As part of our goal to lead the nation in entrepreneurship education and research, the Lundquist College has made strategic investments in faculty to grow our pool of experts to a level few can match.
Alex La China started College Cat—an online tutoring platform that uses AI as an academic virtual assistant—as a class project. It's grown into a venture that has helped 20,000 students in its first 18 months.
An entrepreneur in residence for the college, whose first venture was designing snowboards, has been instrumental in guiding hundreds of student startups across the university.
As more women have entered the biomedical field, they’re getting a bigger share of research grants, and the gender gap in research funding appears to be narrowing, but the gains have been uneven, according to new research by Chris Liu and coauthors
New research by Lundquist College alumnus Adam Kovar ’23 and instructor Charlie Bame-Aldred found that the NCAA football transfer portal can help some teams but not others, depending on the position a transferring student plays.
The Lundquist College is mourning the passing and celebrating the life of one of our most avid and prolific supporters, Patricia Peterson, who died March 10, 2024. She was 97.
Lifelong athlete Mufaro Hungwe, MS '24 studied kinesiology and biomechanics before earning another master's degree from UO's Sports Product Management program.
A $4 million gift bolsters programming for student and faculty entrepreneurs and strengthens ties between the Lundquist College and the Phil and Penny Knight Campus for Accelerating Scientific Impact.
Biochemistry PhD student Justin Svendsen signed up for the Oregon Innovation Challenge to learn about entrepreneurship, but came out of the competition with an idea—and a plan—for a new patent that could revolutionize antibiotics.
Take a look into what is happening with the University of Oregon's new northeast Portland campus, how we as a business college fit into it, and our plan for relocating the college's Portland programs there.
Associate professor of marketing Conor Henderson and his coauthors examined the role of racial diversity in advertising in a new study. "Those that viewed the ads with a diverse ensemble of models reported feeling more connection to society," he said.