While many people associate summer camp with tents or cabins, hikes in the woods, telling stories around a fire and roasting marshmallows, North Carolina Central University offers camps outside the traditional.
In late September, Assistant Professor Kristi Johnson, Ed.D., will head to the Blue Ridge Mountains to create a dance film. Johnson will gain nine days at Trillium Arts, an artist’s retreat on 22 rural acres.
Felder then turned his attention to Cuba. Cubans have not been able to buy an American car since 1962, when President Kennedy instituted a trade embargo.
NCCU's James E. Shepard Memorial Library is participating in “September 11, 2001: The Day That Changed the World,” an educational exhibition that presents the history of 9/11.
The inaugural T.R.U. Eagles program at North Carolina Central University, which supports rural and disadvantaged first-year students received a $10,000 donation from Amazon's Black Employee Network (BEN).
NCCU has been awarded $3.3 million by the U.S. National Science Foundation to support research and expand professional diversity in the field of advanced materials science.
NCCU has provided nearly $5 million in textbooks, e-book vouchers and laptop bundles to students with economic need. The funds came from the Higher Education Emergency Relief Fund, part of the CARES Act.
Siobahn Day Grady, Ph.D., turned a childhood interest in science into a career in computers and artificial intelligence, and encourages others to do the same.
Three senior Biological and Biomedical Sciences students say their summer research experiences provided essential skills they will need to pursue advanced degrees, despite challenges presented by COVID-19.