Skip to Main Content
88° Fort Worth
All TCU. All the time.

TCU 360

TCU 360

All TCU. All the time.

TCU 360

TCU students cheer for the football team.

Student COVID-19 cases near zero as semester reaches midpoint

By Benton McDonald
Published Oct 6, 2020
Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs Kathy Cavins-Tull attributed the decline to university testing protocols and student behavior.
The Harrison Administration Building

Administration wants faculty to teach more in-person classes in the spring

By Renee Umsted
Published Oct 2, 2020
Provost Teresa Dahlberg asked faculty to teach more classes in person in the spring.
Items included in a busy bag given to students in isolation. (Photo courtesy of Danielle Hoefeld)

Hall directors get creative to help students cope in isolation

By Haeven Gibbons
Published Oct 2, 2020
When hall directors realized isolated students were struggling in isolation, they teamed up to create "busy bags."
Neeley (left) plays with Runcle (right) at the Blessing of the Animals.

Pets blessed virtually and in person during Blessing of the Animals

By Samantha Knapp
Published Oct 2, 2020
TCU hosts annual Blessing of the Animals both in-person and on Zoom.
The J. M. Moudy buildings, where the College of Communication is housed. (Heesoo Yang/Staff Photographer)

Instructors look to continue using technology after the pandemic

By Shaina Looker
Published Oct 1, 2020
Professors adapt and enrich online teaching.
The new Groome shuttles have lots of safety measures to assure students and drivers are kept safe. (Cole Marchi/Staff Reporter)

New shuttle service fusing technology into TCU’s public transportation system

By Cole Marchi
Published Oct 1, 2020
Students can track shuttles, which are adhering to safety guidelines, on their phones.
The Founders Statue. (Heesoo Yang/Staff Photographer)

TCU forensics to discuss TCU’s history

By Logan Gibbs
Published Oct 1, 2020
TCU speech and debate will host a campus discussion regarding removal of the Founders Statue.
TCU's Robert Carr Chapel (Samantha Knapp/Staff Writer)

COVID-19 changes TCU students’ religious practices

By Samantha Knapp and Samantha Knapp
Published Oct 1, 2020
TCU religious organizations and students' practice of religion is changing during COVID-19.
TCU Music Center

How performing arts majors are adjusting to the pandemic

By Jillian Verzwyvelt
Published Sep 30, 2020
Performing arts students and faculty discuss challenges adapting to COVID-19.
FILE - In this July 27, 2018, file photo, the Dave Johnson coal-fired power plant is silhouetted against the morning sun in Glenrock, Wyo. A record drop in U.S. energy consumption this spring was driven by less demand for coal that's burned for electricity and oil that's refined into gasoline and jet fuel. (AP Photo/J. David Ake, File)

Physician declares climate change a ‘medical emergency’ in Friday Focus talk

By Camilla Price
Published Sep 30, 2020
Dr. Mark Dambro, who recently completed Al Gore's climate training course, said human health is at risk from global warming.
Faculty discuss adapting to hybrid learning on zoom (Shannon Murphy/Line Editor)

TCU faculty talk about managing a hybrid classroom

By Shannon Murphy
Published Sep 30, 2020
TCU faculty discuss the difficulties and benefits of conducting a hybrid classroom.
Student teachers are unable to teach in-person this semester due to COVID-19 regulations (TCU360 Staff)

Education majors adapt to online student teaching

By Astrid Souto
Published Sep 30, 2020
Some education majors have expressed frustration with policies forcing them to teach online for the rest of the semester.