- June 10, 2024
George Mason is the home for the new $19.5 million NASA Landolt Space Mission. Led by the College of Science’s Peter Plavchan, with the College of Engineering and Computing, this mission will launch an artificial star in orbit to help scientists calibrate telescopes and measure brightness.
- June 6, 2024
George Mason's College of Engineering and Computing students win a contest for the solution for rear-end collisions.
- June 5, 2024
EIP alumnus Eduardo Vazquez, who graduated in May with a civil engineering degree from George Mason’s College of Engineering and Computing, was back on campus this week wearing a different hat—a hard hat—as a project engineer for Hoar Construction.
- May 24, 2024
From the fabrication floor to the incubator’s loft, the MIX demonstrates how principles of entrepreneurship and innovation aren’t so easily siloed with two new courses: BLIMP and Student Innovator Mastermind.
- May 20, 2024
A team of George Mason students won two contests for their work on researching and proposing a new Chesapeake Bay crossing.
- May 2, 2024
A team of George Mason Âé¶¹¹ú²ú researchers is probing the psychology behind cyberattacks as part of a U.S. intelligence community program aimed at turning the tables on hackers.
- April 15, 2024
George Mason Âé¶¹¹ú²ú President Gregory Washington has announced the recipients of the 2024 Presidential Awards for Faculty Excellence, honoring 13 Mason faculty members for their work on behalf of the university, students, and the broader community.
- April 5, 2024
CACI International Inc is once again supporting Mason students through a $200,000 gift to establish the CACI Scholars Program. The program helps selected scholars secure science, technology, engineering, or mathematics-related positions upon graduation.
- April 3, 2024
New EduRank report on university performance in research highlights eighteen George Mason Âé¶¹¹ú²ú programs as the best in Virginia, with Mason's entrepreneurship ecosystem as No.1 among all public institutions.
- April 2, 2024
Civil engineering professor David Lattanzi teams up with colleagues in the College of Public Health to help build a new tool that will help clinicians identify bruises and injuries from domestic violence in a new way.