DSG allots $370,000 in funding to student groups, elects new cabinet members
In its final meeting of the academic year, the Duke Student Government Senate doled out funding to student groups and swore in new DSG officials.
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In its final meeting of the academic year, the Duke Student Government Senate doled out funding to student groups and swore in new DSG officials.
Update: This story was updated at 10:37 p.m. April 30 with the information that Summer Session II will be online, would have more than 200 courses and would be open to the public.
Even during a pandemic, the show must go on.
Undergraduate students will now have a few more days to decide whether they'd like to be graded on a satisfactory/unsatisfactory scale or receive a letter grade.
With all the uncertainty surrounding the fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic, Duke is preparing for all scenarios—even the possibility that students don't return to campus this upcoming fall.
After administering a survey to the student body, the Duke Student Government Senate passed a resolution Wednesday evening calling for the University to extend the deadline for undergraduates to opt-out of satisfactory/unsatisfactory grading.
Duke Student Government Senate passed a resolution in favor of extending the deadline for students to opt in to receive letter grades at its Wednesday night meeting.
We asked you to tell us your favorite moments from the 2019-20 Duke men's basketball season. Here's what you chose:
Duke announced its credit and refund policies in light of the COVID-19 pandemic, which has shuttered the campus to most students.
Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., is the first U.S. senator and third member of Congress to test positive for COVID-19, his Twitter account announced Sunday afternoon.
One day after undergraduate classes moved to a default satisfactory/unsatisfactory grading option, some graduate and professional courses are following suit.
Spring semester undergraduate classes will now be automatically graded on a satisfactory/unsatisfactory scale, wrote Gary Bennett, vice provost for undergraduate education, in an email to The Chronicle Wednesday morning.
Most Duke lab research is being suspended amid growing spread of COVID-19, Vice President for Research Lawrence Carin wrote in an email Tuesday evening.
Duke faculty and staff have been advised to move all in-person meetings to remote conferences, President Vincent Price wrote in an email to the Duke community Monday afternoon.
The first case of COVID-19 has been reported in Durham County, according to the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services.
All undergraduate classes will take place online for the rest of the Spring semester, Vice President for Administration Kyle Cavanaugh wrote in an email Friday afternoon.
Duke will extend its ban on University-sponsored events until May 7 and shut down public buildings to visitors, Vice President for Administration Kyle Cavanaugh wrote in an email to the Duke community Friday afternoon.
On March 10, Duke made the unprecedented announcement that classes would shift online until further notice and that students were discouraged from returning to campus. But the news generated more questions than it answered. We compiled the questions that you asked and addressed them to the best of our ability below.
One day after Duke announced it would shift classes online and encourage students to leave campus, an eighth North Carolinian was diagnosed with COVID-19.
In light of spreading coronavirus, President Vincent Price announced that the University will shift to online classes until further notice and extend spring break for a week to accommodate the unforeseen circumstances.