Complete Calendar of Events

All Week: 
 CCAS Swag Giveaway & Finals Week Survival Bags | Daily, 9:00AM - 5:00PM | Smith 118

*CCAS students who visit the OGS office this week to grab CCAS swag and/ or finals week survival bags will also be entered in a raffle to win limited-edition CCAS swag - new winner announced daily!

Monday, April 20th

Tuesday, April 21st

Wednesday, April 22nd

Thursday, April 23rd

Friday, April 24th

Kick off Reception

6:00 to 10:00 pm

Learn More

Gelman Library Special Collections Tour

11:00 to 2:00 pm

Information Below

Wellness Wednesday

1:00 to 4:00 pm

Learn More

Music in the Yard

3:00 to 5:00 pm

Learn More

Happy Hour @Hive

4:00 to 7:00 pm

Learn More

Virtual Game Night

6:00 pm

Register

Physical Therapy Lab Tour

1:30 to 2:30

Register

Virtual Guided Wellness Session 

3:00 pm- 45 minute session

Live-streaming Link

Webinar, "Entering the Workplace: Skills, Strategy, and Connections"

2:30 pm - CANCELED

Greenhouse Tour

2:30 pm

Register

Woodie Lab Tour

11:00 am and 1:00 pm

Register

Woodie Lab Tour

11:00 am and 1:00 pm

Register

Webinar, "From GW to Global Impact: Building a Career That Scales"

6:30 pm

Register

Greenhouse Tour

11:00 am

Register

 
  

Canine Cognition Center Tour

12:00 pm and 12:30 pm

  Register             

  
  

Infectious Diseases Research Lab Tour

2:00 pm

Register

  

Additional Event Details

Climb to the top of Science and Engineering Hall for a guided tour of GW’s rooftop greenhouse—a 1,225-square-foot high-tech living laboratory buzzing with research and discovery! This vibrant facility is home to over 100 plant species supporting studies on insects, climate change, genetic diversity, and much more.

On the tour, you’ll walk through 400 million years of plant evolution, seeing how plants have adapted and thrived over time, all while learning about the cutting-edge research happening right above campus. Visitors will get a behind-the-scenes look at how scientists care for the collection and engage with the plants, as well as learn about student opportunities to study, enjoy open hours, or even help care for the greenhouse.

Named for Wilbur B. Harlan, a GW agriculture professor in the 1930s, this greenhouse blends history, hands-on learning, and scientific innovation. It’s a living classroom, a research hub, and a place to spark curiosity—come see how plants, people, and science grow together!

Registration is required, tickets are free, and space is limited to 30 participants.

Reserve Tickets for Thursday.                   Reserve Tickets for Friday

Step inside GW’s Canine Cognition Lab to explore how dogs and humans share more than just a home. Dogs are incredible social learners, often outperforming chimpanzees in certain communicative tasks once thought unique to humans. At the GWU Canine Cognition Collaborative—a branch of the Subiaul Social Cognition Lab—researchers study both dogs and children to understand how environmental factors shape social abilities across species. By examining the cognitive abilities of multiple species, we can better understand what makes humans unique.

During the tour, you’ll visit the upstairs of Horton’s Amsterdam House, see a live demonstration led by researchers (and a canine participant!), and get a sense of how our research uses fun, snack-filled games to engage dogs’ minds. It’s a hands-on look at comparative cognition, social learning, and the extraordinary bond between humans and their canine companions.

Students will also get a glimpse of the GW Anthropology Department, one of the most productive biological and social anthropology departments globally. Explore its rich history, including the publication of its own social-cultural anthropology journal, the first-ever academic fraternity for Anthropology, Delta Sigma Gamma, groundbreaking work on the Slave Wrecks Project (building maritime archaeology in local communities and collaborating with institutions worldwide), and continuing the legacy of Jane Goodall. Discover where curiosity, cutting-edge research, and a love of learning come together—human and canine alike!

 

Registraiton is required, tickets are free, and space is limited to 10 people. 

Reserve your Spot

Explore the unique materials housed in Special Collections at Gelman Library. Rather than a traditional tour, participants will have the opportunity to view selected items from a variety of the library’s collections. Special Collections staff and librarians will be on hand to introduce the materials, explain their significance, and answer questions about the archives, rare books, and other primary sources preserved at GW. This visit offers a behind-the-scenes look at resources that support research across many disciplines.  Stop by and tour the collection and dosplays at your own pace.   

The visit will take place in Room 702 on the 7th floor of Gelman Library. Participants will need their GWID to enter the building.

Join us for a series of virtual professional development webinars designed to support graduate and professional students in building skills for academic and non-academic careers. These sessions offer practical insights, expert guidance, and strategies you can apply to your professional journey.

 

Wednesday, April 22 at 6:30 pm

Webinar

"Career Progression with Large Scale Impact: From GW to the WOrld." 

Josh Lasky, GW Alumni

Register

Thursday, April 23 at 1:00 pm

Webinar

"Workplace Readiness, Networking and How to Leverage All Your Personal and Profressional Experiences" 

Kalpana Vissa, GW Alumni

Register

 

Log in, play, and connect at our virtual game night! Graduate and professional students are invited to enjoy a fun evening of games, laughter, and community

Join the Fun!

In the Woodie Lab, we investigate the neurobiology of chrono-metabolic rhythms. We use surgical, genetic, and dietary rodent models to identify mistimed eating sensitive neurons, disrupt their signaling, and measure the metabolic and behavioral outcomes arising from various interventions with the goal of discovering therapies for diseases exacerbated by chrono-disruption (i.e., jet lag and shift work).

To conduct these experiments, our lab space has the following:

  • Dedicated surgical space to perform stereotaxic surgical injections in the mouse brain
  • Fresh-tissue vibratome to slice the mouse brain and spinal cord for viewing under a microscope
  • Preserved biological samples (e.g., fixed whole-brain samples, microscope slides of the brain sections)
  • Temperature- and light-controlled incubator cabinet designed to house mice in a thermoneutral environment
  • “Promethion” cage system that collects real-time behavioral and metabolic data from individual mouse cages: oxygen and CO2 respiration, body mass, locomotor activity, food and water intake
 

Our laboratory is a translational infectious diseases research lab, meaning that we integrate clinical research with laboratory-based immunology and diagnostic evaluation to directly impact patient care and public health decision-making. We focus primarily on arboviral diseases such as dengue and chikungunya, as well as emerging and high-consequence respiratory pathogens.

A central component of our work is understanding host immune responses and early biomarkers of disease severity. In dengue, for example, clinical deterioration often occurs after the initial febrile phase. Through prospective cohort studies and outbreak-based enrollment (such as our FEVER study), we analyze early-phase samples to identify immunological and inflammatory markers that may predict progression to severe disease. Our goal is to improve early risk stratification and resource allocation during epidemics.

In parallel, we conduct randomized controlled clinical trials addressing therapeutic strategies. In the ZAP-DENGUE trial, we evaluate whether zanamivir may reduce vascular permeability and prevent plasma leakage, a key mechanism of severe dengue. In the MARCH Phase III clinical trial, we study methotrexate for chronic inflammatory arthritis following chikungunya infection, while simultaneously investigating immunopathologic mechanisms in affected tissues.

We also actively participate in prospective multicenter clinical evaluations of advanced multiplex diagnostic platforms developed by BioFire Defense, including the SPOTFIRE Warrior Panel and the Emerging Coronavirus (ECoV) Panel. These systems use multiplex nucleic acid detection technology capable of simultaneously identifying multiple viral and bacterial pathogens from a single clinical specimen. Our role includes specimen processing, performance evaluation, and supporting regulatory-grade data generation for in vitro diagnostic validation.

Technologies Used in Our Laboratory:
• MSD (Meso Scale Discovery) multiplex immunoassay platforms for simultaneous quantification of multiple cytokines and immune mediators
• ELISA-based serological assays for antibody detection and inflammatory marker analysis
• BioFire multiplex molecular diagnostic systems for pathogen detection and evaluation of diagnostic accuracy
• Clinical specimen processing, plasma/serum biobanking, and cold-chain management
• Translational biomarker profiling linking clinical phenotypes with laboratory immune signatures

Through this integration of clinical trials, outbreak surveillance, immunological profiling, and diagnostic innovation, our lab aims to strengthen outbreak preparedness, improve early disease detection, and advance therapeutic strategies in global infectious diseases.