Events & Exhibits
The Boulder Faculty Assembly is pleased to invite members of the campus community to attend this year’s ceremony in celebration of the recipients of the 2025 BFA Excellence Awards.
The next Politics & Pizza session—the first this semester—will let students and others discuss the relationship between business and politics.
Jennifer Doudna, 2020 Nobel Laureate in chemistry, will present the 54th George Gamow Memorial Lecture, “Genome Editing the Future: Improving Human and Planet Health with CRISPR.” The lecture is free and open to the public.
For the past decade, Hebrew classes at CU Boulder have hosted a novel event described as a rite of passage: the Schmooze-a-Palooza—part concert, part community-building and part celebration of Hebrew and song. Anyone with an interest in Hebrew is invited.
The Office of Academic and Learning Innovation continues its free series, BoulderTalks: Insights from Education Innovators, with a workshop and presentation by guest speaker Tawnya Means, assistant dean for education innovation at University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.
Five years after CU Boulder’s campus closure, a panel will reflect on the lasting effects of COVID-19 and how art helps process crisis and healing. This event is free and open to the public.- An all-time tongue twister, the “Major-General’s Song” is the most beloved tune from what is perhaps the most beloved operetta of Arthur Sullivan and W.S. Gilbert: "The Pirates of Penzance." Attend March 14–16.
The School of Education has partnered with the Cultural Events Board and acclaimed Indigenous artist Danielle SeeWalker on a community mural to provide inspiration in the Miramontes Baca Education Building. Join an unveiling event on March 11.
Top student and faculty startups founded by women will pitch their business ideas to a panel of esteemed judges and you, a live audience. Come support the next big CU Boulder innovations as we give away $15,000 in funding.
CU Boulder is hosting a roundtable examining Indigenous materials in the curriculum and the library, centered on the book “Indigenous Materials in Libraries and the Curriculum.”