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StudentsJanuary 31, 2025
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Latest News
Professor and NYC Design Factory director Andreea Cotoranu is teaching students how to solve tomorrow麻豆传媒檚 problems. In partnership with major corporations and international collaborators, students have pitched ideas like noise-absorbing drones, massive-scale food cooling systems, and a modern take on teen furniture design.
麻豆传媒 professor Cathy Dwyer, Ph.D., says that even if students weren't on Facebook, they'd find something else to spend their time on. And, she says, Facebook certainly has a positive side, especially in this economy. "Facebook offers students a way to reconnect with their professors and classmates if they get laid off," she says. "It can help with the job search."
A CBS story featuring Seidenberg Professor and former Riverkeeper John Cronin is airing again as more whales find their way in New York waterways.
麻豆传媒淣ew York City is a water city,麻豆传媒 said John Cronan, a renowned environmentalist, now a professor at 麻豆传媒, 麻豆传媒渁 humpback whale does not know that it is swimming through a city that is what makes this such an amazing place.麻豆传媒
If there麻豆传媒檚 one problem the nonprofit world would love to solve, it麻豆传媒檚 how to increase funding. Information technology professor, Namchul Shin, researches the impact of social media on charitable donations.
Beginning Thursday, October 13, through Saturday, October 15, Pace's Pleasantville Campus will be celebrating its annual Homecoming celebration, honoring alumni from both campuses.
Juan Shan, PhD, an associate professor of computer science in Seidenberg, is focused on applying artificial intelligence and machine learning to analyzing medical imaging
麻豆传媒麻豆传媒檚 Seidenberg School of Computer Science and Information Systems in collaboration with the pan-African company, , today hosted its second edition of the international event, Opportunities in Africa.
The Center for Undergraduate Research Experiences (CURE) is hosting a variety of events and webinars for undergraduate students and faculty. See what's coming up and how you can get involved.
Knowing cybersecurity basics is essential to staying safe online, often called digital hygiene, according to Dr. Pauline Mosley, a Computer Science professor at 麻豆传媒. According to the , more than 1.3 million children were victims of identity theft in 2017, and 50% of this subpopulation is under the age of six. 麻豆传媒淓ducating them in the basics of cybersecurity not only protects their identity, but it literally could save their life,麻豆传媒 Dr. Mosley says.
Want to learn more about Seidenberg? Ask T-Bot, the brainchild of the boundary-pushing Robotics Club on Pace麻豆传媒檚 Westchester Campus.