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Professor Rachel Gregor

‘The future is interdisciplinary’: Meet new ChemE professor Rachel Gregor

A group of U of T Engineering employees

Engineering professors and staff honoured for excellence by the faculty 

Kochhar, in a suit, smiles at the camera

Six U of T-founded firms named among TIME magazine’s Top GreenTech Companies

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An ouroboros (snake eating its own tail) carving in stone.

Training AI on machine-generated text could lead to ‘model collapse,’ ECE professor and collaborators warn

Students demonstrate a new catalyst in the lab

New electrocatalyst improves both stability and efficiency in electrochemical conversion of captured carbon into valuable products

Public transit is just one example of a field at the intersection of engineering and public policy. A new certificate, launching this fall, will enable U of T Engineering students to gain fluency and experience with the design and implementation of public policy. (Photo: surangaw, via Envato Elements)

New Certificate in Public Policy and Engineering expands the skill set of future engineering leaders

Clockwise from top left: Professors Cindy Rottmann and Emily Moore (both ISTEP, ChemE), Andrea Chan (ISTEP), Emily Macdonald-Roach (ChemE 2T2, ChemE MASc candidate in EngEd), Dimpho Radebe (IndE 1T4 + PEY, ChemE PhD candidate in EngEd) and Professor Emeritus Doug Reeve (ChemE). (Photos: submitted)

ISTEP/Troost ILead team gains international recognition for engineering leadership research