The good, the bad and the obsessive: Experts explore the benefits and detriments of calorie-tracking apps
Moderation is key — especially when it comes to calorie-counting apps. Apps like MyFitnessPal — one of the most popular and well-establi…
Moderation is key — especially when it comes to calorie-counting apps. Apps like MyFitnessPal — one of the most popular and well-establi…
For the ninth consecutive year, Ohio State is offering its students chances to explore 3D printing, produce plays, solve mysteries and more…
Hello, Buckeyes! Are you an undergraduate student thinking about next steps in your academic journey? Or someone with an undergraduate degree w…
Economic recovery from the pandemic has begun, and graduate students have more employment prospects than they may have had a year ago.
University President Kristina M. Johnson announced Thursday that Ohio State will be awarding $80,000 in cash gift cards to students, faculty and staff who received their COVID-19 booster shot.
After over a year of being a Buckeye, University President Kristina M. Johnson is stepping out of her administrative office and back into academia this coming spring semester to teach her first Ohio State course.
Ohio State has distributed $57.7 million in emergency aid to students since the start of the pandemic, and will now distribute $57.8 million more.
In the midst of COVID-19 and its unprecedented consequences, an age-old barrier for students has surged with a vengeance: financial uncertainty. Ohio State’s Knowlton School of Architecture launched the Knowlton Access Fund, a need-based fund provides financial support for Knowlton students looking for assistance, especially during the pandemic.
Ohio State’s Undergraduate Student Government is now accepting applications for vacant General Assembly seats, new general members and Black Caucus…
About 70 million Americans — or 1 in 3 adults — have been involved in the criminal justice system through an arrest or conviction, according to a 2016 report from the U.S. Department of Education. Of those individuals, about 600,000 reenter society each year, according to the U.S. Department of Education. Many, like Michael, are required to indicate their past criminal record — or “check the box” — when asked a series of questions on applications or conditions upon acceptance to employment, housing and higher education, including Ohio State.