Four faculty members at Missouri S&T were honored with the Post Tenure Review Excellence Award. This award is granted to faculty who excel in scholarship and teaching through the five-year review period after achieving tenure. The recipients are:
Read More »Dr. Fatih Dogan, professor of ceramic engineering and interim director of the Center for Research in Energy and Environment, is working with leaders across the country to discuss and develop climate change solutions. His recent efforts include participating in the White House Campus and Community-Scale Climate Change Solutions forum.
Read More »Missouri S&T celebrated faculty excellence at an awards banquet Dec. 8 on campus. Honorees include:
Read More »Dr. Jeff Smith, professor of ceramic engineering, received the American Ceramic Society’s Outstanding Educator Award.
Read More »Dr. Bill Fahrenholtz, Curators’ Distinguished Professor of ceramic engineering and director of the Materials Research Center, was a plenary speaker at the “Ceramics in Europe” conference held July 10-14 in Krakow, Poland.
Read More »Dr. Greg Hilmas, Curators’ Distinguished Professor of ceramic engineering, was elected and inducted as an Academician into the World Academy of Ceramics. The Academician distinction is to “reward and honor individuals who have made an international renown significant contribution to the advancement of ceramics culture, science and technology.”
Read More »Dr. Richard Brow, interim deputy provost for academic excellence, has accepted a one-year appointment as special assistant to the provost for academics effective Sept. 1.
Read More »Dr. William Fahrenholtz, Dr. Gregory Hilmas, and recent S&T Ph.D. graduate Dr. Alec Murchie co-authored a paper that was named one of the best papers of 2021 by the Journal of the American Ceramic Society (ACerS).
Read More »Jecee Jarman, a 2018 graduate in civil engineering from S&T and a current Ph.D. student, won third place in the student presentation category of the National Space and Missile Materials Symposium (NSMMS) and Commercial and Government Responsive Access to Space Technology Exchange (CRASTE).
Read More »The success of NASA’s future plans to explore and inhabit the moon may depend in part on research by university students, including a team of seven from Missouri S&T who have won a grant from the space agency to develop a way to remove lunar dust.
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