Visitors experience sights, sounds and tastes of ASU's West campus


Listening for 'Sammy's' breath

Arizona State University's Night of the Open Door — five free open houses over the month of February — continued at the West campus in Glendale on Saturday, where the rain held off as visitors learned about forensics, the neuroscience of chocolate, black widow spiders and other subjects.

Scroll down to see video and photos from the event.

Young visitors tried their hand at an Army ROTC pull-up challenge, real-life Angry Birds games, personality tests for future careers, crime-scene investigations and Minecraft fun as the West campus' schools and departments opened their doors to the public to show off ASU's learning spaces.

Check out the Downtown Phoenix campus' Night of the Open Door event on Feb. 3 here — including healthy cooking demos, coral reef exploration, journalism technology of the future and more.  

If you missed the fun, don't worry: There are three more free Night of the Open Door events this month:

  • Polytechnic campus: 4-9 p.m. Friday, Feb. 17
  • Thunderbird campus: 4-8 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 18
  • Tempe campus: 3-9 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 25

Read more about what's in store at each campus here, including information on the free app that can help visitors map out the activities they want to visit.

Get free tickets in advance online and enter to win a gift package. Tickets also function as an express pass to collect the free glow wand and event programs at the registration booths once on campus.

Check ASU Now after each event for photo galleries and video, and follow along as our crew shows all the fun on Snapchat (search for username: ASUNow). See photos from the Downtown Phoenix campus event here.

Top photo: Sebastian Flores listens for "Sammy's" breath at the nursing booth during Night of the Open Door on West Campus on Saturday evening.  Photo by Deanna Dent/ASU Now

More Science and technology

 

Palo Verde Blooms

Why women and LGBTQ+ students face greater challenges in college science classrooms

A new nationwide study conducted by researchers from Arizona State University, titled "Academic social comparison: a promising new target to reduce fear of negative evaluation in large-enrollment…

Man wearing glasses working on equipment

New technology developments to help surgeons save lives

​How many heart surgeries are performed each year worldwide? What about colonoscopies?In the United States alone, more than 900,000 heart surgeries are performed each year. Around the globe, 17.9…

Jayesh Nagpal holds a controller to help train a robot.

Dirty, dull or dangerous: Using AI to teach robots to do the jobs we don’t want

Fantasy writer Joanna Maciejewska recently took to the social media site X to opine, “I want AI to do my laundry and dishes so that I can do art and writing, not for AI to do my art and writing so…