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Gradescope is available within Moodle, allowing faculty to streamline grading and provide consistent feedback. Explore at your own pace with step-by-step resources designed to help you make the most of its features.For new users, explore the resources available at: Get started with GradescopeYou can also explore their instructor resources for creating and grading different types of assignments.
More from Today's Events
- Sep 810:30 AMClifford Gallery Exhibition: HOLESToday's Events | Little Hall, Clifford Gallery (101 Little Hall)
This exhibition expands on the forthcoming issue of the artist-run journal Effects, organized around the motif of the hole. Holes draw our attention to the periphery, the edges of the visible, bringing to the fore what typically disappears into the margin. Through rips and shadows, enclosures and erasures, the included artworks address transience, destructive violence, and lost histories, while also evoking the nascent formation of as-yet-unknown patterns for meeting the problems of living — with ourselves, with one another, and with absence.Featuring work by Noel Anderson, Milano Chow, Mary Helena Clark, Clementine Keith-Roach, Lakshmi Luthra, Eric N. Mack, Nour Mobarak & Jeffrey Stuker, Christopher Page, Paul Pfeiffer, Adam Putnam, Larissa Sansour & Søren Lind, Paul Sietsema, and Patricia Treib.Opening reception Wednesday, September 24, following the 4:30pm Art Lecture.Curated by Lakshmi Luthra, Associate Professor of Art and Film & Media StudiesMore information at https://www.cliffordgallery.org/holes/*Please note: Weekend hours are dependent on the availability of student monitors. If driving a distance, please contact the department (315-228-7633), during regular working hours, to ensure the gallery will be open. The gallery is not open during university breaks and holidays. - Sep 84:15 PMFaculty MeetingToday's Events | Olin Hall, Love Auditorium
Faculty meetings will take place on:September 8, 2025 October 6, 2025 November 3, 2025 December 1, 2025January 26, 2026February 23, 2026March 30, 2026April 27, 2026 - Sep 97:00 AMCU Well Biometric ScreeningToday's Events | James C. Colgate Hall, Clark Room
There are appointments available for biometric screenings.Blood cholesterol, blood glucose, and body composition measurements are critical health numbers that can help determine your risk for cardiovascular disease and diabetes. Annual monitoring helps you stay on top of any risks you may have. Sign up today!To register for an appointment:Log in to personify Health through the CUWell website; sign in on the Colgate Portal (Tools- Health and Wellbeing- CU Well)Once logged in Select Benefits at the Top of the page (hand with + icon)Select View AllScroll down to select LabCorp Select Start Now Select Continue under Onsite Screening The Search Bar: Enter 13346 in the Zip Code fieldClick in the Location Box- enter/select Colgate UniversityUnder Date: select the calendar icon to scroll through the year- all scheduled dates are highlighted with a green dotSelect your date Select your time and specific time slotSelect Schedule AppointmentYou will receive a confirmation email - Sep 910:30 AMClifford Gallery Exhibition: HOLESToday's Events | Little Hall, Clifford Gallery (101 Little Hall)
This exhibition expands on the forthcoming issue of the artist-run journal Effects, organized around the motif of the hole. Holes draw our attention to the periphery, the edges of the visible, bringing to the fore what typically disappears into the margin. Through rips and shadows, enclosures and erasures, the included artworks address transience, destructive violence, and lost histories, while also evoking the nascent formation of as-yet-unknown patterns for meeting the problems of living — with ourselves, with one another, and with absence.Featuring work by Noel Anderson, Milano Chow, Mary Helena Clark, Clementine Keith-Roach, Lakshmi Luthra, Eric N. Mack, Nour Mobarak & Jeffrey Stuker, Christopher Page, Paul Pfeiffer, Adam Putnam, Larissa Sansour & Søren Lind, Paul Sietsema, and Patricia Treib.Opening reception Wednesday, September 24, following the 4:30pm Art Lecture.Curated by Lakshmi Luthra, Associate Professor of Art and Film & Media StudiesMore information at https://www.cliffordgallery.org/holes/*Please note: Weekend hours are dependent on the availability of student monitors. If driving a distance, please contact the department (315-228-7633), during regular working hours, to ensure the gallery will be open. The gallery is not open during university breaks and holidays. - Sep 911:30 AMKnown Unknowns: Gender Trouble and Scopic VulnerabilityToday's Events | Center for Women's Studies
Ashleigh Cassemere-Stanfield is an assistant professor of film and media studies at Colgate University. They work at the intersection of Black Studies, Videogame Studies, Queer Theory, Media Theory, and New Materialism. Their research examines the imaginary that subtends artificial intelligence. Specifically, it explores how the abrasive generativity of AI rhymes with a similar generativity within blackness and queerness. They earned their PhD from the University of Chicago and their M.A. from the Graduate Center of the City University of New York.Visibility has long been understood to be a trap within societies that are organized around surveillance, data capture, and racial capitalism. As such, opacity has become a key term of resistance for a broad array of scholars and activists working to resist this “scopic vulnerability” (Benjamin, 2020). However, opacity is itself motivated by a desire for transparency, and this makes opacity constitutive of the very crisis it resists. That is, where surveillance, data capture, and racial capitalism threaten us with epistemological foreclosure, these systems first transform those lives into unclassifiable and otherwise obscured bodies whose illegibility occasions renewed investigation, pursuit, and capture. That is, surveillance states first render us opaque in order to then have cause to investigate us and make us visible in highly oppressive ways. This mirrors the “epistemology of the closet” whereby queers are framed as endless and endlessly dangerous secrets whose truth must be investigated and made public (Sedgwick, 1990). Thus, as in life, where one is never done coming out, at the level of the state, this secret can never be exhausted. And so, much then as the epistemology of the closet turns on the production of a secret that can be endlessly adjudicated, the black site also turns on the production of “known unknowns” that can be endlessly intercepted and interrogated (Massumi, 2015). Thus, these systems desire and catalyze the very opacity they refuse. Via a close-reading of the gender undecidability within the videogames Portal and Portal 2, this discussion will show that loosening the double-bind of visibility and opacity requires investigating the closet and the black site for their specific nexus of affect, desire, and ambivalence, as well as for the “cruel optimisms” and complicated negotiations made therein (Berlant, 2012). - Sep 911:30 AMTIA Incubator OrientationToday's Events | Bernstein Hall, 214
All students are invited to join the Office of Entrepreneurship and Innovation for one of two orientation sessions to prepare them for the TIA Incubator for 2025-2026.What is the TIA Incubator? Like other Thought Into Action (TIA) programs—including the Incubator, Summer Accelerator, and PE courses—it is a hands-on experience where students create businesses, nonprofits, social enterprises, and campus initiatives while developing entrepreneurial skills, guided by alumni mentors and Colgate’s entrepreneur in residence. Join our inspiring and inclusive community of accomplished and effective creators, changemakers, and problem solvers!Learn more about the TIA Incubator and reach out if you have further questions.