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U of G Hosting Canada’s Biggest Teaching With AI Conference 

A graphic with the words Teaching With AI conference June 9-13, 2025

How is the rapid advancement of artificial intelligence disrupting and evolving teaching and learning? How can educators adapt their teaching and assessment strategies, now as well as prepare for the future? And what are some of the opportunities for harnessing this technology to re-examine teaching?  These are just some of the questions to be explored […]

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U of G Researchers Explore Techniques to Transform Environmental Monitoring

A scenic river landscape framed by tree branches with fresh spring leaves. The river sparkles under sunlight, bordered by a sandbar and a dense line of trees in the distance. Behind them rise dark green forested mountains with patches of lingering snow, all beneath a clear blue sky.

At the core of this research program is a partnership between the University of Guelph and Ecological and Regulatory Solutions. A cross-functional research program at the University of Guelph might hold the key to better environmental health assessments.  Dr. Robert Hanner, professor in the Department of Integrative Biology, College of Biological Science and director of the Biodiversity Institute for […]

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Fit Learning into Your Life: School of Continuing Studies Evolves to Meet Modern Learning Needs

The School of Continuing Studies might be based in Johnston Hall, but the scope and value of what it has to offer students at all stages of learning far exceeds the campus at the University of Guelph. “Our whole mission is to bring the world-renowned internal expertise we have at U of G to an […]

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Canisia Lubrin, Creative Writing Professor, Wins Carol Shields Prize for Fiction

A person with long, black braids wearing a black sleeveless t-shirt stands against a brick wall with one arm extended on a ledge.

Canisia Lubrin, professor and coordinator of the University of Guelph’s Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing, is the 2025 winner of The Carol Shields Prize for Fiction. Lubrin won for, Code Noir, and is the first Canadian to take home the prize. The Code Noir, or the Black Code, is a set of 59 […]

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Celebrating Asian and South Asian Heritage Month

Asian Heritage Month

As we celebrate Asian and South Asian Heritage Month this May, U of G proudly joins communities across Canada in recognizing and celebrating the rich contributions of Canadians of Asian descent to our country. Asian Heritage Month is an opportunity to honour the diverse histories, cultures, and achievements of Asian communities – East Asian, Southeast […]

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Diversity, Human Rights AVP Appointed to NATO Association of Canada Board

Johnston Hall against a partly cloudy sky.

Indira Naidoo-Harris, associate vice-president, Diversity and Human Rights, at the University of Guelph, has been appointed to the board of the NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization) Association of Canada. “I am deeply honoured and excited to join the board of the NATO Association of Canada, an incredibly important organization right now when it comes to […]

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U of G Divests From Fossil Fuels 

A field of green grass and trees on U of G campus; Johnston Green, a residential hall, can be seen in the background.

 The University of Guelph has completed its divestment from fossil fuel companies in its endowment portfolio, fulfilling a five-year, fossil-free divestment goal that began in April 2020.  Meeting the target date of early 2025, the Board of Governors has divested all of U of G’s endowment assets from companies that hold fossil fuel reserves.   The […]

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World’s Largest DNA Library Collects 15 Millionth Specimen 

large insects are pinned in a specimen drawer

A tiny beetle from Costa Rica has just made scientific history, becoming the 15 millionth specimen in an archive that underpins an effort to build a genetic reference library cataloguing all life on Earth.  That library lives at the Centre for Biodiversity Genomics (CBG) at the University of Guelph, which has an ambitious mission to collect, […]

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University Flags Half Mast for Day of Mourning

The flags in front of the University Centre are at half-mast.

In 1984, the Canadian Labour Congress established April 28th as the National Day of Mourning in Canada to remember and honour those who have died, been injured or suffered illness in the workplace.  The flags at U of G will be lowered to half-mast.  The day is traditionally marked in many ways including holding public […]

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University Flags at Half-Mast To Honour the Passing of His Holiness Pope Francis

Campus flags at half-mast in spring

Flags on the University of Guelph’s campuses are being flown at half-mast on Thursday, April 24 to mark the death of His Holiness Pope Francis, who passed away on Monday, April 21.  The flags will remain lowered until sunset on April 26 in accordance with the National Flag of Canada half-masting protocol.    […]

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Protein Destruction Enzymes May Hold Key to Treating Leukemia, Tuberculosis

Three researchers wearing white lab coats stand together in a laboratory setting, smiling at the camera. The researcher on the left has short, styled hair and is wearing purple gloves. The researcher in the middle wears glasses and a plaid shirt under their lab coat. The researcher on the right has long brown hair and a black shirt under their lab coat. Laboratory equipment and shelves are visible in the background.

New findings from University of Guelph researchers could help unlock better treatments for leukemia and tuberculosis, two deadly diseases that affect millions worldwide. These studies focus on specialized enzymes that destroy damaged proteins, a process essential for disease survival, and reveal how these enzymes can be switched on or off. In studies recently published in Nature Communications and Proceedings of the National […]

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