Not Your Grandma’s Big Bad Wolf
Through a partnership with the Endangered Wolf Center, Maryville students are working with two litters of African painted dog pups, an endangered species native to sub-Saharan Africa.
Through a partnership with the Endangered Wolf Center, Maryville students are working with two litters of African painted dog pups, an endangered species native to sub-Saharan Africa.
A Maryville program offers free job development and placement services for people with disabilities.
The University Seminar course helps first-year students explore their personal identities and create change in their communities.
Online education is a way for working adults to expand on skills needed in their current jobs or start new careers, ultimately changing their lives.
Maryville is changing the way students learn physics thanks to new wireless sensors, which allow students to design and conduct their own experiments outside of the classroom.
Traditional undergraduate students who arrived on campus when Digital World launched four years ago are the first class to graduate after having used an iPad their entire college career.
The complex social world of Renaissance Europe comes alive through an interactive game requiring alliances among students.
Two Maryville alumni are pursuing their entrepreneurial dreams to provide media and marketing support for real estate and small business professionals.
When the 100th PGA Championship came to Bellerive Country Club in St. Louis last August, a large contingent of Maryville University students worked behind the scenes, gaining valuable experience and observing how a major sporting event unfolds in real time.
On Sept. 12, Anuradha Vummenthala, PhD, assistant professor of chemistry, and Soo-Jin Kwoun, PhD, associate professor of music therapy, took the Oath of Allegiance to the United States. They share a desire to support the communities in which they live and work—and call home.