Upcoming Events

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Monday, April 6

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06
Apr

First Aid for Your Research Data

Workshop/Training

Can’t find data? Can’t get the file to open properly? Or is your data so messy, it seems impossible to analyze? The first part of this workshop will review some common issues and how to fix them using simple, accessible tools. The second part will be an open clinic to help you with whatever symptoms you are encountering, so please bring your sick spreadsheets and painful error messages!

12:00 pm - 1:00 pm | Merrill cazier Library |
06
Apr

The Why and How of Open Access Publishing

Workshop/Training

Do you want to publish open access but aren’t sure where to start or how to protect your work? This workshop covers the basics and importance of open access publishing, different open access models, and how USU supports open access. We discuss how USU Researchers can access open access funding through the Library, including publisher agreements and the Library Open Access Fund. Finally, we cover copyright basics and share key authors’ rights resources to protect your research as it’s disseminated throughout the research ecosystem.

1:00 pm - 2:00 pm | Merrill cazier Library |
06
Apr

Bad Prompt = Bad Output: Learn AI Prompting

Workshop/Training

This workshop will break down the basics of AI prompting. Content will be divided into two 45-minute sections focusing first on prompt foundations, then advanced AI workflows and responsible Use of AI. Hosted by the USU Data Science and AI Center (DSAI Center).

2:30 pm - 4:00 pm | Merrill cazier Library |
06
Apr

Agentic AI in Practice

Workshop/Training

Agentic AI in Practice explores how emerging AI agents can meaningfully support workflows across disciplines at USU. This workshop will introduce practical strategies for integrating AI tools to enhance productivity, efficiency, and impact.

4:00 pm - 5:00 pm | Merrill cazier Library |
06
Apr

What Disney Didn't Tell You - A Tour of the Original Grimm Fairy Tales: An Aggie Talks Event

Panel Discussion/Presentation

Think you know Cinderella, Snow White, or Sleeping Beauty? Think again. For most Americans, these stories feel like Disney inventions, but their true origins are far older, stranger, and more fascinating. During this presentation, USU Researcher Claudia Schwabe will take the audience on a journey back 200 years to discover the "original" fairy tales collected by two German brothers, Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm. You'll learn that these tales were filled with sharp moral lessons, psychological terror, and bizarre magic. The Grimms’ world is a place where justice is brutal, the woods are truly terrifying, and “happily ever after” often comes with a dark price.

RSVP at: https://airtable.com/app7WaBBpO3c77QwG/pag2PbyCIhLQThmN7/form

6:00 pm - 7:00 pm |