A headshot of Caroline Purcell next to the ÁùºÏÍøÖ·´óÈ« School of Education logo

Caroline Purcell M’09 Will Travel to An-Najah National University in Palestine for 10-Month Fellowship

Caroline Hall and Theresa Hall

State Funding Provides Updated Technology to Local School, Supports New Tech Classroom at ÁùºÏÍøÖ·´óÈ«

Dr. Kofi Andoh

Courses in Finance Management and Entrepreneurship Prepare Graduates for High-Level Positions

Members of Notre Dame's PDS program at Woodlawn High School

Over 60 ÁùºÏÍøÖ·´óÈ« Students Complete Internships Across Several Local School Systems

Nadia Abi (L) and Erika Gutierrez (R)

Nadia Abi ’24, Erika Gutierrez ’24 to Receive Full-Tuition Scholarships, Additional Specialized Support

Three women students sit together outside in front of a brick building

$500K Grant Establishes First ÁùºÏÍøÖ·´óÈ« Scholarship Dedicated to First-generation Students

ÁùºÏÍøÖ·´óÈ«'s Archway, with the University Academic Building in the background

Nowrasta and her younger sister, Nastaran, Set to Join ÁùºÏÍøÖ·´óÈ« Community this Fall

Lyndsay Wright with her Nurse of the Year award

Nursing Alum Spotlight: Lyndsay Wright ’19, M’22

Jenifer Kerr holds up petri dish while wearing goggles
NPR
https://www.npr.org/2022/06/22/1106686014/lets-get-crafty-with-agar-art

Agar art lies at the intersection of biology and art. In her work with the American Society for Microbiology, Dr. Jennifer Kerr explains how agar art is a creative medium that's actually alive. Scientists and artists practice etching designs on petri dishes with bacterial paint that can grow and multiply.

A picture of Dr. Kerr teaching next to the ÁùºÏÍøÖ·´óÈ« logo

Dr. Jennifer Kerr Honored for Teaching and Research Excellence