Skip to main content

March 12, 2026

Research

UW researchers shine light on indigenous-led research

The Badger Herald

After taking community and tribal input, the Manoomin Team aimed to address mixed concerns regarding the state of the restored wild rice — some members of the community feared the rice because of the water it was living in, while others thought that if manoomin was present and growing, it must be healthy, according to Ojibway.

The Hua Lab at UW, led by associate professor within the Department of Forest and Wildlife Ecology Jessica Hua, has been a key partner in testing samples for heavy metals and PFAS.

“What we know so far … is that wild rice plants, the way that they grow, the way they make seed, is pretty protective of people’s health,” Erickson said. “I think we feel pretty good about people eating rice in the estuary and we can share that with people.”

Phonics is crucial. But how much is too much?

EducationWeek

Phonics—how letters represent sounds—is critical to reading. But once students have mastered its rules, the bulk of their time should be spent working with authentic texts, experts say.

“There are indications, circumstantial indications, that what’s happening is a lot of overteaching,” said Mark Seidenberg, an emeritus professor of psychology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, at the March 2 annual symposium of the AIM Institute for Learning and Research, a literacy professional development group.

UW-Madison, WARF open San Francisco office to boost campus startups

Wisconsin State Journal

Entrepreneurs launching startups through UW-Madison and the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation will soon have a larger presence on the West Coast.

The university and WARF, the campus’ nonprofit patent licensing arm, are partnering with seven other schools to open a two-year pilot workspace in San Francisco that university-founded startups and teams traveling to the Bay Area can use for work and to meet with investors.

UW scientists genetically editing Badger hemp lines with USDA approval

WKOW - Channel 27

Scientists at the Wisconsin Crop Innovation Center are pioneering the future of hemp farming. Researchers at UW-Madison have received deregulation from the U.S. Department of Agriculture for 3 gene-edited hemp lines, allowing field cultivation without special permits.

Senior research scientist Mike Petersen explained they use a tool called CRISPR to gently edit the plant’s DNA, giving it traits like no THC or resistance to disease. Back in November 2025, the first line approved was Badger G, high in CBG, and known to reduce inflammation and other pharmaceutical benefits.

In Antarctica, UW-Madison researchers answer questions about the hidden giants of our universe

The Daily Cardinal

“When the neutrino interacts in the ice, it shatters an atom and the splinters from that direction are a lot of energetic subatomic particles,” UW-Madison professor of physics and astronomy — and frequent IceCube collaborator — Justin Vandenbroucke said. “A fraction of those have electric charge, and they make a flash of blue light.”

Higher Education/System

Hmong American Peace Academy received national recognition for exceptional performance. How did it do it?

Wisconsin Watch

Angelina Vang said she knew she wanted to go to college since her freshman year.

She has choices – she’s been accepted at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, Loyola University and DePaul University. She’s looking to study medicine and become an emergency physician.

The office has also supported Yang, who plans to attend the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

“A lot of the students here are first generation,” Yang said. “Having that support really builds our self-esteem and making sure that we know what we want to do in the future and how we can go to college or enter the workforce.”

Wisconsin legislature advances $14.6 million funding bill for UW athletics NIL program

Channel 3000

Wisconsin lawmakers moved closer to providing millions in taxpayer funding to help the University of Wisconsin-Madison athletics department compete in the evolving landscape of college sports name, image and likeness programs.

The Joint Finance Committee approved Bill 1034 on Wednesday afternoon in an 8-5 bipartisan vote, advancing legislation that would allocate $14.6 million to UW athletics. The bill could reach the Senate floor as soon as next week.

Women’s History Month: Honoring Vel Phillips, a Wisconsin trailblazer

WMTV - Channel 15

A statue of Vel Phillips stands at the corner of Main and Carroll streets in Madison — the only statue of a Black woman on the grounds of the Wisconsin State Capitol.

Phillips, who became the first Black woman to graduate from the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s law school in 1951, built a career defined by historic firsts in Wisconsin politics and civil rights.

Legislative committee advances funds so UW-Madison can pay student athletes

Wisconsin Public Radio

The Legislature’s budget committee voted Wednesday to give more than $14 million a year to the University of Wisconsin-Madison for athletic facilities costs as the sports powerhouse pays student athletes for “name, image, likeness” deals, known as NIL.

But the vote on the GOP-led Joint Finance Committee suggests the legislation will require Democratic votes to get over the finish line in the Senate.

UW-Madison international students navigate uncertain federal policies

The Daily Cardinal

As recent changes to immigration policy under the Trump administration lead to a decline in foreign student enrollment across the country, some current and prospective international students feel uncertain about their future in the U.S.

The U.S. saw its largest decline in foreign enrollment in a decade, excluding the COVID-19 pandemic, as international enrollment for the 2025-26 academic year fell by 17%.

At the University of Wisconsin-Madison, freshman international enrollment declined by 30%, with only 325 students joining this academic year compared to 506 students the year before.

Campus life

Wisconsin Union’s inaugural chef-in-residence brings more vegan, vegetarian options to campus

The Daily Cardinal

Chef Lauren Montelbano has worked as Wisconsin Union’s first chef-in-residence since last April, expanding vegetarian and vegan options across Union restaurants and collaborating with Union chefs to develop recipes and culinary programs for the Madison community.

Over the past year, she designed dishes for the catering menus, Grab ‘N’ Go areas and the Rathskeller and hosted a cooking demo and class through WUD Cuisine to teach more about vegan food preparation.

“I had the opportunity to collaborate and learn from the highly skilled and talented chefs that have made the Union their home,” Montelbano said. “Their attention to detail, passion for teaching and ability to manage multiple high volume businesses at once was inspiring to witness and be a small part of.”

UW-Madison faculty union calls for removal of Flock security cameras

Channel 3000

The University of Wisconsin-Madison Police Department’s use of Flock security cameras has sparked privacy concerns among faculty and staff, leading to calls for the surveillance technology to be removed from campus.

UW-Madison police adopted the security cameras in July 2025. The department said the cameras help with investigations by identifying license plates and vehicles, but do not identify faces, people, gender or race. The system captures photos rather than videos.

‘Mathematicians are just going crazy’: YouTuber 3Blue1Brown packs UW lecture hall, talks high-dimensional spheres

The Daily Cardinal

A crowd of over 400 gathered in Van Vleck Hall to hear Grant Sanderson, a STEM content creator known by his YouTube handle 3Blue1Brown, talk about high-dimensional spheres in a Feb. 13 event hosted by the University of Wisconsin-Madison Math Club.

Sanderson’s UW-Madison talk was titled: “Who cares about high-dimensional spheres?” Enough people, a UW-Madison math club member joked, to “outdraw the Harry Styles pre-album release listening party.”

State news

Could Trump ‘nationalize’ elections in Dane County?

Isthmus

Trump cannot simply mandate that the federal government take over election administration in a state or local jurisdiction, says Derek Clinger, senior counsel and director of partnerships at the University of Wisconsin Law School’s State Democracy Research Initiative.

To do so would require federal legislation, which Clinger says seems unlikely.

Some Senate Republicans are withholding their votes because they believe the Save America Act “provides too much federal control” over elections, Clinger says. Actually “taking over” administration would be a further step with even less support, he adds.

“American elections have pretty much always been run by the states, with just a few key exceptions where Congress has passed laws impacting that,” says Clinger.

Evers calls for special Legislative session to ban partisan gerrymandering

The Daily Cardinal

When Evers called Republican lawmakers in the past for special sessions, they often gavel in and out within seconds to avoid taking action. But University of Wisconsin-Madison political science Professor Barry Burden said this special session might have potential among Republicans.

The amendment is more of an “idea of wanting to end partisan gerrymandering,” not necessarily about the process, Burden said, adding that the amendment has to move through the legislature, campaigning and voter ballots before it could be approved.

“It’s a long, complicated set of steps. But I think for the moment, it’s still a live issue and has some potential,” Burden said.

Health

AI chatbots recommend calorie-starved diets for teens, study warns

Gizmodo

“Adolescence is one of the big time periods of growth, next to infants,” said Taiya Bach, a member of the teaching faculty at the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s Department of Nutritional Sciences told Gizmodo. “They need way more calories than a grown adult does.”

“Even if you are overweight, you still have that growth piece because a bunch of your calories are still going towards hormones and development and bone growth,” Bach said.

Athletics

Wisconsin’s Caroline Harvey is a top three finalist for the Patty Kazmaier Award

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Caroline Harvey’s mantel is stacked with awards.

The University of Wisconsin senior defender was recently named the most valuable player at the Olympics after helping Team USA win the gold medal.  She also claimed player and defender of the year distinction in the WCHA.

Could the Patty Kazmaier Award be next?

The USA Hockey Foundation announced Wednesday, March 11 its three finalists for the 2026 award, which is given annually to the top women’s college hockey player. Harvey made the cut, as did fellow Olympians Abbey Murphy of Minnesota and Tessa Janecke of Penn State.

If Harvey wins it would mark the second time Badgers player won the award in consecutive years. Casey O’Brien was the winner last season. UW’s Meghan Duggan and Brianna Decker won in 2011 and ’12.

Business/Technology

How energy prices figure into the Fed’s interest rate decisions

MarketPlace

Menzie Chinn, an economics professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, said it’s a pretty safe bet that the Fed is keeping an eye on the war in Iran and its effect on energy prices.

“I think they will be eager to make sure that they show commitment to not let inflation get out of hand,” he said.

Chinn said the Fed usually focuses on core inflation, which strips out energy prices since they can jump around from month to month. But he said the Fed will also consider scenarios where the conflict drags on, keeping energy prices high for a while.

“And if it’s sustained, then that’s going to feed into core prices, eventually,” Chinn said.