Communiversity Announces Winter Season
Look for the
Communiversity Winter 2015 Catalog
online (see Current Courses) or in pdf format at the same link. If you would like to be added to our mailing list, simply call 513-556-6932 day or night and let us know.
Short Term Classes for Busy Men and Women was the original name of Communiversity when it first began 65 years ago. The name was not so catchy, perhaps; but it still described what continues to be at the heart of this UC lifelong learning experience. Noncredit personal enrichment and professional development classes are offered in manageable, short segments so that valuable learning can fit into busy peoples schedules. Face-to-face classes are held in the evenings and on the weekends; and in addition, online formats ensure that learning can occur at your convenience, 24/7.
Come to Communiversity for a class in music, dance, arts, handicrafts, astronomy, fitness, health, sports, travel, languages, business or career. Communiversity participants like the hands-on aspects of these classes, learning a lot in a little amount of time, and most of all they like the wide variety of offerings.
Class start dates begin as early as January 6 and there are new class launches continually through mid-March. Bring your sense of fun, adventure, and curiosity and try your hand at something new.
Related Stories
Yahoo News: Doctors see rising rates of colon cancer in younger...
May 1, 2024
Yahoo News featured comments from the University of Cincinnati's Rekha Chaudhary in a story about rising rates of diagnoses and deaths from colorectal cancers among young people.
Newsweek: Ancient Maya ballcourt may have been blessed
May 1, 2024
International media highlights UC's discovery of plants imbued with ritualistic significance beneath a ballcourt in the ruins of Yaxnohcah in Mexico.
Neuroimaging, AI help detect brain changes
May 1, 2024
Researchers at the University of Cincinnati and Dell Medical School at the University of Texas at Austin are leading a study using state-of-the-art neuroimaging techniques and artificial intelligence to identify changes in the brains among children of adults living with bipolar disorder.