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Dean Bridgewater presents this special edition of the Impact magazine, which celebrates BYU's 150th anniversary by highlighting some of the ways that students and faculty in the College share their light for the benefit of the world.
The 2025 Neuroscience Art Contest challenged students to explore the musicality of the brain through art, resulting in several creative and captivating pieces.
Two Brigham Young University professors have been named as two of the most influential researchers in the world, with one earning the distinction for the first time and another extending a years-long streak on the list.
In the campus devotional on Tuesday, Elder B. Corey Cuvelier of the Quorum of the Seventy spoke to students about having righteous desires and how to align life goals and daily habits with those desires.
Life Sciences Alumnus Riley Peck spoke to students about his path to becoming the Director of Utah’s Division of Wildlife Resources.
Office Hours is a series focusing on unique artifacts that BYU employees display in their offices.
Elder Edward B. Rowe, a general authority seventy of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, testified in his devotional address to Brigham Young University students about overcoming trials through the power of covenants.
BYU professor Sam St. Clair is the principal investigator on the first study to show positive impacts of megafires (fires greater than 100,000 acres) across different forest types. Megafires can help some forest communities thrive — especially in areas where chronic browsing by elk, deer, and livestock has hindered tree regeneration, a widespread issue that often leads to forest regeneration failure.

Honorable Mention Inspiring Learning Contest 2025


Brighton Jacobs is an undergraduate studying Cell Biology and Physiology. He works in a lab exploring embryo development at the cellular level using chicken eggs. There is a unique reverence in the way Brighton studies these embryos. You can see the wonder he holds as he witnesses the development of life from under a microscope. Brighton showed me that BYU is a unique place where observing the creation of life can deepen not only our scientific understanding but our faith in God and his gift of life and light.