In this issue’s article package on experiential learning at UTSA, the Citymester program takes students beyond their classrooms to help solve civic issues.
Expanding military history by recording the stories of women who’ve served.
Students hone skills writing for public relations, business, advertising, and marketing.
Members of a student organization at UTSA tackle case files of crimes gone cold with the goal of potentially offering investigators new insights to look into.
Students involved with UTSA’s Urban Future Lab work to translate a vision created for an area community into valuable ideas that people can aspire to.
Roadrunners work with residents on property-title issues and estate planning.
What’s the great potential—and the potential peril—when editing human genomes?
Sombrilla Magazine keeps a watch over our campuses to document in photos the important, the beautiful, and the memory-worthy moments of life at UTSA.
NASA taps UTSA’s experts to work on developing homes that can optimally last in the conditions of outer space for Earth’s explorers to the moon and Mars.
Researchers work with the military to harness electrons’ spin to power tech devices.
Taylor Eighmy explains the benefits of experiential learning projects for students.
UTSA’s engineering researchers have developed an inexpensive, smart stop sign that could improve driver safety on the rural roads of Texas.
Alternate reality experts have won a grant to find a cybersickness cure.
UTSA experts are studying potential bias in prosecutors’ case-filing trends.
UTSA uncovers the disconnect between human dopamine and cocaine addiction.
UTSA will test blood cells in volunteers to see if data can predict disease.
Researchers make a surprising discovery about patterns of prescription opioid misuse.
A roundup of important news events from the daily lives of Roadrunners.
Roadrunner basketball great Derrick Gervin stays close to the game he loves through mentorships with San Antonio students and a new podcast.
UTSA news in the ’70s was inseparable from Peggy Jo Tholen M.Ed. ’76.
Helen Wolf M.Ed. ’77 was the Alumni Association’s first lifetime member.
Once a student government leader, an ROTC corps commander, and an innovator of school spirit and tradition, Chris Webb ’83 left a lasting mark on his alma mater.
Helping you keep up with fellow classmates in our year-by-year coverage of events.
Remembering the members of Roadrunner Nation.
Check out the most recent print issue. Just click on the cover to open and start reading Sombrilla Magazine.
Whether it’s workforce plans or movie reviews, the UTSA professor and economic forecaster is providing valuable counsel
President Flawn addresses faculty and staff about university progress upon the close of the first year of operation
Staff describe UTSA life at the end of the first academic year on the new, permanent campus