• March 13 – April 5 Exhibition: “Limits of Freedom”

    Rockingham Community College 315 Wrenn Memorial Road, Wentworth, North Carolina, United States

    Limits of Freedom, an exhibition created by UNCG’s Public History Program, is a part of the America 250 NC Commemorative project. Limits of Freedom highlights the role that enslaved individuals had in making the nation despite being barred from the freedom the country proclaims.

  • LLC Hands-on Culture Jam

    Elliott University Center (EUC) 507 Stirling St, Greensboro, NC, United States

    From the UNCG Department of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures: Come experience a wide-array of hands-on mini workshops presented by UNCG faculty, staff, students, and community members and leave with a variety of new skills! Refreshments provided. All are welcome!

  • Rethinking How We Talk About And Work With A.I.

    Ashby Dialogues
    School of Education Building 1300 Spring Garden St, Greensboro, NC, United States

    Anthropomorphizing language can obscure the fact that replacing humans with machines does not lead to equivalent actions or interactions. This session presents a framework for understanding how technology changes the nature of tasks and prescribes behaviors.

  • An Evening with Author Casey McQuiston

    Elliott University Center (EUC) 507 Stirling St, Greensboro, NC, United States

    Celebrate the launch of the Greensboro Bound Book Festival: American Kaleidoscope with #1 New York Times bestselling author Casey McQuiston.

    Free event. Registration required.

  • Film Screening and Panel Discussion: “Homage to a Hero: Reflections from Reverend Steve Allen”

    International Civil Rights Center & Museum 134 S Elm St, Greensboro, NC, United States

    The International Civil Rights Center and Museum, in collaboration with UNC-Greensboro’s departments of Media Studies, History and University Libraries, will honor Rev. Allen’s achievements with the short film, Homage to a Hero: Reflections from Reverend Steve Allen, at the ICRCM Auditorium.

  • Science Everywhere 2026

    Science Everywhere

    Returning again this year is one of UNCG’s biggest STEM events: Science Everywhere! As part of the North Carolina Science Festival, UNCG is excited to host a unique gathering of community members, professionals, and students. Everyone is invited!

  • Helen Barton Lecture: “Constructing Features from Data: Geometry, Dimension, Reduction, and Invariants”

    Helen Barton Lecture Series
    Virtual (on Microsoft Teams)

    This talk explores how to construct meaningful features from noisy, high-dimensional data by leveraging geometric and invariant structures. First, we introduce a geometric framework for dimension reduction using a power-weighted path metric, which effectively de-noises high-dimensional data while preserving its intrinsic geometric structure. This framework is particularly useful for analyzing single-cell RNA data and for multi-manifold clustering, and we provide theoretical guarantees for the convergence of the associated graph Laplacian operators.

  • Annual Star Party at the Three College Observatory

    Science Everywhere
    Three College Observatory 5106 Thompson Mill Road, Graham, North Carolina, United States

    Hosted at the Three College Observatory, participants will get to peer through the 32-inch telescope, take part in crafts, listen to a one-of-a-kind storyteller, be guided through the night sky and so much more.

    This year’s Star Party is a collaboration between the Three College Observatory, UNCG’s Science Everywhere, Alamance County Public Libraries, and Alamance Parks.

  • North Carolina Writers’ Network Spring Conference 2026

    UNCG's Moore Humanities and Research Administration (MHRA) Building 1111 Spring Garden St, Greensboro, NC

    The North Carolina Writers’ Network and the MFA in Creative Writing Program at UNC Greensboro bring you a full day of classes, workshops, conversations, Lunch with an Author, Slush Pile Live!, and more. This year’s Spring Conference will again be in UNCG’s MHRA Building, at the corner of Spring Garden and Forest Streets, and in Curry Auditorium next door, offering classes and discussions on the craft and business of writing.