Interactive Oral Assessments: A viable model for COVID-19 and beyond
The dramatic impact of the pandemic on the nation’s higher education sector has accelerated innovation and is transforming the way it operates.
The dramatic impact of the pandemic on the nation’s higher education sector has accelerated innovation and is transforming the way it operates.
This week, Brisbane became a central hub for discussions on the importance of information integrity as Griffith University, in collaboration...
The 4th Annual Pacific Research Conference and Leaders Forum took place in Honiara, Solomon Islands, from June 26-27, 2024, under...
Griffith University researchers are using cutting-edge equipment to expose and inspire girls to pursue STEM at the university level.
Griffith University has entered into a $135 million commercial partnership with Gene Company o further develop a new drug treatment for SARS-CoV-2, the virus responsible for COVID-19.
Griffith research confirms the essential contribution of backpackers and seasonal migrant workers to regional Australia is undervalued.
Irene Bartlett has had a long, illustrious career as a vocal coach, teacher, and mentor to generations of singers across the globe.
New public artworks can again hold a mirror up for local communities that have changed in unexpected ways. They offer opportunity to celebrate differences and commonalities and reflect the lived experiences of communities navigating unprecedented change.
As we head into the third year of the pandemic, debates continue to rage over the ethics of vaccine mandates, restrictions on civil liberties, the limits of government power and the inequitable distribution of vaccines globally. With so much disagreement over questions like these, has the pandemic fundamentally changed the way we think about ethics?
A Griffith study has found childhood COVID vaccination leads to high reductions in child disease and mortality, but is more beneficial to adults, particularly the unvaccinated.