News
They inspire women to code and teach lifelong learning skills
When Laney Strange began her career in computer science as an undergraduate student at Simmons College, a women’s college, she almost forgot she was entering into a male-dominated field. “My first four years of computer science were collaborative and not competitive,” says Strange, an associate teaching professor of computer science at Northeastern. “I never felt […]
April 08, 2021
Co-op takes students around the world
A Co-op Biology assignment can transport you When Sophie Chaney went on her second co-op Biology assignment, she got in touch with a team of researchers, set up her own housing, and set off on an adventure of a lifetime. The fourth year biology student spent last spring in South Africa researching pollinators like bees, […]
December 21, 2016
Prof. Begley’s Students are engaged in Service-learning
Service-learning Expo First year students in Professor Begley’s Inquiries in Biology class have been engaged in Service-Learning throughout the fall semester and recently showcased their work at the university-wide Service-Learning Expo. The students partnered with: Citizen Schools to create and deliver an after-school apprenticeship on microbes at Orchard Gardens Middle School in Roxbury Science […]
December 13, 2016
Prof. Begley’s Students are engaged in Service-learning
Service-learning Expo First year students in Professor Begley’s Inquiries in Biology class have been engaged in Service-Learning throughout the fall semester and recently showcased their work at the university-wide Service-Learning Expo. The students partnered with: Citizen Schools to create and deliver an after-school apprenticeship on microbes at Orchard Gardens Middle School in Roxbury Science […]
December 13, 2016
Prof. Win Chai receives an NSF Career Award
Congratulations Prof. Chai on your 2017 NSF Career Award! In [his] years at Northeastern, Chai has helped – in collaboration with research groups at Harvard – provide techniques essential to understanding and driving future research in this field. These collaborative experiences were driven by resources provided by the College of Science, he says. “The College of […]
December 06, 2016
Northeastern women students mentor youngest scientists
Science Club for Girls The mission of Science Club for Girls, a nonprofit organization founded in Cambridge, Mass. in 1994, is to “foster excitement, confidence, and literacy in STEM for girls, particularly from underrepresented communities…by maximizing meaningful interactions with women mentors.” Volunteers have been mentoring at elementary schools since the mid ‘90s, but Northeastern was […]
November 17, 2016
Ovary regeneration in salamander could provide solutions to human infertility
Ovary Regeneration? In a study published in the journal Stem Cells, Northeastern University biology professor James Monaghan and his team have discovered that these salamanders not only have the capability of re-growing limbs, they can also regenerate their ovaries and produce eggs throughout their lifespan. “When we remove a large portion of the ovary, it […]
November 07, 2016
GMOs? Nobel laureate makes the case for Genetically Modified Organisms
If the thought of genetically-modified organisms, or GMOs, brings to mind vague notions fraught with danger, Nobel laureate and Distinguished University Professor Sir Richard John Roberts would say you needn’t worry. In fact, he argued Thursday at Northeastern that the perceived dangers of GMOs are the result of something of a smear campaign by green […]
October 31, 2016
Faculty Highlight: A look into Professor Erin Cram’s work
Faculty Highlight: Prof. Erin Cram The College of Science Graduate Program staff talks with Prof. Cram about her research at Northeastern University in this faculty highlight. Can you tell us about your current research? We have two current projects in the lab. They’re both overlapping with engineering projects. The first is to improve production of […]
October 17, 2016
Alumna Beth Stevens fights debilitating neurological diseases
Alumna Beth Stevens, BPH'93, discusses her cutting-edge research into the brain’s circuitry.
September 16, 2016
Biology PhD student Alison Wirshing wins International Award
Poster Award goes to . . . Alison Wirshing! Congratulations to Biology PhD student Alison Wirshing for winning the International Society of Differentiation Beverly McKinnell Student Award (and 1000€) at the Society for Developmental Biology Poster Competition this past weekend! Alison participated in the 75th Annual Meeting ISD 19th International Conference (http://sdbonline.org/2016mtg). After being selected […]
August 09, 2016
MRSA Studies: Scientists find new antibiotic in the human nose
MRSA Studies identify potential treatment from Bacteria found in the Human Nose Until now, conventional antibiotic discovery has focused on looking for compounds from bacteria living in dirt. But identifying novel compound structures from soil microbes has been getting harder. The new research, from Andreas Peschel and colleagues at the University of Tübingen, suggests that the […]
August 01, 2016
How serious is the threat posed by new superbug?
Last year, a team led by Northeastern professor Kim Lewis discovered teixobactin, an antibiotic that eliminates bacteria without encountering any detectable resistance.
June 07, 2016
Meet the graduates: Theo Bowe
"I would say that my biggest achievement at Northeastern was managing to balance all of the demands on my time needed to meet the academic and extracurricular goals I set for myself, while still managing to explore interests unrelated to these goals and to have fun."
May 06, 2016