News at Adelphi
- Faculty,
- Research & Creative Works
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Fighting for Our Salt Marshes: Adelphi Biology Professor Speaks Out on the Dangers of Methoprene
CategoriesPublished:Dr. Foellmer shared his expertise in a video produced by the Sierra Club Atlantic Chapter. He explained that healthy wetlands protect property and surrounding areas by absorbing flood water from storms such as Superstorm Sandy.
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This year’s Research Day on April 17 was Adelphi’s biggest yet—it grows every year. Learn what was new at our 16th annual event, and meet some of the students who presented their research.
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Indigenous peoples often appear as caricatures in official histories and popular narratives of Japan’s 20th-century empire. A new book by assistant professor of history Kirsten Ziomek, PhD, paints a fuller picture of cultures that have long been marginalized.
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Research by Geoffrey Ream, Ph.D., associate professor of social work, has revealed a shocking fact: Nearly one-quarter of young teens who died by suicide were LGBT.
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This academic year, ÃÛÑ¿TV received four grants totaling nearly $1.7 million for STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics)-related projects. Three grants were awarded from the National Science Foundation (NSF) and the fourth grant was awarded from the American Chemical Society.
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For Women Entrepreneurs in Conservative Countries, "Strategic Disobedience" Is a Path to Success
CategoriesPublished:Can women entrepreneurs succeed in male-dominated, conservative countries? Research by Murat Erogul, Ph.D., assistant professor of management, shows they can—as long as they practice what he calls “strategic disobedience.â€
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Lauren Gonzales, Ph.D., assistant professor of psychology, combines various methods of research to better understand the factors that can prevent persons with mental illnesses from integrating successfully into their communities.
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Damian Stanley, Ph.D., assistant professor of psychology, has developed a test that may lead to the identification of subcategories of autism and the development of new interventions and/or treatments.
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I had to step beyond the obvious and do more, says Matthew J. Wright, who offers advice for other scholars seeking funding.
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Professor Anagnostis Agelarakis, Ph.D., is widely renowned for his archaeological work in Greece, as well as here at Adelphi, for bringing his students with him to gain hands-on experience with the summer Field Research program in Greece.
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Patients of all ages come from surrounding communities for low-cost treatment of hearing, speech and language issues at Adelphi’s Hy Weinberg Center for Communication Disorders.
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Adelphi’s sense of community extends to the entire planet. That’s why we formed a Sustainable Campus Council—powered by staff, faculty and students—to develop solutions that will make Adelphi greener.
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Craig Carson, Ph.D.
CategoriesPublished:Dr. Carson won the Teaching Excellence Award for untenured faculty at ÃÛÑ¿TV and his teaching and research interests include literary theory, aesthetics, political theory, and ecocriticism.
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Q&A With Elaine L. Smith '78, M.S. '88, Ed.D., New Dean of the College of Nursing and Public Health
CategoriesPublished:In March 2019, Elaine (Kaupp) Smith '78, M.S. '88, Ed.D., was named dean of the College of Nursing and Public Health. The announcement may be new, but Dr. Smith is no stranger to Adelphi.
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The ÃÛÑ¿TV's International Leadership Coordinating Committee was pleased to award the 2019 International Research Awards during the 16th Annual Adelphi Research Conference.
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Igor Webb, Ph.D.
CategoriesPublished:Igor Webb, Ph.D., director of creative writing at Adelphi, is a poet and author of short stories, essays and novels.
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Jacqueline Jones LaMon
CategoriesPublished:Jacqueline Jones LaMon is the author of two poetry collections and the novel In the Arms of One Who Loves Me.
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Katherine Hill
CategoriesPublished:Katherine Hill is the author of the novel The Violet Hour (Scribner, 2013).
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Martha Cooley
CategoriesPublished:Martha Cooley is a professor is the winner of an O. Henry Prize for Short Fiction (2017)
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Judith Baumel
CategoriesPublished:Judith Baumel, founding director of the Creative Writing Program at Adelphi, is a poet, critic and translator.
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Vincent Wei-cheng Wang Ph.D. is welcomed as the new dean of the College of Arts and Sciences.
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Debbi A. Smith, M.A., M.B.A., M.S.L.S., has been appointed Interim Dean of University Libraries for ÃÛÑ¿TV effective April 1.
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Margaret Gray, associate professor of political science, is quoted by the New York Times about indoor greenhouse farm labor conditions.
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In recognition of his work, Dr. Fareri was named a Rising Star by the Association for Psychological Science (APS), an honor given to a handful of outstanding psychological scientists in the early stages of their postgraduate research careers around the world.
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Inside and outside the classroom, experiential learning works. Hands-on, high-impact learning experiences are central to Adelphi's personalized approach to education. A panel at the conference provided examples of their benefits to students.
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A study by Professor Geoffrey Ream Ph.D. on suicide rates in LGBTQ youth is featured by many media outlets including Reuters and Huffington Post.
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Jacques Barber, Ph.D., professor and dean of the Gordon F. Derner School of Psychology, is the winner of this year's Division 39 (Society for Psychoanalysis and Psychoanalytic Psychology) Research Award.
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Scientists from around the world travel to the famous CERN laboratory in Geneva, Switzerland, to probe the fundamental structure of the universe using the largest and most powerful particle accelerator on earth—the Large Hadron Collider. Last summer, they were joined by an Adelphi senior, Muhammad Aziz, a physics major who spent six weeks as part of a longer 10-week internship with the Triangle Universities Nuclear Laboratory/Duke University Research Experiences for Undergraduates (REU) program.
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"The cemetery within the fortification walls of Polystylon was discovered in 1991 and contained at least 20 graves, all of which were studied by Anagnostis Agelarakis, a bioarchaeologist at ÃÛÑ¿TV."
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Adelphi students don't just learn in the classroom. They work in labs and professional settings and, at least in the classes of Michael D'Emic, Ph.D., assistant professor of biology, are known to get out and get their hands dirty.