm | Merrill cazier Library |
24
Jan

College of Science Faculty Research Roundtable

Panel Discussion/Presentation

College of Science Faculty Members are invited to the college's inaugural Research Roundtable Friday, January 24, 2025, from 3:30-5 pm in LSB 231. (Break-out sessions will be held in additional, adjacent rooms.) The event will be centered around specific research themes, with the intent of informing participants about each other's research endeavors and fostering collaborations.RSVP at: https://usu.co1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/SV_5tkWkAXccqpgZ2S Questions? Contact Dr. Susannah French, Associate Dean of Faculty and Research at susannah.french@usu.edu. See less

3:30 pm - 5:00 pm | Life Sciences Building |
24
Jan

Science Unwrapped: Celebrate Undergrad Research - Biologist Jessica Habashi

Panel Discussion/Presentation | Science Unwrapped

Science Unwrapped, the public STEM outreach program of USU's College of Science, invites inquiring of minds of all ages to participate in science learning fun. Admission is free. Each event begins with a brief science talk following by hands-on learning activities and refreshments. Our Spring 2025 theme is "Celebrate Undergrad Research" in recognition of USU's 2025 "Year of Undergraduate Research." Jan 24 Speaker: Jessica Habashi is a champion of undergraduate research. Some years ago, the biologist noted a real-world program at the USU Brigham City campus and saw it not only as a challenge to be investigated, but as a meaningful research experience for students. The challenge? Bird-window collisions on the Brigham City campus. Bird-window collisions are often not though about as a major problem, Habashi says, yet the phenomenon is threatening bird populations worldwide. Habashi and are students are studying how often these mishaps occur and how to mitigate them. In the process, Habashi is teaching scholars how to design, organize, fund, conduct and present scientifically valid research projects.

7:00 pm - 8:30 pm | Eccles Science Learning Center Auditorium |
8
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