Workshops & Seminars
- Gain first-hand insight into one of the most-talked-about considerations in the workforce: work-life balance. Set up your career—and life—for success with advice and inspiration from panelists at this free networking event on April 19.
- This free workshop for international graduate students helps participants learn how to effectively express empathy amid failure or loss and compliment and congratulate in times of success. Register to attend.
- Unlock the magic of Shakespeare’s language with the Colorado Shakespeare Festival’s wildly popular summer acting programs: Camp Shakespeare (ages 9–18) and Shakespeare’s Sprites (ages 6–9).
- Do you teach with PlayPosit? The Office of Information Technolgy is hosting a series of interactive training sessions on using PlayPosit in new and innovative ways.
- Learn what to do in an active harmer situation using the Run, Hide, Fight response protocol. Open to all students, faculty and staff, no registration is needed; simply show up ready to learn.
- In this virtual skill building “lunch and learn” presented by Jenn Mahoney, learn where defensiveness comes from, explore what the likely triggers are, and discover a plan for how to disrupt it in the moment.
- Researchers from all disciplines, practitioners from any organization and members of the community and general public are welcome to attend the second in a series of forums dedicated to research conducted in the immediate aftermath of the 2021 Boulder County fires.
- The Research & Innovation Office is launching its spring Faculty Development and Workshop calendar for 2022. Faculty are encouraged to explore the full range of offerings for the rest of the semester, including the faculty writing opportunities.
- Compassion practices offer a way to extend care to ourselves and others, to replenish our energy and inspiration, and to help build resilience as we grapple with the impacts of life. This virtual session includes a guided practice and group discussion.
- In the Difficult Dialogues series, the Center for Humanities & the Arts and the University Libraries will facilitate a discussion of what it means to make a mistake and then repair the harm that happens when we mess up with our friends, peers, co-workers, family or on social media.