Link: UCOP's e-newsletter

Stay Informed. Stay Connected.

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You’re invited to play bingo on Friday!

Colleagues from several campuses are invited to join their local Staff Assemblies for fun bingo games this Friday afternoon and evening.


Boost your career this year with the UC Alumni Career Network

From navigating workplace culture to advancing as a person of color, balancing parenting with work, managing your finances and more, the UC Alumni Career Network offers real-world advice from the UC community.


Read the UCOP COVID-19 Prevention Plan

Learn how UCOP is responding to COVID-19 and our eventual return to on-site operations.


New learning opportunity: Gain leadership skills at UCOP

The new UCOP Aspiring Leaders Development Program is an experiential professional development program offered to staff who are interested in exploring leadership roles and career development.


UC statement on Gov. Newsom’s 2021-2022 budget plan

On Jan. 8, UC Board of Regents Chair John A. Pérez and President Michael V. Drake, M.D., issued a statement on Gov. Newsom’s proposed 2021-22 budget.


Improve your work-from-home experience with collaborative, live workshops

Learn to manage stress, increase focus, balance competing priorities, collaborate more effectively, support your colleagues and more.


Reminder: GUEA welcomes author Amy Nickerson this Friday

GUEA will welcome Amy Nickerson, author of “How Do You See Us? Our Lived Realities of Being Viewed as a Threat” for an exploration of racial injustice and systemic racism in the United States.


UC plans for fall 2021 in-person instruction across its 10 campuses

UC is preparing to welcome students back to all its campuses, while remaining vigilant in critical prevention efforts and continuing to prioritize the health and well-being of the university community.


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New class: Stand out on LinkedIn

If you’ve thought about boosting your online professional profile but aren’t sure where to begin, this is the course for you!


UC research: The 16 facial expressions most common to emotional situations worldwide

A new UC Berkeley study shows that humans from all over the world all use variations of the same facial expressions in similar social contexts, such as smiles, frowns, grimaces and scowls.