New partnerships, breakthrough discoveries and student success made it a year to remember
Arizona State University took great strides forward in 2018, cementing partnerships to further student access and success, facilitating groundbreaking scientific research and earning prestigious awards and grant funding. The university snagged its fourth-straight "No. 1 in Innovation" title. It cut the ribbon on Biodesign C. It even renamed a college.
And above all, Sun Devil students, faculty and staff remained committed to serving their community. Here's a look back at the top stories of 2018.
Discoveries
ASU researchers and their teams pushed knowledge forward this year, publishing work in many fields, including microplastic pollution, nanomedicine, the gig economy and man's best friend.
ASU researchers found that science students appreciate when instructors tell jokes in class, but that female and male students differ in what topics they find funny or offensive.
ASU scientists, in collaboration with researchers from the National Center for Nanoscience and Technology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, successfully programmed nanorobots to shrink tumors by cutting off their blood supply.
Multiple theories abound as to why Arizona is independent from daylight saving time. To get to the truth, ASU Now asked Calvin Schermerhorn, a history professor in the School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies.
Every year, about 45 million Americans rely on contact lenses to see the world more clearly. Every day, these plastic lenses are tossed away. ASU scientists are reporting the first nationwide study that shows consumers may be unknowingly contributing to plastic pollution.
Matt Buman, associate professor in ASU’s College of Health Solutions, served as one of nine special consultants for the 2018 Physical Activity Guidelines Advisory Committee Scientific Report.
A team at ASU analyzed a huge data set from an online labor market and discovered that women earn less than men in technology work — primarily because of the women’s choices in seeking jobs.
After 12 years of experimental effort, a team of scientists, led by ASU School of Earth and Space Exploration astronomer Judd Bowman, has detected the evidence of the earliest stars in the universe.
Image by N.R.Fuller/National Science Foundation
Arizona Impact
From the 100th anniversary of an infamous Arizona shootout to the groundbreaking of an innovative new concept in intergenerational living, ASU is embedded in both Arizona's past and future. This year saw the expansion of ASU Prep, an initiative for resilient cities and powerful steps forward in how we educate our young people.
Mirabella at ASU is a 20-story senior living facility on the Tempe campus. The new concept in intergenerational living and lifelong learning will link the ASU community to the residents, who also will be able to take classes.
This is the story of the Power brothers. One of the West’s most amazing tales, it’s mostly unknown except by Arizonans of a certain age. And it began with a bloody shootout at dawn a hundred years ago.
Photo courtesy of the Power Brothers Notebook housed at ASU's Special Collections
ASU Prep South Phoenix PCA opened with nearly 700 students in kindergarten through 12th grade on three campuses south of Broadway Road. The school was formerly Phoenix Collegiate Academy, which was launched in 2009 by three teachers, one of whom was an ASU graduate.
Calling the linear system of schooling archaic, ASU President Michael Crow said at the “Minding the Skills Gap: The Future of Education in the Future of Work" talk that people should be able to access education at any point in their lives so they can shift from career to career.
The Valley of the Sun is uniquely positioned to seize upon discoveries that are happening at ASU, especially at the Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering with more than 450 faculty and researchers in six multidisciplinary schools.
ASU senior and Prescott City Council member Alexa Scholl was one of 59 college students from around the country to be named as a 2018 Truman Scholar. The scholarship comes with as much as $30,000 toward graduate study.
While the nation’s schools continue to struggle to retain teachers, many Mary Lou Fulton Teachers College alumni are finding reasons to stay, advancing their careers and finding joy in classrooms.
With a grant from Virginia G. Piper Charitable Trust, ASU scientists have begun a new initiative that aims to make the people and communities of Maricopa County more resilient so that when a shock hits, they can get back to their normal lives as quickly as possible.
Photo by Margaret Hinrichs/ASU Decision Theater
ASU News
It was a year of change for the university — though that No. 1 in innovation ranking stayed the same. ASU unveiled the newly renamed Watts College of Public Service and Community Solutions, introduced Sanjeev Khagram as the new dean and director-general of the Thunderbird School of Global Management and inked a partnership to extend student access to Uber's top drivers.
U.S. News and World Report named ASU the most innovative school in the nation, recognizing the university’s culture of groundbreaking research and partnerships, as well as its commitment to helping students thrive.
ASU appointed Sanjeev Khagram, a world-renowned expert in global leadership, the international political economy, sustainable development and the data revolution, as the director-general and dean of Thunderbird School of Global Management.
Uber and ASU partnered to provide a pathway to a fully funded college degree for thousands of drivers and their families. The education program will be available to eligible Uber drivers in eight pilot locations, including Phoenix, through ASU Online.
Though Mike and Cindy Watts' business was about machines, they knew that their company’s real assets were the people. Today, the Watts family is continuing to invest in people with a gift that will further ASU’s mission to increase access to higher education.
The Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law at ASU welcomed a record-setting class of new students. With a median GPA of 3.76 and a median LSAT score of 163, the 2018 fall JD class came in even more highly credentialed than the 2017 class, which had set top marks for the law school.
Times Higher Education world university rankings represent the only global performance tables that measure research-intensive universities across core missions: teaching, research, knowledge transfer and international outlook
The ASU 365 Community Union project got off to a rocking start with a series of concerts. The stadium renovation was just one of many projects completed this year, and the stadium also got a new accessory: a pitchfork statue.
Photo by Anya Magnuson/ASU Now
Sun Devil Life
Campus life at ASU saw a lot of exciting changes in 2018, among them a complex of brand-new living and working spaces for Greek Life members on the Tempe campus, a unified home for the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and the introduction of Dutch, ASU Police's new puppy who will grow to be a comfort animal for crime victims.
The student-housing complex, at Rural and Terrace roads east of the Tempe campus, houses about 950 fraternity and sorority members in a cluster of townhouse-style dwellings.
Nikki Beaudoin was excited to be accepted to ASU’s College of Nursing and Health Innovation. Tragically, before she could enter the program, she passed away. Her family has created the Nicole Brittany Beaudoin Nursing Scholarship to honor her memory.
ASU President Michael Crow, ASU Librarian Jim O'Donnell and other VIPs gathered at the Hayden Library concourse for a ceremonial "groundbreaking" on the renovation of the university's largest library.
The newest member of the ASU Police Department will focus on crime victims, not perpetrators. But first he must be housebroken. Dutch, a 3-month-old Labrador retriever, joined the department as its first trauma dog.
Not only did more ASU students get into high-status programs, they’re also winning awards that have never gone to Sun Devils before — including ASU's latest Rhodes Scholar.
Ivy League professors Cornel West and Robert George are political opposites, but they are good friends who have taught together for 11 years. They spoke at ASU on Jan. 26 about "Truth-Seeking and Freedom of Expression."
Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU Now
Solutions
How do online biology students get lab experience? Solved. How does a classic car enthusiast keep his Thunderbird from overheating? Solved. Finding answers to problems facing our community and the world remains a strong focus for ASU's scholars and students.
Every day, black people have to dispel stereotypes and convince everyone that they’re worthy; it’s hard work, every day, according to Elijah Anderson, a Yale University sociology professor who spoke at ASU.
Most people go to college to broaden their horizons. U.S. Air Force veteran Christopher Ames went back to Arizona State University with a laser focus to solve one particular problem: His 1956 Ford Thunderbird was overheating.
Catchy but inaccurate health headlines can find endless life on social media. College of Health Solutions Associate Professor Matt Buman collaborated on an investigation that debunks one insidious health myth: that sitting is the new smoking.
Mexico has progressed rapidly over the past generation thanks to better education, according to Vicente Fox, a businessman and the former president of Mexico. Fox, who served from 2000 to 2006, delivered the final keynote address at the ASU + GSV Summit in San Diego.
An online class at ASU lets students draw blood and manipulate DNA — in virtual reality. Students in the general biology course are using VR headsets to complete their lab requirement as part of a new partnership among ASU Online, Google and Labster.
There is a Great Transition underway, a colossal shift from fossil fuels to wind, plants, natural processes and our sun. ASU is tackling energy research with more than a hundred experts working on every aspect imaginable.
Biodesign C, a five-story, 191,000-plus-square-foot building, gives scientists even more space for groundbreaking research, with high-quality wet lab space arranged in an open layout that encourages collaboration. It will also be home to the world’s first compact X-ray free-electron laser.
Photo by Charlie Leight/ASU Now
Global Engagement
Between a stacked lineup of Fulbright and Cambridge scholarship winners, the opening of the Ambassador Barbara Barrett & Justice Sandra Day O’Connor Washington Center at ASU and visits from world-renowned journalists and philosophers, it's no wonder ASU was also named the top choice among public universities for international students this year.
ASU had 14 students in the U.S. government’s flagship educational exchange program for 2017-18. Among public universities, ASU ranked seventh in student Fulbright awards, while among all research institutions, ASU was 23rd.
ASU Now live-blogged from the opening week at the Ambassador Barbara Barrett & Justice Sandra Day O’Connor Washington Center at ASU. Check out highlights, photos and video of the panels and events celebrating ASU's new home in Washington, D.C.
ASU is ranked as the top public university of choice for international students according to the 2018 Open Doors Report on International Educational Exchange. This is the fourth consecutive year that ASU has topped all public universities on the list.
ASU and the National WWII Museum have announced the launch of a new online master’s degree program in World War II studies. The fully accredited online Master of Arts degree will provide 30 hours of coursework taught by the world’s top WWII scholars from both ASU and the museum.
Photo courtesy of the National WWII Museum in New Orleans
Anderson Cooper, the anchor of CNN’s “Anderson Cooper 360” and a correspondent for “60 Minutes” on CBS, was the recipient of the 2018 Walter Cronkite Award for Excellence in Journalism.
When news came that a monastery was to be permanently shuttered, a group of ASU-led researchers spent years fighting to preserve its treasure trove of previously unknown texts.
ASU science historian and bioethicist J. Benjamin Hurlbut offered a long-view societal perspective to address the safety, risks and ethics of the newly announced — and unregulated — gene-editing of infant Chinese twins.
Photo by J. Benjamin Hurlbut/ASU
Creativity
Poetry. Art. Needlework? Sun Devils find creative expression in many forms. This year they found it in music therapy for a senior center, making customized T-shirts at Innovation Day and, for one professor and poet, in a MacArthur "genius" grant.
ASU poet Natalie Diaz was named one of 25 winners of this year's John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation fellowships, commonly known as MacArthur "genius" grants. She explores how language can exist in our bodies and shape identity.
“You cannot derive the kind of change you want. You have to build a new model,” said ASU President Michael M. Crow in a March TED Talk-style discussion about the university’s vision of the future.
Music-therapy students from ASU spent six weeks during spring semester working with clients at the Tempe Adult Day Health Services center sparking memories and encouraging movement and laughter.
Miki Garcia wants to pull the curtain back on the formality of art exhibits by encouraging a more interactive experience. Also this year, ASU partnered with LACMA to increase diversity in museum professionals.
Of the 18,891 classes offered at ASU, PHY 498: Workshop in Perception Technology stands out. It’s taught by theoretical physicist and Nobel laureate Frank Wilczek. It’s about color, and you have to know some stuff to take it (but not everything).
The rankings proclaim it. The double-decker bus wraps brag about it. And the ASU community came together to celebrate Innovation Day on Nov. 16, in a university-wide celebration of the efforts of faculty, staff and students to try new things and take on grand challenges.
Professor Maureen Goggin of the Department of English explored early 20th-century needlework items made by feminists and suffragettes to pull together the strands of rhetoric, activism and delicate handiwork with not-so-delicate messages.
Entrepreneurship
The entrepreneurial spirit of ASU was off the charts this year: Startups crushed it at Demo Day and the Innovation Open, the university moved up in the global patent rankings and scores of students made full use of ASU resources to launch their products and businesses.
Hoolest Performance Technologies, made up of three ASU engineering students, won the grand prize at the entrepreneurial competition, beating out four other student-led ventures.
Most nanotechnology startups don’t have the money to buy the kinds of processing and testing equipment they need. Enter the NanoFab user facility on ASU’s Tempe campus.
ASU graduate Justin Hillsten and W. P. Carey School of Business senior Holly Hillsten — his sister and startup co-founder — debuted the DrainFunnel on Kickstarter in August.
ASU ranked No. 17 of all universities worldwide for U.S. patents awarded, according to a report by the U.S. National Academy of Inventors and the Intellectual Property Owners Association. ASU earned 100 patents in 2017, up from 62 the previous year.
Local business Mr. Misters is working to bring the cooling experience of misting systems to boaters. During academic year 2017-18, Mr. Misters partnered with students at the Polytechnic School to develop misters for small watercraft.
Arizona Microcredit Initiative, a nonprofit organization whose members are all ASU undergraduates, strives to help local, underserved entrepreneurs start and run their businesses through business development workshops, one-on-one consulting and microloans.
For many entrepreneurs in the ASU community, the journey to success is personal. Many such startups created by the ASU community won thousands in funding for technology, devices and social programs at this year's Demo Day.
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