News at Adelphi
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Adelphi is committed to being a model of diversity and inclusion, from faculty hiring practices to supporting the needs of all students.
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Rebecca DelGiudice: Exploring New Challenges in the Emerging Field of Infant Mental Health
CategoriesPublished:A student in Adelphi's new Infant Mental Health-Developmental Practice Training Program talks about her experience in the program.
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Kyle Roach began his studies at Adelphi University in the Fall of 2015 to study Computer Science with a concentration in Game Development. “I came to college extremely open-minded,” he said. What attracted Roach to Adelphi was the Game Development program. An avid gamer, Kyle enjoys interactive games on his Playstation 4 and Xbox One…
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Susan Kurian joined the Adelphi team in 2005 as a programmer analyst and has since been promoted to business intelligence analyst. However, Kurian’s journey began some 6,000 miles away from Adelphi University, in Salmiya, Kuwait. Born to Indian parents, she was educated in Kuwait until the ninth grade when her parents moved her and her…
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Students and alumni of Adelphi's online M.S. in Nutrition Program met face-to-face for a field trip to the Museum of Food and Drink in Brooklyn.
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The real-world history behind fostered children in Game of Thrones.
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Adelphi Associate Professor Aditi Bandyopadhyay, Ph.D., studies the compilation of these materials, which have undergone a remarkable transformation over the past several decades.
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William Cobbett was the most widely read British journalist of his era, though his name is not well known these days outside the UK. His fame lives on, uncredited, in a term that was invented to describe him.
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Clinical Associate Professor John Wygand put “cupping”—the therapy responsible for those blotches—through its own Olympic-like trials.
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A new metric, the Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) rating, which is assigned by specialized agencies founded in the United State and Europe over the past 20 years.
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What is information and how does it define us? One Adelphi specialist is putting the University at the forefront of this emerging field called the philosophy of information.
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New Way Out
CategoriesPublished:The research of Meredith Whitley, Ph.D., in informed by a passion for understanding the correlations and causalities affecting young athletes in risk-laden environments—and developing viable solutions.
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A new program called Supervisory Leaders in Aging promises to help several chapters of the National Association of Social Workers dramatically improve the delivery of healthcare and social services to older adults.
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Muhammad Ali, MS ’17, uses supply chain research on the petroleum industry to jump-start his dreams of entrepreneurship.
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Archaeological digs are hit-or-miss propositions. Often you find nothing. Sometimes a theory is confirmed. Once or twice in a career, you unearth the unexpected.
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Alexander Heyl, Ph.D., assistant professor of biology, exposes students to the rigors of his methodologies, providing them with invaluable access to his cutting-edge work.
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Through his research, Julian R. Woolf, Ph.D., has gained profound insight into the prevailing cultural beliefs about, and attitudes toward, PEDs,
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When a couple gets married, they aren’t just connecting two people—they’re linking two different sets of social ties and networks. This intricate social web is at the heart of Katherine Fiori, Ph.D.’s research.
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For author and professor Martha Cooley, the tombstones in a charming Tuscan village cemetery serve as a touchstone to a pair of seemingly incongruent truths: that grief can be at once imprisoning and liberating.
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A New Life
CategoriesPublished:When CarolAnn Daniel, Ph.D., arrived in Haiti to volunteer in the wake of the 2010 earthquake, she had no idea that she would end up studying violence among displaced Haitian youth and women.
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Robert Bornstein, Ph.D., calls for continued research into issues surrounding self-reports, particularly the psychological processes that occur when people choose their answers to questionnaires.
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Stephen Mark Shore, Ed.D., recently traveled to Bangladesh and Bhutan to speak about autism education, giving hope to parents that rich and fulfilling futures are possible for their children with autism.
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One of the greatest strengths of Adelphi’s theater program is its deep-rooted connections to the entertainment world: All faculty members work professionally, advancing their craft and bringing their hands-on experience back to the classroom.
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Stella Uwechia, pursuing a master’s in healthcare informatics, won a graduate oral presentation award at Adelphi’s 14th annual Research Conference in April 2017.
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Diana Mason, Ph.D., senior policy service professor at George Washington University School of Nursing, called on nurses to be “at the table where major healthcare decisions are being made.”
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Keynote speaker Jane H. White, Ph.D., addressed the 140 undergraduate and graduate students who were coated at the 2017 white coat ceremony.
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Jasmine Thalappillil is a registered nurse in a telemetry/stepdown unit at Montefiore Medical Center in the Bronx, where she started as a new graduate nurse.
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Alexander Klotsche ‘17 has just begun his career of helping patients in hospital and emergency-care situations and he’s set his long sights on becoming a chief nursing officer at a hospital.
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Independence in Action
CategoriesPublished:Keiko Iwama came to Adelphi's Ph.D. in Nursing program to experience a more independent nursing environment.
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The Ph.D. in Nursing program at the College of Nursing and Public Health aims to have a positive impact on a negative trend.