Students
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Health Waiver to Opt Out of Student Health Insurance Plan Available Through August 15
June 03, 2025 -
2025 Department of Psychology Outstanding Student Awards
May 15, 2025 -
Level Up Your Degree With an Accelerated Master’s
May 13, 2025 -
Stuart Graduate Programs Spotlight: A Focus on Business
May 13, 2025 -
Important Commencement Day Instructions for Graduating Students
May 08, 2025 -
Attend Innovation Day Tomorrow at the Kaplan Institute
May 01, 2025 -
Friendly Reminder for Graduating Student Workers
May 01, 2025 -
Grad Students: Register for the Summer Research Writing Workshop
April 24, 2025
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Health Waiver to Opt Out of Student Health Insurance Plan Available Through August 15
Athletics
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Men’s Varsity Soccer Tryouts
August 18, 2022 -
Women’s Tennis To Hold Tryouts August 20 Through August 26
August 18, 2022 -
Men’s Tennis To Hold Tryouts August 20 Through August 26.
August 18, 2022 -
Men’s Tennis Takes Home 2021 NACC Tournament Title with 5-2 Win Over Concordia (Wis.)
May 11, 2021 -
Illinois Tech Athletics Announces Advisory Board
December 10, 2020
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Men’s Varsity Soccer Tryouts
Research
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Congrats to Morganne Smith on Being a Finalist in Poster Competition
June 10, 2025 -
Illinois Tech’s Indika Edirisinghe Finds That Eating Chickpeas Lowers Cholesterol
June 10, 2025 -
Building Community Champions: Using CBPR to Explore Genetic Testing Barriers Among Women of African Descent at Risk for Inherited Breast Cancer
June 10, 2025 -
Take Part in Research Study on Optimizing Mango’s Glycemic Impact
May 29, 2025 -
Join ITM’s Community-Based Participatory Research (CBPR) Training
April 01, 2025
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Congrats to Morganne Smith on Being a Finalist in Poster Competition
Chicago-Kent College of Law Archive
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Chicago-Kent College of Law Professor Carolyn Shapiro wrote an article for the Washington Monthly explaining why states can’t stop electors from voting their conscience.
December 12, 2016In the article, Carolyn Shapiro explains the constitutional responsibilities of the Electoral College, as well as the role of the states under the Constitution and federal law. -
Chicago-Kent College of Law Professor William Birdthistle will chat live online December 8 with the Washington Post’s personal finance columnist.
December 8, 2016Today at noon EST/11 a.m. CST, Chicago-Kent College of Law Professor William Birdthistle will participate in a live online chat with Washington Post personal finance columnist Michelle Singletary about topics from his new book on retirement savings and the mutual funds industry. -
Chicago-Kent College of Law Professor Christopher Schmidt wins American Society for Legal History’s 2016 Surrency Prize
December 7, 2016The American Society for Legal History has awarded Chicago-Kent College of Law Professor Christopher Schmidt the 2016 Surrency Prize for the best article published in the society's 2015 edition of its journal Law and History Review. -
Chicago-Kent College of Law Professor Anthony Michael Kreis is a guest on Bloomberg Radio’s Bloomberg Law.
December 6, 2016Anthony Michael Kreis discusses whether sexual orientation discrimination can be qualified as employment discrimination because of sex. -
In a guest post for the Huffington Post, Chicago-Kent College of Law Professor Carolyn Shapiro explains how the Electoral College could prevent President-Elect Donald Trump from becoming president.
December 6, 2016The election on November 8 was the mechanism for each state to select its slate of electors, who will not themselves elect the president and vice-president until December 19. -
Chicago-Kent College of Law Dean Harold Krent is interviewed by WBEZ about the Aurora City Council’s practice of praying before meetings as it relates to separation of church and state.
December 5, 2016Details about legality and constitutionality come down to who performs the prayer and how the prayer is performed. But these relevant details won’t get legal scrutiny unless a citizen or other party with legal standing challenges the practice in court, according to Harold Krent. -
Chicago-Kent College of Law Dean Harold Krent discusses with WTTW’s Chicago Tonight how President-Elect Donald Trump’s business entanglements could bring him into conflict with the Constitution.
December 2, 2016"Most of the conflict of interest statutes don’t apply to the president—the president has been exempted from them by Congress," said Harold Krent. -
Chicago-Kent College of Law Professor Anthony Michael Kreis discusses a case that could extend workplace protection to the LGBT community in the Chicago Tribune and the Los Angeles Times.
December 2, 2016A ruling handed down by a lower court in Pennsylvania recently held that sexual orientation discrimination falls under the Civil Rights Act, according to Anthony Michael Kreis. -
Chicago-Kent College Associate Professor of Law Christopher W. Schmidt is quoted in PolitiFact about the possibility of President-Elect Donald Trump defunding sanctuary cities throughout the country.
December 2, 2016"If Trump was referring to the possibility of congressional legislation that would make continued funding contingent on cooperation with federal immigration policy, then we have a possible Dole situation," said Christopher W. Schmidt. -
In an interview with STAT, Chicago-Kent College of Law Professor Lori Andrews commented on Myriad Genetics’s claim that its test for the BRCA gene is superior.
December 1, 2016“It’s shocking that Myriad is disparaging other labs’ tests when, for nearly 20 years, it used its patents to keep other labs and academic scientists from making BRCA testing as accurate and accessible as possible,” said Lori Andrews.