Students have so much power at Ohio State. Their voices can be heard by faculty, staff, instructors and deans all over the university, and all it takes is one unified cause. What’s a...
What if you had the chance to follow a dream you’d put off for more than 40 years? That’s the situation Suzanne Minnich faced when she retired in 2015 from her long career serving children and adults with disabilities.
If you’re a history nut or even a Buckeyes superfan, there’s always more to learn.
The Ohio State University is inviting all of Buckeye Nation to celebrate the university’s sesquicentennial with a free online course commemorating its 150-year history.
It’s time, it’s finally time for you to start your own blog. It’s the perfect platform for writing stories, sharing photos, and engaging with friends, family and even strangers.
When course concepts are constantly changing, a traditional textbook becomes outdated quickly. That’s why Assistant Professor Brian Partido decided that an electronic book, or e-book, would be the right course material for his students.
The June 27 edition of the Enterprise Project Digest was shared with the Ohio State community to provide updates about the project’s work. Check out the EP Digest archive to read the full June issue.
Highlights of this issue: (1) A Day in the Life of Tammy Ament; (2) Celebrating e-Builder Launch; and (3) Business Decisions Webpage.
The Enterprise Project Digest is distributed monthly, and those who are interested in additional information are encouraged to subscribe.
When new Buckeyes open their Digital Flagship iPads for the first time, Visual Communication Design Student Anne Knellinger’s wallpaper image will be there to greet them. Knellinger is using her design education and lifelong Buckeye experience to help new students connect with the university from day one.
Kara Johnson, Content Generation Intern at Nike. Sounds pretty awesome, right? Kara used free design tools on her iPad like Adobe Spark to land her dream internship.
You’re a graduate research assistant working in a lab. You enjoy the work, and some of the research you helped with gets published. There’s just one catch: the principal investigator left your name off the paper. What do you do? Quit the lab? Confront the PI? Go to the dean? Trash them on social...
The day-to-day work of state authorization can be tedious, but it protects the value of each student's education.
Maintaining state authorization for The Ohio State University requires constant work. The state authorization team regularly reviews regulations, submits information to regulators, shares disclosures with current and prospective students, and reports collected student location data. This diligence helps maintain Ohio State's authorization to offer online and on-ground activities nationwide.