College of Charleston Biology Program Featured on National Science Foundation Blog
College biology professor Matt Rutter heads a collaborative program that allows undergraduate students to gain invaluable scientific experience.
College biology professor Matt Rutter heads a collaborative program that allows undergraduate students to gain invaluable scientific experience.
In 1988, residents in Lee County, S.C., reported seeing a 7-foot-tall lizard-like creature with red eyes. In 2011, experts from the College of Charleston decided to do their own investigation into Lizardmania. Here's what they found.
Marine biology professor Gavin Naylor helped identify a rare pocket shark caught off Louisiana. Only two are ever known to have been found.
They're carving a legacy: Alum brothers Ian ’03 and Colin McNair ’08 have created careers through the art, craftsmanship and family tradition of wooden duck decoys.
At the College of Charleston, you can study abroad in almost any academic discipline on nearly every continent.
More than 300 students and faculty presented research at the College's annual science and math poster session.
From swimming with sharks to publishing the news and joining a tech startup, College of Charleston students gain invaluable experience – and even jobs – through internship opportunities.
Susan von Frank ’03 sees agribusiness as part of the climate change solution. It's why she and her husband started GrowJourney.
Associate Professor of Biology Erik Sotka researches how an invasive Japanese seaweed species is able to thrive in every estuary in the Northern Hemisphere.
Five College of Charleston professors comment on six surprising ways the Hunger Games series is more realistic than you think.