Rather than teaching the business impact of artificial intelligence (AI), robotics and digital transformations as stand-alone topics, an S&T graduate course encourages students to consider an array of sources in forming their own opinion about technologies that promise to change the world.
Read More »During our 150th anniversary, many alumni accomplishments and stories were featured in celebratory publications. During Black History Month, we offer a look back at this selection of distinguished Black alumni and their outstanding achievements that show how students persevered and paved a way for others throughout S&T’s history. — Lelia Thompson Flagg, who earned a […]
Read More »Joshua Perkins, a junior at Missouri S&T, has long been interested in having a career as a computer engineer.
The reason why?
“Computer engineers pave the way for the future,” he says.
Read More »Remember the flying cars made famous in Hanna-Barbera’s futuristic cartoon, The Jetsons, that first aired in the early 1960s?
According to Dr. Xiaosong Du, an assistant professor of aerospace engineering at Missouri S&T, a similar mode of transportation will be an option for people needing a ride across larger cities in the next 5-10 years.
Read More »NOTE: This performance has been canceled. Leach Theatre will follow up about ticket refunds within 48 hours.
Read More »The future of construction engineering would benefit from more women – especially minority women – being inspired to join the field and share their perspectives, according to Remy Haire, a student at Missouri S&T.
Read More »The theme for National Engineers Week 2024 is “Welcome to the Future,” and two Missouri S&T alumni say this aligns perfectly with the focus of the large aircraft startup company they founded last year.
Read More »The key to advancing future technologies lies with one of the world’s oldest industries.
That message may sound counterintuitive at first glance, but Kate Johnson, a mining engineering student at Missouri S&T, says it makes perfect sense.
Submitted by Dr. Simeon Mystakidis for the CASE monthly newsletter: Dr. Simeon Mystakidis, an assistant professor in the Department of Physics, leads the Quantum many-body dynamics and technologies group. Previously, he served as an ITAMP (Institute for Atomic Molecular and Optical Physics) postdoctoral fellow at Harvard University, focusing on entanglement-based processes and magnetic phenomena in […]
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