By Ari Massefski, Class of 2015
When Sarah Freeman-Woolpert graduated from high school in 2010, she had already decided to attend the George Washington University. But Ms. Freeman-Woolpert...
Browse past GW Today articles in our archives.
By Ari Massefski, Class of 2015
When Sarah Freeman-Woolpert graduated from high school in 2010, she had already decided to attend the George Washington University. But Ms. Freeman-Woolpert...
Research Advisory Board Convened
As GW continues to focus on raising its research profile and attracting first-rate faculty and students, a new Research Advisory Board, an initiative of the Office of the Vice President for...
GW Helps Students With Disabilities Excel Academically
By Ari Massefski, Class of 2015
Alexa Dectis has spinal muscular atrophy – a disease that means her body cannot regrow stem cells after they die, causing her to progressively weaken. When...
By Laura Donnelly-Smith
It’s safe to say that GW Assistant Professor Pinhas Ben-Tzvi, director of GW’s Robotics and Mechatronics Laboratory, is pretty comfortable in his roles as a...
GW Research Team Examines Gender Equality in New Report
A new report on gender equality in employment in the United States and Switzerland reveals women in both countries still face a lot of workplace challenges.
Released by George Washington...
With Finals Approaching, ‘Chalk-In’ Draws Crowd
Chalk in hand, George Washington students took to H Street on Tuesday, turning their pent-up stress into artistic masterpieces on a canvas of city street cement.
Hundreds of students...
GW Expands Advanced Nursing Education in Rural Virginia
Nurses living in the Shenandoah Valley will now have an opportunity to earn advanced degrees from the George Washington School of Nursing through a new partnership with Dabney S. Lancaster...
With a combination of live music, audio clips of historic interviews and discussion among Duke Ellington experts, the GW community commemorated Foggy Bottom’s most famous and influential native on...
By Danny Freedman
For a generation of blacks looking in from the tattered margins of American life, and for a TV network known for buttoned-up fare, the PBS show “SOUL!” shattered the mold...
Controlled Blasting Begins at Science and Engineering Hall Site
As part of the excavation required for construction of the Science and Engineering Hall, once-daily controlled blasting activities are planned for weekdays beginning today, and will continue for...