If America's consumers must be warned of possible food and drug dangers, why shouldn't education consumers be warned of the pitfalls of standardized value-added assessments of their students?
Environmental engineering graduate student Tingting Gao wins a prestigious scholarship from a national industry association based on her research to help alleviate air pollution.
Candacy Lindsay has all the makings of a leader – the assistant director of Sponsored Projects Service recently completed a year-long leadership training program, approaching the project with great enthusiasm and diligence.
Former U.S. Secretary of Labor Robert Reich will deliver this year’s John P. Frank Memorial Lecture at 7 p.m., March 19 in the Evelyn Smith Music Theatre on ASU’s Tempe campus.
The ASU Alumni Association is honoring faculty members and alumni involved in solving challenges with world-changing consequences at its Founders’ Day Awards Dinner.
Some of the top minds in the business, legal, academic and policy worlds are addressing how to improve trade relations between the United States and China at a series of invitation-only forums sponsored by ASU and the nonprofit Kearny Alliance.
Some of the greatest minds in science, including six Nobel Laureates, will gather to discuss the origins of everything, from the universe to humanity, April 6, in ASU Gammage.
Edging the rim of the Grand Canyon and paving the way for geoscience education, the world's largest geoscience interpretative exhibit nears completion.
In a lecture, titled "Private Faith/Public Faith: Religion and Government," Daisy Kahn addressed questions about how Americans perceive Islam and what Muslims believe about violence and the relationship of faith and government.
Extreme Speech and Democracy, a book edited by law professor James Weinstein and British barrister Ivan Hare, recently has been published by Oxford University Press.