Under The M About University Of Montana
UM is proud to present Under the M, a website about and for UM employees. It's designed to complement the weekly e-newsletter reaching more than 3,000 Grizzly employees. Under the M (this website) and the employee newsletter are intended to help you feel in-the-know and up-to-date about what’s happening on campus, what our colleagues are doing, and the bear (wink) necessities about... We review content submissions each week. Submit your content by noon Monday for Thursday's edition. On Thursday mornings, the employee newsletter is sent to UM's 3,000 Grizzly employees.
We welcome your feedback. Want another way to connect? Join Under the M – the Team on Microsoft Teams! Any UM employee can post. Let’s share what we know and help each other out. At the beginning of the semester, I asked our campus what it would look like if the University of Montana was recognized as a community that models healthy, respectful dialogue across differences and robust...
Next week's election gives us an opportunity to see what this looks like in practice. First and foremost, it looks like everyone participating in the democratic process by exercising their right to vote. This right is both a gift and a responsibility that is foundational to our concept of democracy. In fact, many members of the Griz community will vote for the first time in a presidential election. UM is hosting a polling place in the James E. Todd Building on Tuesday, Nov.
5, and UDASH will run a shuttle to the election center throughout the day. Get out and vote! In the aftermath of the election, some will no doubt be disappointed, angry even. But the project of American democracy does not begin and end with a single election. For nearly 250 years, our forebears have shepherded this republic through times of great difficulty, and it now falls to us to steward it into the future. Regardless of who serves as our next president, American democracy is a shared and ongoing endeavor.
We should be proud that UM has long been recognized as an institution committed to strengthening the cornerstones of democracy: robust civic engagement, challenging but necessary conversations, collaborative solution building, and service for the... This is who we are. And as we live through a particularly tumultuous political moment in our country, I take confidence in the fact that Grizzlies will continue to cultivate a climate of curiosity, exploration, collective problem solving, and... Our Montana way includes robust dialogue in the classroom, next week's DiverseU events, this spring's Democracy Summit, participation in student clubs and community organizations. Regardless of which candidates are elected to office next week, here at UM we will carry on our efforts to foster the intellectual and experiential understandings that underpin a healthy democracy. As one expression of this continued work, this year's UM Flagship Fund invites proposals for one-year grants of up to $10,000 to foster civic thought, action, and leadership.
These projects may deepen understanding of the diverse human experience; further develop the uniquely human capacities of empathy, teamwork, creative problem-solving and communication; and create opportunities for dialogue across differences. The University of Montana has produced graduates at the top of the food chain for the past 131 years. We’re Grizzlies after all. But there’s more to us than serving as an iconic symbol of the West. If you want to really understand what it means to embody the ethos of Montana’s public research institution, you've come to the right place. From our main campus under the shadow of Mount Sentinel to Missoula College, our two-year institution campuses located in Missoula and Hamilton, we provide in-person and online academic programs to students seeking associate’s, bachelor’s,...
We also offer certificates to sharpen your skills and and joint-degree programs to fast-track your time to graduation. With 500 degree pathways, UM provides the training and skillsets for achieving a future of your own making. Our faculty and inclusive campuses encourage interdisciplinary studies with a penchant for service, internships and career experience. UM’s academic menu and hands-on experience attract students from across the globe. Our 13:1 student-to-faculty ratio ensures students can build meaningful, authentic relationships with professors, including valuable mentorship opportunities. Seth Bodnar has led the University of Montana since taking office in January 2018.
Together with UM’s faculty, staff and students, President Bodnar works to create a high-quality education that is widely accessible and to help every member of the community reach their unique, full potential. At the University of Montana, we don’t just educate for success — we educate for personal meaning and collective significance. The Montana Way helps our students live boldly, learn deeply and lead with purpose. Explore this curated content to discover UM's latest research advancements, student work, campus events, employee news and more. From Aunt Goldie’s take on gerrymandering to cousin Jerry’s theories about the inflation of organic pumpkin puree, the holidays can leave us overstimulated and out of patience. But researchers in the University of Montana’s College of Humanities and Social Sciences suggest treating the season as professional development in disguise.
The University of Montana, along with the surrounding Missoula and western Montana communities, collectively raised more than 1 million pounds in food and monetary donations during the annual Can the Cats food drive. Research and scholarship are vital to the UM experience and they central to our mission as an R1 institution and Montana's flagship public research University. Most University researchers teach students directly in the classroom, and more than 300 students work laboratories or other sectors of UM's research enterprise. State University of Montana (1913–1935)[1] The University of Montana (UM) is a public research university in Missoula, Montana, United States. UM is a flagship institution of the Montana University System[7] and its second largest campus.
Fall 2024 saw total enrollment hit 10,811,[8] marking the highest total enrollment for UM since 2018. It is classified among "R1: Doctoral Universities – Very high research activity" as of 2022.[9] Alumni include 11 Truman Scholars, 14 Goldwater Scholars, and 40 Udall Scholars.[10][11] One alumnus, Harold Urey, has won the Nobel Prize.[12] An act of Congress of February 18, 1881, dedicated 72 sections (46,000 acres (72 sq mi; 190 km2)) in Montana Territory for the creation of the university. The University of Montana has a very pretty campus. One of its most remarkable features is the view from the west side of the oval with its giant bronze grizzly statue framing Main Hall and the “M” on the side of Mount Sentinel.
That’s inspired me to choose Under the Big M as the title of a memoir I’m working on. I was at UM from 1963 to 1967. Those were heady years there. The arts were alive with Avant Garde plays, painting, sculpture, and jazz. The English Department was headed by one of the top critics in the county, and the sciences had been jolted forward when the Soviets sent Sputnik into space. The University was a cultural enclave of student activism more than a thousand miles from the hotbeds of protest like Berkeley and the University of Michigan.
UM Students were going to the Deep South to register Black voters and were beginning to protest the Vietnam War. A thousand students marched on Main Hall to protest the suspension of three men for participating in a snowball fight that newspapers called “a near riot.” Professors complained when students published their classmates’ evaluations... Women were chafing under university dress codes and curfews. Marijuana was becoming common. The Beetles and The Pill arrived. When I arrived at the university, I was a naive ranch kid from a country of nearly 4,000 square miles and about that many people.
Of those people, only one was Black. I had never known a person from another country, not even a Canadian. I had never heard live jazz or bought art from the person who produced it. I got a part in a major production of Macbeth and wrote a news story that Associated Press distributed across America. We take seriously our commitment to our students from around the world and our responsibility to our friends and neighbors across the state. We are relentless in pursuit of the future, of our individual passions and our institutional purpose.
But make no mistake, we also have some serious fun around here. Tell us what kind of Grizzly you are and learn more about what it's like to attend UM. A degree you can take to the bank, coming right up. “I feel like UM is the perfect fit where I can pursue all my passions.” “Being involved in research gives me real-world application. I think it’s given me a more holistic education.”
Many exciting things happening in this edition of Under the M: UM to launch Coalition for Business Engagement; Missoula leads nation in number of Peace Corps volunteers; and MC Culinary Arts student to compete...
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UM Is Proud To Present Under The M, A Website
UM is proud to present Under the M, a website about and for UM employees. It's designed to complement the weekly e-newsletter reaching more than 3,000 Grizzly employees. Under the M (this website) and the employee newsletter are intended to help you feel in-the-know and up-to-date about what’s happening on campus, what our colleagues are doing, and the bear (wink) necessities about... We review co...
We Welcome Your Feedback. Want Another Way To Connect? Join
We welcome your feedback. Want another way to connect? Join Under the M – the Team on Microsoft Teams! Any UM employee can post. Let’s share what we know and help each other out. At the beginning of the semester, I asked our campus what it would look like if the University of Montana was recognized as a community that models healthy, respectful dialogue across differences and robust...
Next Week's Election Gives Us An Opportunity To See What
Next week's election gives us an opportunity to see what this looks like in practice. First and foremost, it looks like everyone participating in the democratic process by exercising their right to vote. This right is both a gift and a responsibility that is foundational to our concept of democracy. In fact, many members of the Griz community will vote for the first time in a presidential election...
5, And UDASH Will Run A Shuttle To The Election
5, and UDASH will run a shuttle to the election center throughout the day. Get out and vote! In the aftermath of the election, some will no doubt be disappointed, angry even. But the project of American democracy does not begin and end with a single election. For nearly 250 years, our forebears have shepherded this republic through times of great difficulty, and it now falls to us to steward it in...
We Should Be Proud That UM Has Long Been Recognized
We should be proud that UM has long been recognized as an institution committed to strengthening the cornerstones of democracy: robust civic engagement, challenging but necessary conversations, collaborative solution building, and service for the... This is who we are. And as we live through a particularly tumultuous political moment in our country, I take confidence in the fact that Grizzlies wil...