快活app

Skip to Content

快活app鈥檚 Far-Reaching Research Enterprise Aims to Advance Knowledge, Better Lives and Serve the Public Good

Back to News Listing

Author(s)

Janette Ballard

News  •
Winter Magazine Cover Image

This article is the cover story in the winter issue of University of听Denver Magazine. Visit the听听for bonus content and to read the article in its original format.

In less than a decade, the 快活app doubled its research volume鈥攆rom $19 million in 2012 to more than $38 million in 2020.

Research spending, meanwhile, increased 82% over the past 10 years. And in fiscal 2021, the University was awarded 153 new research grants, eight of them for more than $1 million.

None of this occurred by happenstance. And now 快活app鈥檚 concentrated research push has earned it status as a Research 1 university, a designation awarded in December by the Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education.

The step up from being an R2 institution puts the University on a par with other prestigious universities conducting the highest levels of research activity. And it makes 快活app the fourth Colorado institution to secure R1 ranking 鈥 and the only private R1 institution in the Rocky Mountain region.

鈥淚 think that 快活app is a little bit different than the average research university,鈥 says Corinne Lengsfeld, senior vice provost for research and graduate education. 鈥淲e really have leaned into this vision of a private university serving the public good, and as such, we very much are looking for research, scholarship and creative work with impact.鈥

Lengsfeld, the primary advocate for the University鈥檚 research mission, has shepherded efforts to leverage its intellectual capital.

As Chancellor Jeremy Haefner sees it, this emphasis on impact advances the 快活app鈥檚 role as a catalyst for positive change. 鈥淭he research underway at the 快活app is valuable to industry, to policymakers and to scholars across the globe. It has implications that reach far beyond our labs and clinics and classrooms. And that鈥檚 critical as the University tries to attract talented faculty and students in an increasingly competitive higher education marketplace.鈥澨 听

According to 快活app鈥檚 2021 Research and Scholarship Annual Report, the University received more than $40 million in new award money, a 56% increase over the past five years. Funding comes from federal organizations such as the National Institutes of Health and the National Science Foundation (up to 69%), plus industries and foundations ranging from the Carnegie Foundation to the Colorado Health Foundation and Keck Foundation.

Lengsfeld says many 快活app research groups have 鈥渉it it out of the park鈥 on funding and are conducting work sure to better individual lives.

For example:

  • A group from the Department of Psychology in the College of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences is looking at toxic stress in adolescent children and building intervention programs.
  • A biomechanics group in the Ritchie School of Engineering and Computer Science is looking at total joint replacements, tackling everything from shoulders, knees and hips to spine stabilization.
  • The Butler Institute in the Graduate School of Social Work is working with child and family welfare systems in 38 states to devise and evaluate interventions.
  • At the Morgridge College of Education, researchers have developed methodologies that significantly improve how early math is taught and learned.
  • Faculty at the Sturm College of Law are on the cutting edge of research expected to refine trial law.
  • At the Daniels College of Business, studies on emerging economies are illuminating how corporate practices can contribute to human rights violations.

Lengsfeld also points to emerging groups making great strides.

鈥淲e currently have a funded multifaculty, multidivision group in the area of migration and immigration,鈥 she says. 鈥淭his is a pretty hot topic in the world right now. They鈥檝e really focused in on Colorado needs,鈥 such as migration from Latin America and policy related to immigration issues.

Another emerging group, from the Graduate School of Professional Psychology, is tackling trauma and veteran psychology and needs. Other groups are focusing on prison incarceration and reducing recidivism.

According to Lengsfeld, campus research, scholarship and creative work are having an impact on the Rocky Mountain region and, in many cases, on the nation and world.听

鈥淲e define research in a much broader context than most universities,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e think of it as those involved in scholarship, which would be the basic, fundamental research, but also those that take practice and practitioners and effect policy change as a result.听

鈥淪o, what we鈥檙e really doing is the full spectrum of all the things that are really important to the region,鈥 she adds.

Equally important is the benefit to students. Faculty members who bring their research into the classroom say it enhances the student experience.听

What鈥檚 more, Lengsfeld says, funded research 鈥渋s the employer for about 1 out of 5 students on this campus, so it鈥檚 actually funding student salaries and many times their tuition.鈥

According to the annual report, 552 graduate and undergraduate students were supported by $3 million in grant funding in fiscal 2021.

That pleases Provost Mary Clark, who considers student research opportunities a key component of 快活app鈥檚 signature 4D Experience, which emphasizes intellectual growth, character development, well-being, and the nurturing of careers and lives of purpose. 鈥淭he research opportunities we provide students allow them to hone their skills and develop intellectually. Our students benefit from the close collaboration with faculty mentors and from participating in projects that change lives and better communities,鈥 Clark says.

Research, scholarship and creative work have raised the University鈥檚 visibility and rankings, and that in turn helps 快活app attract high-achieving students, faculty and employees, Lengsfeld says. But, she adds, any institution dedicated to the student experience needs a mixture of faculty to achieve its goals.

鈥淎s we raise research, we need to raise all the boats with us, or it won鈥檛 be sustainable, and it won鈥檛 be our brand,鈥 she says. 鈥淪o we have to find ways that as research moves forward and transforms the campus that it intimately rewards and recognizes the importance of professors of the practice and teaching faculty who really contribute in unique ways across campus.鈥