- Study exposes crisis communication gaps
- New research reveals the forgotten women behind the Uganda Martyrs
- Education and mindset gaps fuel graduate unemployment
- URA honours UCU for Tax contribution.
- Radio journalism that helped end a war
- Single parenting strains child welfare, UCU study reveals
- Atuhaire petitions Guild Elections
- UCU School of Law Year Two Students Win Sports Gala
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A new study by Uganda Christian University (UCU) postgraduate student Jacqueline Nalubwama now sheds light on how the media house managed those critical first months of the pandemic and what lessons Uganda’s media industry can draw from that experience.
While the kingdom’s young converts were led to execution, their mothers prayed, mourned, and sustained the early Christian movement under intense persecution. Their resilience, she argues, formed the spiritual backbone of Uganda’s first Christian community.
gh many graduates complete university with strong academic qualifications, they face a job market that demands far more than theoretical knowledge.
In the midst of that lesson, Ateme discovered gardening. Within the school’s garden, pupils engaged in practical work twice a week – every Wednesday and Saturday. There, among plants, Ateme began a lifelong relationship with agriculture.
Uganda Christian University’s (UCU) Honors College hosted a career exhibition on Saturday, March 16th, this year, under the theme ‘NAVIGATING HORIZONS: A Journey Through Diverse Careers’. The event aimed to spotlight students, schools, and faculties excelling in various skills beyond academic competencies.
Catherine Nakiridde will now lead the team as the captain, taking over from Shadia Nankya. Nankya had previously stepped in for the team’s legendary player, Hasifa Nassuna.
The significance of blood donation cannot be overstated. Donated blood is used to save the lives of patients suffering from a wide range of medical conditions, including trauma, surgery, cancer, and chronic illnesses
Uganda Christian university , UCU, will feature prominently in this year’s 3×3 basketball in the ongoing 2024 African Games in Ghana.
When Micheline Ugara Mazo arrived in Uganda more than six years ago, all she wanted was to pursue a university education. She did not care what course she studied. To get herself ready for education in Uganda, Ugara Mazo, a native of he Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), took lessons in English for more than eight months.
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