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Engage in high impact, hands-on learning.

CURS supports faculty-led research and scholarly activity by working with students of all majors and faculty researchers on all Augusta University campuses.

 

What can CURS do for you?

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CURS

Summerville Campus

Allgood Hall

E-330

706-729-2094

curs@augusta.edu

AUGCURS

Because of CURS

Watch student researchers share their stories and experiences. Listen as they explain opportunities available to them because CURS.

CURS News

An older man wearing academic regalia stands for a photo with a student. The student holds a plaque that reads "Outstanding Undergraduate Student in Physics Award."

‘A culture creator’: CSM graduate uses major shift to spur innovation

“He is the student that asks the really good questions and often challenges thinking and concepts at a deep level,” says Tom Colbert, PhD.

‘A culture creator’: CSM graduate uses major shift to spur innovation
A female college student talks about a research project to another college student. They are in a large ballroom surrounded by other faculty and students.

Students shine during Undergraduate Research and Fine Arts Conference

“Some students have presented a number of times and are pretty well seasoned, and then there are students who are here for the first time,” says Quentin Davis, PhD.

Students shine during Undergraduate Research and Fine Arts Conference
Four women standing next to a stand up poster.

AU undergraduate research team participates in national advocacy program

“This was a unique opportunity for the students because they are taking their research and explaining it to legislators,” says Deborah Jehu, PhD.

AU undergraduate research team participates in national advocacy program
A group of ten scientists in lab coats smile at the camera. There are shelves of materials for experiments around them. Two scientists stand in front of the others.

AU scientists’ research on fruit flies published in Biophysical Journal

"It's one of the first publications as a lab we've produced, and it was kind of new because it took what we were doing in the fruit fly and combined that with computational work with Dr. Malmi-Kakkada,” says Paul Langridge, PhD.

AU scientists’ research on fruit flies published in Biophysical Journal

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