News at Adelphi
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A new TV show, Carl the Collector, will be the first PBS animated series starring a character on the autism spectrum. Stephen Shore, EdD, clinical associate professor, who is on the spectrum himself and is a globally recognized expert on autism from the Ruth S. Ammon College of Education and Health Sciences, was called in to advise.
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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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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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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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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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The ÇÑ×ÓÊÓƵ Robert B. Willumstad School of Business has named Deborah Zawisza ’80 its 2023–2024 Executive in Residence.
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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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Student-faculty team examines the foundational assumptions of carcinogenesis modeling.
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A student-led photovoice project empowers people in treatment to share their experiences and build community ties.
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An international collaboration leads to the development of eco-friendly solar technologies
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A new theoretical framework outlines best practices school psychologists can use to help LGBTQ+ youth prepare for college
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For Anagnostis Agelarakis, PhD, professor in Adelphi's history department, archaeology is an endlessly generative practice.
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New discoveries connect Indigenous Alaskans to their ancestors
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Professor Pamela Buckle, PhD, MA '13, teaches nontraditional students in CPCS and earned her degree in the program as well.
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A grant-funded study investigates the cognitive processes that allow us to form healthy social bonds and resist maladaptive behaviors
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Different subsets of the transgender population have different rates of marijuana use when medically transitioning, new research finds
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Examining factors precipitating substance abuse, from America's rural to urban communities.
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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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Four days after Russia invaded Ukraine, Adelphi faculty hosted a teach-in to help students make sense of the conflict.
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Probing the correlation between a company's political ideology and its loan terms
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Adelphi professor's ethical framework offers a new way of thinking about culpability and provocation.
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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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Latinx street art illuminates the immigrant experience and history of labor in Texas, countering societal erasures.
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Adelphi faculty explore a century of American immigration through art, music and film.
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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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A new approach to cost-benefit analysis helps corporations reduce their carbon emissions.
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One painter finds beauty—and despair— in our world's changing landscape.
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Adelphi scientists work to restore biodiversity to local coastlines.
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A response letter to Jemima Kelly’s piece in the Financial Times about mindfulness in politics from Mariano Torras, PhD.
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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.