Business school may soon not accept online courses from other institutions
The E. Claiborne Robins School of Business may no longer accept online courses from outside institutions for transfer credits.
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The E. Claiborne Robins School of Business may no longer accept online courses from outside institutions for transfer credits.
This story was updated on Monday, Dec. 10 at 5 p.m.
Editor's Note: This article was updated to correct information regarding the origins of the concept for the multicultural space. The concept was started under members of a Multicultural Student Solidarity Network executive committee
Whether school was in session or students were on break, the SpiderBytes email filled with announcements always came. Whether they were part of the group that read SpiderBytes every day or never read it, students noticed when they stopped receiving the emails.
The University of Richmond has an outbreak of adenovirus, a respiratory illness. Several students were tested by the Student Health Center and diagnosed with the virus, according to an email sent to students on Nov. 29.
The University of Richmond campus may look completely different when you return for your five- or 10-year reunion – and university staff members are already hard at work envisioning what changes will be made.
“I think it was a feeling of genuine disappointment.”
Can you vote for someone you despise simply because of his or her party affiliation?
Mayor of Richmond Levar Stoney spoke about voter disenfranchisement to a sold out audience in the Alice Jepson Theater on Wednesday, Nov. 28.
Editor's note: This story was updated to remove inaccurate information about student feedback during the creation of the living-learning program.
Work on several construction and renovation projects across campus continues, with finishing timelines ranging from December 2018 to summer 2021, according to University Facilities.
Capt. Scott Kelly headlined the Richmond Forum's first lecture of its 33rd season, talking about his time in space as an astronaut on the International Space Station to a sold-out crowd at the Altria Theater on Nov. 17.
Jane Berry, the University Faculty Senate president, withdrew a motion to create a task force on developing an official free speech policy at the monthly senate meeting on Friday, Nov. 16.
University of Richmond Residence Life will be wait-listing female students coming back from fall-semester study abroad and other students returning for the spring semester who want to stay in campus housing, according to an email sent to students on Nov. 8.
What started for James Vonesh as a journey across the Virginia landscape to examine the James River soon sparked the creation of a four-week program in South Africa that carried students along the Tugela River watershed, Pongola River and African coastal plains.
The grandiose gold-lined Empire Room at the Jefferson Hotel was packed with an array of guests from all over the city of Richmond.
Two years after the introduction of a Peer Sexual Misconduct Advisor program for undergraduate students, the T.C. Williams School of Law has seven of its own confidential peer advisers trained in Title IX policy and emotional support.
In response to the recent shooting at a Pittsburgh synagogue and Charlottesville Rally, the religious studies department will offer a new class next semester titled “Hate: A History of Antisemitism," in the hope of unearthing the antisemitism affecting local and global communities.
University President Ronald Crutcher gave his State of the University address in Camp Concert Hall on Tuesday morning, describing the continuous positive trajectory of the university, notable national rankings and record-breaking applicant pools.
In an open campus Health & Well-Being Center and Initiative Progress Presentation on Nov. 8., Tom Roberts, associate vice president of health and well-being, laid out the plans and updates that will be added to the new well-being center that is scheduled to open by the fall of 2020.