Daily Archives: September 30, 2015

3 Day Startup Austin

3 Day Startup Austin is a 3-day program that teaches entrepreneurial skills to university students in an extreme hands-on environment. During the event, you learn how to start a company in 72 intense hours with talented peers and amazing mentors. You’ll form teams, develop a startup idea, conduct market research, create a prototype, and pitch to investors by Sunday night. The event is free for participants, open to all majors (undergrads, grads, and current working professionals), and we’ll provide food for all three days. The fall 3DS Austin program will take place November 6-8 at Capital Factory. If you’re interested in participating or learning more, please visit austin.3daystartup.org to apply by October 17.

Texas Student Research Showdown

The Oct. 5 deadline is fast approaching for submissions to the Texas Student Research Showdown! All undergraduate researchers at The University of Texas at Austin are invited to create a 2-minute video recap of their work, to be voted on by UT students. The top submitters will present to a live audience and judging panel Nov. 12 for a chance to win up to $1,500 in awards.

Please join us for a workshop on creating short research videos Tuesday, Sept. 29 from 3:30-4:45 in the PCL Media Lab (register here).

The Showdown is open to any current UT undergraduate involved in research or creative activity in any major. Your work can be an independent project, or a collaboration to which you have made substantive contributions.

The 2015 Texas Student Research Showdown Final Round is scheduled for Thursday, Nov. 12, 2015 at 3:30-4:30 p.m. in the Avaya Auditorium (POB 2.302).

For more details, visit http://www.utexas.edu/ugs/our/showdown.

Is Grad School for Me? Graduate School Fair Information

During the Grad Fair on October 6th, there will be panel discussions with UT faculty and with current grad students. The panels will talk about the benefits, challenges, and realities of graduate school, to help you decide if grad school is for you! Join us from 10:30 – 11:30am and from 12:30 – 1:30pm.  Student and faculty panels will be held simultaneously in the Sinclair Suite and Quadrangle Room.  You are welcome to attend one or both sessions!

 

Both events are free and open to all students! Click here to register. Registration is encouraged but not required.  

 

Graduate School Fair

October 6

10:00am-2:00pm

Texas Union Ballroom

 

Is Grad School For Me?  

October 6

10:30am-11:30am

12:30pm-1:30pm

Faculty panel (Texas Union, Sinclair Suite): Hear from faculty members in different areas who can tell you what they look for in successful applicants, how they select students, and the different kinds of funding available to students.  

Student panel (Texas Union, Quadrangle Room): Current graduate students can tell you what it is like to be a graduate student on the UT campus.  They can also give tips on how to apply to graduate schools and what to expect when dealing with programs.

Panel: Women in Energy: Perspectives on Business, Law, Policy & Science

The Kay Bailey Hutchison Center for Energy, Law, and Business
at The University of Texas at Austin Presents

“Women in Energy: Perspectives on Business, Law, Policy, and Science

A panel moderated by Sylvia Kerrigan and featuring Claire Farley, Stephanie Hildebrandt, and Dr. Peggy Wilson Ph.D.


Friday, October 30, 2015, 1:30-2:30 PM
The University of Texas at Austin
Avaya Auditorium, POB 2.302
201 East 24th Street
Austin, Texas  78712


ABOUT THE EVENT

Women in Energy Panel moderated by Sylvia Kerrigan (Marathon Oil Corporation), featuring Claire Farley (KKR & Co. L.P.), Stephanie Hildebrandt (Norton Rose Fulbright), and Dr. Peggy Wilson Ph.D. (retired Mobil Oil Corporation). The panel will focus on perspectives on business, law, policy, and science. For more information about our speakers, visit our website.

Refreshments will be provided.


REGISTRATION
Attendance is free, but seating is limited and an RSVP is required. To register for this event, remember to click on the bright green button that says “Register” on this registration page.

*Lecture is free and open to the public. 

20th annual undergraduate poster session on Capitol Hill

Dear student researchers,

In the Spring of 2016 the Council on Undergraduate Research (CUR) will host its 20th annual undergraduate poster session on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC.  There will be an evening poster session and reception where students will have the opportunity to speak directly to members of Congress and demonstrate how they have been impacted by program supporting research.

Submission Process: Applications due Wednesday, November 4, 2015, including letter of recommendation

Students: The Council on Undergraduate Research invites students to submit an abstract for the 20th Annual Posters on the Hill. Your research should represent one of CUR’s Divisions (Arts and Humanities, Biology, Chemistry, Engineering, Geosciences, Health Sciences, Mathematics/Computer Science, Physics/Astronomy, Psychology, and Social Sciences). Abstract submissions should describe your research, scholarship, or creative activity and discuss its significance to society (i.e. what larger issues or problems were you trying address or understand?; how does your work relate to current policy issues?).

Review Process:

Reviewers are CUR members and Councilors in our disciplinary divisions. Your application will be reviewed by these individuals within the same discipline as you indicate on your application. The reviewers are asked to consider:

The readability of the abstract to an educated audience outside of the discipline

The student’s demonstrated ability to present to a non-technical audience

The technical merit or methodology of the project

The broader interest of the project

Is the research complete or is it reasonable to assume that the research will be completed by April?

The primary selection criteria include:

project quality, (e.g. timeliness, level of completion, and interest to both the scholarly and general communities),

communication skills (e.g. being understandable by any educated person), and

disciplinary and geographical distribution.

It is unlikely that more than one student project will be selected per school, but up to four students may be associated with a project. The University of Texas at Austin has an institutional membership to the Council on Undergraduate Research, so there is no need for submitters to have an individual membership.

For more information on the submission process, please visit http://www.cur.org/conferences_and_events/student_events/posters_on_the_hill_call_for_abstracts/

Robert V. Reichle, Ph.D.

Senior Program Coordinator

Office of Undergraduate Research

School of Undergraduate Studies

The University of Texas at Austin

robert.reichle@austin.utexas.edu

512.232.5792