Purple, orange, blue and green puzzle pieces
Exploring how whole-to-part learning is a natural bias in children
By Sarah Steimer
Purple, orange, blue and green puzzle pieces
Exploring how whole-to-part learning is a natural bias in children
By Sarah Steimer
Purple, orange, blue and green puzzle pieces
Exploring how whole-to-part learning is a natural bias in children
By Sarah Steimer
Going Tactile book cover
A new book on the DeafBlind community considers communication the limits of lan...
Going Tactile is the product of almost 20 years of Terra Edwards’s anthropological research and engagement with the community.
2023 artwork from the neubauer collegium titled archive for 57 people by Dan Peterman
2024-25 Neubauer Collegium Faculty Research Projects Announced
The Neubauer Collegium for Culture and Society has selected eight new faculty-led research projects to launch July 1, 2024.
2023 artwork from the neubauer collegium titled archive for 57 people by Dan Peterman
2024-25 Neubauer Collegium Faculty Research Projects Announced
The Neubauer Collegium for Culture and Society has selected eight new faculty-led research projects to launch July 1, 2024.
2023 artwork from the neubauer collegium titled archive for 57 people by Dan Peterman
2024-25 Neubauer Collegium Faculty Research Projects Announced
The Neubauer Collegium for Culture and Society has selected eight new faculty-led research projects to launch July 1, 2024.
2023 artwork from the neubauer collegium titled archive for 57 people by Dan Peterman
2024-25 Neubauer Collegium Faculty Research Projects Announced
The Neubauer Collegium for Culture and Society has selected eight new faculty-led research projects to launch July 1, 2024.
2023 artwork from the neubauer collegium titled archive for 57 people by Dan Peterman
2024-25 Neubauer Collegium Faculty Research Projects Announced
The Neubauer Collegium for Culture and Society has selected eight new faculty-led research projects to launch July 1, 2024.
Michele Friedner
Deepening our understanding of deafness, technology, and ‘normalization’
Michele Friedner’s latest book, which received the 2023 Rachel Carson prize from the Society for the Social Studies of Science, is hailed as “nu