News at Adelphi
- Faculty,
- Research & Creative Works
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Published:Friends, family and a who's who of colleagues celebrated Jacques Barber, PhD, who recently retired after 12 years as dean of the Gordon F. Derner School of Psychology.
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Published:Michael Moore, PhD, studies how people's thoughts can lead to depression and anxiety. His hope is that Adelphi will train more people from underrepresented groups to help those in need.
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Published:His evolving role reflects how Derner's Office of the Dean is expanding the School's Teaching Fellows and graduate programs during a time when the nation needs more psychologists.
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Published:Carl Mirra, PhD, associate professor in the Ruth S. Ammon College of Education and Health Sciences, has made several service trips to Ukraine, and sees a school system in transformation. “We are witnessing a historic moment where democracy is being forged in schools and society amidst a crisis," he explains.
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Published:
The ÃÛÑ¿TV Robert B. Willumstad School of Business has named Deborah Zawisza ’80 its 2023–2024 Executive in Residence.
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Published:A history major looks at how the Adelphi community—and everyone—can all honor Native American heritage, culture and history this month and year-round.
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Published:Student-faculty team examines the foundational assumptions of carcinogenesis modeling.
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Published:A student-led photovoice project empowers people in treatment to share their experiences and build community ties.
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Published:An international collaboration leads to the development of eco-friendly solar technologies
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Published:A new theoretical framework outlines best practices school psychologists can use to help LGBTQ+ youth prepare for college
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Published:For Anagnostis Agelarakis, PhD, professor in Adelphi's history department, archaeology is an endlessly generative practice.
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Published:New discoveries connect Indigenous Alaskans to their ancestors
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Published:Professor Pamela Buckle, PhD, MA '13, teaches nontraditional students in CPCS and earned her degree in the program as well.
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Published:A grant-funded study investigates the cognitive processes that allow us to form healthy social bonds and resist maladaptive behaviors
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Published:Examining factors precipitating substance abuse, from America's rural to urban communities.
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Published:Thanks to a major gift from Bharat Bhisé, MBA '78, students and faculty will examine history, relations and economics to address global issues and increase understanding.
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Published:Four days after Russia invaded Ukraine, Adelphi faculty hosted a teach-in to help students make sense of the conflict.
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Published:Probing the correlation between a company's political ideology and its loan terms
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Published:Adelphi professor's ethical framework offers a new way of thinking about culpability and provocation.
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Published:Assistant Professor Natalia Prado-Oviedo, PhD, is studying the genomes of elephants in U.S. zoos to increase the odds of survival for this endangered species.
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Published:Latinx street art illuminates the immigrant experience and history of labor in Texas, countering societal erasures.
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Published:Adelphi faculty explore a century of American immigration through art, music and film.
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Published:The fraught relationship between Central American immigrant mothers and their reunified children.
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Published:Biology professor Matthias Foellmer, PhD, is giving native plants and local pollinators a newly renovated home on our 70-acre organic campus arboretum.
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Published:A new approach to cost-benefit analysis helps corporations reduce their carbon emissions.
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Published:One painter finds beauty—and despair— in our world's changing landscape.
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Published:Adelphi scientists work to restore biodiversity to local coastlines.
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CategoriesPublished:
A response letter to Jemima Kelly’s piece in the Financial Times about mindfulness in politics from Mariano Torras, PhD.
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Published:MS student Samuel Sey spent the summer conducting research as one of Adelphi’s competitive Jaggar Community Fellows. Unique to Adelphi, Jaggar internships advance student careers with paid internships while supporting important nonprofit missions.
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Published:Jacqueline Olvera, PhD, director of Latin American and Latinx Studies and associate professor of sociology, and students spent an eye-opening summer with the hardworking, entrepreneurial women who sell tamals on street corners.