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Healing Comes Home: TBRI® Practitioner Training Returns to TCU Campus After Nearly a Decade

KPICD welcomes cohorts of professionals to Texas Christian University for flagship TBRIĀ® Practitioner Training.

photo of chemistry students with masks and social distanced

National Chemistry Week Goes Virtual With the Help of TCU Students

Due to social distancing regulations, National Chemistry Week looked a little different this year, but was a success nonetheless. For the past 10 years, DFW Chemistry Organizations have come together to serve the local community through a collaborative effort at the Fort Worth Museum of Science and History (FWMSH). Thanks to volunteers from universities and high schools in the area, these organizations have served more than 27,000 museum guests.

November 2, 2020, by Anne Reneslacis
photo of Loucks

A Look Into Space: Alumna Lieutenant Colonel Loucks Shares Her Story

Lieutenant Colonel (LTC) Diana Loucks ’96 graduated with a bachelor’s degree in mathematics and a minor in astrophysics from TCU. She went on to earn a master of science degree in 2008 and a Ph.D. in 2017 - both in aerospace engineering sciences, from the University of Colorado Boulder. She was commissioned at TCU in December 1996, and is married to fellow Army officer Lieutenant Colonel Gary Loucks.

October 22, 2020, by Anne Reneslacis, CSE communications intern

Institutes Collaborate and Lead NIH-Funded Research

The Institute of Behavioral Research (IBR) and Karyn Purvis Institute of Child Development (KPICD) have been awarded $4,460,305 of funding from The National Institute of Health (NIH) for the continuation of their project, ā€œPreventing Opioid Use Among Justice-Involved Youth as They Transition to Adulthood: Leveraging Safe Adults (LeSA).ā€

October 22, 2020, by Anne Reneslacis, CSE communications intern

Energy Institute Launches Energy Poverty Initiative

The TCU Energy Institute’s mission is to promote energy research and knowledge about the energy industry, management, and related technologies through an integrated approach to examine the future of energy resources. This fall, the institute started an initiative on energy poverty led by Richard Denne, Hunter Enis Endowed Chair in Petroleum Geology and Director of the TCU Energy Institute.

October 22, 2020, by Anne Reneslacis, CSE communications intern

Chemistry Boot Camp Benefits Students in the Classroom

The online, six-week program was offered free of charge, and was designed for students to work at their own pace. The faculty and student leaders provided 1-2 hours of lecture and office hours each week.

October 21, 2020, by Anne Reneslacis
woman holding a bird

Working with Endangered Species: A Bird's Eye View

Carolina Granthon ’12 (MS ’15) graduated with bachelor’s degrees in biology and chemistry and a minor in French. Originally from Peru, Granthon took a year off to pursue an internship in the Peruvian rainforest before returning to TCU and receiving her master’s degree in biology in 2015. During her internship in Peru, Granthon learned to capture tropical birds in nets (mist-netting) and find their nests, as well as monitor nesting macaws.

October 13, 2020, by Anne Reneslacis, CSE communication intern

Alumnus Barrington Hwang '14

Barrington Hwang ’14, a Dallas native, graduated from TCU as a triple major with degrees in chemistry, economics and biology. He also received a Fulbright grant for a yearlong position in Taiwan as an English Teaching Assistantship post-graduation.

September 14, 2020, by Anne Reneslacis
Photo of food in the kitchen

Studying Nutrition During COVID-19

As TCU prepares for a socially distanced fall semester, CSE professors have adjusted courses to best serve students and their academic goals. Associate Professor of Professional Practice Rebecca Dority is using the unique circumstances of the COVID-19 pandemic to incorporate new components to her Contemporary Issues in Nutrition course.

July 29, 2020, by A. Stafford
photo of Elizabeth Trexler and family in a production facility

Engineering Student Helps Family Business Design Face Coverings

As the COVID-19 outbreak spread across the globe in early 2020, Elizabeth Trexler, junior engineering major, had the opportunity to help her family’s knitted fabric manufacturer business pivot to produce cloth face coverings.

July 28, 2020, by A. Stafford

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