New to Blackboard? This is the training for you! We will show you how to create, upload and edit content, including a review of the feature-rich content editor. We’ll suggest valuable ideas, short cuts, and tips designed to save you time and energy managing your online class.
Workshop / Seminar
February 2020
Jianghao Zhang received his bachelor’s degree from Beijing University of Chemical Technology and his master’s degree from the Chinese Academy of Sciences.
Presented by Shawn Ringo and Jason Sampson, WSU Environmental Health & Safety
Please join us for a lab safety seminar presented by representatives from the WSU Environmental Health & Safety (EH&S) office.
In this training, you will learn to use this tool to proactively engage students in reading and provide a focus of conversation with automatically graded annotations.
The Department of Physics and Astronomy invites you to a colloquium featuring Dr. Shruti Puri, faculty candidate. Dr. Puri will present their talk, “Quantum Error Correction with Schrödinger Cats.”
Zoom allows users to communicate through web cam, chat, and screen share.
Garry Smith is a 3rd year Ph. D student in Chemical Engineering. He began in Fall 2017 after earning a National Institutes of Health (NIH) Protein Biotechnology Traineeship, providing him with two years of funding and the opportunity to rotate in several labs over the first year.
The Department of Physics and Astronomy invites all to a colloquium featuring Dr. Michael Pretko, Faculty Candidate.
In this training, we explain different grade center set up options, show how to grade and comment on student work, and demonstrate how to use the electronic rubric.
The Department of Physics and Astronomy invites all to a colloquium featuring Dr. Bihui Zhu, Faculty Candidate. Dr. Zhu will present their talk, “Controlling ultracold quantum matter out of equilibrium.”
Join your colleagues this Presidents Day for an opportunity to learn about and experience what innovative practices WSU faculty are doing in their classrooms.
The Department of Physics and Astronomy invites you to a colloquium featuring Russell Bisset, Faculty Candidate. Dr. Bisset will present their talk, “Quantum gases and the next generation of quantum liquids.”
Electronic rubrics reduce grading fatigue and ensure more consistent judging criteria. In this session we will cover rubrics, assignments, and SafeAssign.
This award-winning panel of WSU faculty will discuss their personal experiences in their journey towards educator excellence.
The largest moon around Neptune, Triton, is a unique celestial body that has a rarified atmosphere, active geysers as high as 8 km that leave plumes suspended in the atmosphere that can drift down wind for over 100 km, and could potentially have tholins.
Review concrete ways to establish buy-in from administrators, faculty, and staff when pioneering initiatives from the ground up. T
The Department of Physics and Astronomy invites all to a colloquium featuring Dr. Yong Chen, Department of Physics and Astronomy Purdue University.
Ready to do more with your panopto lectures?
Graeme Henkelman is a professor of chemistry at the University of Texas at Austin. He did his undergraduate work in physics at Queen’s University in Canada, a PhD in chemistry at the University of Washington, and a postdoc at Los Alamos National Lab before starting at UT over ten years ago.
Dr. Jason Umans will provide a brief history of our developing understanding of hypertension’s central role in cardiovascular disease, kidney disease, and stroke.
In this training, you will learn how to engage students in robust asynchronous conversations as they interact with their peers.
This training will provide a review of Blackboards full array of powerful question formats and setting options that allow you to precisely control and manage delivery of online assessments.
Fluid-membrane interaction (FMI) problems involve the interaction of flexible bodies or membranes like flexible airfoils, parachutes, and sails, with fluid flows.
The Department of Physics and Astronomy invites all to a distinguished colloquium featuring Dr. Philip Marston, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Washington State University.
Want to familiarize yourself with the video conferencing technology in your classroom?