Featured Research
The Office of Research and Creative Scholarship highlighted select faculty and student research in an annual publication, Research and Creative Scholarship at Andrews University (2010-2016). Andrews Universtiy alumni magazine, FOCUS, continues to feature faculty and student research in every Winter edition. To view previous editions of Research at Andrews, please select the links below.
2024 Research at Andrews
2023 Research at Andrews
2022 Research at Andrews
2021 Research at Andrews
2020 Research at Andrews
2019 Research at Andrews
Research and Creative Scholarship Publications (2010-2016)
Stories covered in the the 2016 edition include research on carcinogenic foods, archaeology in Sicily, canonical theology, the art of listening, the connection between psychology and art, truth in documentary films, and race in Renaissance literature.
It's been a busy year at Andrews University! In the 2015 Research Brochure you'll get catch a glimpse of the campus master plan, learn about autoethnography, discover the importance of internalizing the Sabbath, and much more!
Read about the latest research and creative scholarship at Andrews, including the production of the St. Matthew Passion, cricket neuronal behavior, and Waldensian architecture and environmental design.
The complexity of European politics, the artistry of license plates, the roots of the first amendment, and the genes of zebrafish are just a few of the things being discussed in the 2013 Research Brochure.
Learn about marine iguanas on the Galápagos Islands and be impressed by the research projects of undergraduate students. Discover Adventism's first historian and learn why kids are afraid of math. All this and much more are included in the 2012 Research Brochure.
Can we detect gravitational waves? How can Jews and Christians discuss theology together? What do teapots and license plates have in common? The 2011 research Brochure holds the answers to these questions!
The 2010 Research and Creative Scholarship brochure covers everything from the egg-laying habits of seabirds to the new ways biblical research is being conducted.