News at ĚÇĐÄvlogąŮÍř
Follow Us:
Find News
Filter news by date and topic.
Filter Options
Search Results
You searched: Research is the engine behind innovation, commercialization and economic growth across nearly every industry. At South Dakota State University, that innovation doesn’t stop in the lab; it goes to work. In this episode, we explore how a single research idea can become a commercial product with real regional and global impact.
Srinivas Janaswamy, associate professor in South Dakota State University’s Department of Dairy and Food Science, has been named to the Stanford/Elsevier Top 2% Scientists List for 2025.
For qualifying students at South Dakota State University, it’s the best of both college experiences: the appeal of a Division I university combined with the personal experience of a school that feels much smaller.
The South Dakota State University College of Pharmacy and Allied Health Professions has continued its long record of excellence, reporting a 94.1% first-time pass rate on the North American Pharmacist Licensure Examination for the 2025 Doctor of Pharmacy graduates.
Just how does a scientific discovery in a lab become a medicine that is available worldwide? Anamitro Banerjee, director of global chemistry, manufacturing and controls regulatory affairs at AstraZeneca, will discuss that journey at the 13th annual Francis Miller Lecture at 5:30 p.m. March 31 in Bailey Rotunda F.
Two South Dakota State University students from the Mike Huether Public Service Academy have earned prestigious national recognition, demonstrating how SDSU’s newest academic program is already making waves beyond South Dakota.
Bryson Love didn’t need an invitation to get involved in the activities of the mechanical engineering department at South Dakota State University.
Before he even began classes, Love asked about getting involved in NASA projects. By September he was on a team, surrounded by other freshmen and sophomores. By June he was in Cocoa Beach, Florida, with his team as a finalist in a NASA contest, and their entry received the award for building the best prototype.
This school year he and some of the other 2024-25 freshman are now leaders on teams competing in a variety of NASA contests.
Linet Paul came to South Dakota State University with a bachelor’s degree in civil engineering, five years of experience as a hydraulic engineer in her native Kenya and a desire to grow.
She was looking for a U.S. graduate program where she could earn her master’s degree and gain valuable lab experience that she could turn into know-how for the construction of water engineering systems in her home country.
Paul earned her master’s degree in December 2024 and continued her academic track as a doctoral student under Professor Francis Ting in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering with a focus on fluid mechanics and hydraulic engineering. Ting, a 31-year veteran at SDSU, is recognized as an expert in breaking waves, bridge hydraulics and scour.
South Dakota State University is now home to the state’s first chapter of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics.
“It is the society for aerospace engineering,” said Jeffrey Doom, an associate professor in mechanical engineering and a professional member of the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics for 15 years. He is also the coordinator of the aerospace engineering minor and specialization in the Lohr College of Engineering and the chapter’s adviser.
Doom and Turner Marr, the student branch chair, were notified Jan. 21 by the national organization that the application for a provisional charter was approved.
In 2014, Jacob Englin walked across the graduation stage at South Dakota State University with a bachelor's degree in agricultural education and a dream to help shape the next generation of agricultural leaders. Over a decade later, he’s back at SDSU not as a student, but as a full-time assistant professor helping to guide the very program that once shaped him.