Certified Sports Nutritionist (International Society of Sport Nutrition) Lecturer,
Department of Graduate Studies (Canadian Memorial Chiropractic College) Medical Director (GoodLife Fitness Toronto Marathon & The Limberlost Challenge Ultramarathon)
Not exact matches
while a
graduate student in economics at MIT, I dropped into the political economy
department at the University
of Toronto where I had done my undergraduate degree and one year
of graduate study.
He also serves at the Director
of Graduate Studies in Notre Dame's Philosophy
Department.
Faculty in those fields who are members
of departments of religious
studies receive their doctoral education in the same
graduate schools as do faculty in theological schools, and faculty move back and forth between the two contexts.
He is currently pursuing
graduate studies at The University
of Oxford's
Department of Politics and International Relations (Oct. 2015).
It featured contributions from Blake Ewing (
Graduate Editor, Politics in Spires, DPIR), Chris Gilson (Managing Editor, LSE USApp — American Politics and Policy), Sierra Williams (Managing Editor, LSE Impact
of Social Sciences blog), Chris Bertram (
Department of Philosophy, University
of Bristol, blogger with the group blog Crooked Timber), William Dutton (Oxford Internet Institute), David Levy (Director, Reuters Institute for the
Study of Journalism) and Will de Frietas (Business & Economy Editor, The Conversation).
During her many years
of academic journey, Professor Opoku - Agyemang served in a number
of important roles including Head
of the English
Department, Dean
of the Faculty
of Arts and Dean
of the Schools
of Graduate Studies and Research, all
of the University
of Cape Coast.
She was the inaugural Director
of the Reuters Institute for the
Study of Journalism at the
Department of Politics and International Relations and taught and supervised undergraduate and
graduate students in this
Department and the Oriental Institute.
Under the 4 +1 pathway assessment option, students must take and pass four required Regents Exams or
Department - approved alternative assessments (one in each
of English, math, science, and social
studies) and a comparably rigorous assessment for the fifth required exam to
graduate.
Ms. Throne - Holst
studied conflict resolution on the
graduate level at Columbia University and served with the UN's
Department of Peacekeeping Operations, notably in helping guide an election process in the Congo.
Wesley Kerr, whose
graduate studies will be completed in the UCLA
Department of Biomathematics, and his trainees, Akash Patel and Sarah Barritt, will present their poster entitled «Computer - Aided Diagnosis
of Epilepsy Using Clinical Information» outlining advances in the use
of computational machine learning to help clinicians detect and diagnose epilepsy correctly.
With ALMA, an international team lead by Yoko Oya, a
graduate student
of Department of Physics, The University
of Tokyo, and Nami Sakai, an associate chief scientist
of RIKEN,
studied the distribution
of various organic molecules around a Solar - type protostar IRAS 16293 - 2422A at a high spatial resolution.
The survey also revealed a wide range
of graduate curricula: programs within astronomy, physics - astronomy, and physics
departments; direct - entry Ph.D. programs, and programs which required, and valued, the MSc; programs with extensive and compulsory course requirements, and others which replace courses with minicourses, self -
study courses, or extra research projects; programs in which coursework (if any) was purely astronomy, and others which included physics or other subjects; programs with comprehensive exams, and others without or with an exam which was basically a defence
of the Ph.D. proposal.
The
study by Alison McLeish, a University
of Cincinnati associate professor
of psychology, Christina Luberto, a recent doctoral
graduate from UC and clinical fellow at Massachusetts General Hospital, and Emily O'Bryan, a
graduate student in the UC
Department of Psychology, will be presented at the Association for Behavioral and Cognitive Therapies (ABCT) 49th Annual Convention.
Now 24, he is a first - year
graduate student in the
department of cellular and structural biology at the University
of Texas Health Science Center in San Antonio (UTHSCSA), where he is
studying the role
of oxidative damage — the wear and tear inflicted upon the cell by toxic molecules called free radicals — in the aging process.
«We wanted to know how these beetles recolonize within burn units as well as how the neighborhood in which a burn unit occurs affects recolonization rates,» said Jessie Mutz, an FSU
graduate student in the
Department of Biological Science and the
study's lead author.
The lead author on the
study was Richard A. Slivicki, a
graduate student in Hohmann's lab in the IU Program in Neuroscience and
Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences.
According to a
Department of Veterans Affairs report, as
of February 2007, some 13,000 post-9 / 11 veterans have used the benefits to pursue
graduate degrees, about 139,000 have
studied for undergraduate degrees, and some 122,000 have enrolled in community colleges.
Scott Rick, a co-author
of this
study and a
graduate student in the Social and Decision Sciences
Department at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, was an economics major as an undergraduate.
In a
study published in Forensic Science International: Genetics, a team
of graduate students and faculty from the
Department of Forensic Science investigated several methods to recover and analyze DNA from improvised explosive devices, or IEDs, to help thwart terrorist efforts.
«We know that our brains change over time, but fully understanding how we make and recall memories as we age has been a mystery,» said Renante Rondina, a University
of Toronto and Rotman
graduate student in the
Department of Psychology and lead author
of the
study.
In the field results
of a
study by Brianna Lam, a
graduate student in the J.M.U.
Department of Biology, published in the journal Biological Conservation in 2009 (as well results published by Vredenburg and Harris in 2008 in Abstracts
of the General Meeting
of the American Society for Microbiology), revealed that wild mountain yellow - legged frog populations in the Sierras differed greatly in their amount
of cutaneous J. lividum.
«In our
study, it did not matter whether their sodium levels were high at the beginning
of the
study or if they were low to begin with, then gradually increased over the years — both groups were at greater risk
of developing high blood pressure,» said Tomonori Sugiura, M.D., Ph.D. the
study's lead author and an assistant professor in the
Department of Cardio - Renal Medicine and Hypertension at the Nagoya City University
Graduate School
of Medical Sciences in, Nagoya, Japan.
The University Teaching Services (UTS), in collaboration with numerous
departments and the Faculty
of Graduate Studies and Research, introduced the new University Teaching Program (UTProgram) in 1998.
The
study, published in the journal Psychological Science, was led by Johannes Eichstaedt, a
graduate student in the School
of Arts & Science's
Department of Psychology, and included H. Andrew Schwartz, a visiting assistant professor in the School
of Engineering and Applied Science's
Department of Computer and Information Science; Margaret Kern, an assistant professor at the University
of Melbourne, Australia; Gregory Park, a postdoctoral fellow in the School
of Arts and Science's
Department of Psychology; and director Martin Seligman, both
of the Positive Psychology Center, as well as Lyle Ungar, a professor
of computer and information science.
In their latest
study, published today in the journal PLOS ONE, Scott Evans, a
graduate student in the
Department of Earth Sciences, and Mary Droser, a professor
of paleontology, both in UCR's College
of Natural and Agricultural Sciences, show that the Ediacaran - era fossil animal Dickinsonia developed in a complex, highly regulated way using a similar genetic toolkit to today's animals.
«They take it to new nutrient sources for the bacteria to grow, and they also prudently harvest — they don't eat all
of it — and save some
of it for the dispersal,» explains Debra Brock, a
graduate researcher at Rice's
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and co-author
of the new
study.
«Our
study is unique because we were actually out in the forest peeling bark off
of the burned trees, looking for evidence
of the beetle,» said Robert Andrus, a
graduate researcher in the
Department of Geography at CU - Boulder and lead author
of the new
study.
Dr. Julia Painter, an assistant professor in Mason's
Department of Global and Community Health (GCH) led the
study with support from assistant professor Dr. Michael von Fricken;
graduate student Suyane Viana de O. Mesquita (now an alumna
of the Master
of Public Health program); and professor Dr. Ralph J. DiClemente from Emory University.
«When foreign students want to take a vacation, we advise them to make sure they have evidence
of their intent to continue their
studies,» says Venkataramanan Balakrishnan, director
of graduate admissions for the electrical and computer engineering
department at Purdue University, in West Lafayette, Ind. «We give them documents, and we tell them to register for courses in advance.»
«This is one more tool we can add to our tool box to help us combat this invasive species,» said Brian Smith, a
graduate student in the UF / IFAS wildlife ecology and conservation
department and lead author
of a new
study documenting the radio - tagging experiment.
Bryan Shuman, a UW professor in the
Department of Geology and Geophysics, and Jeremiah Marsicek, a recent UW Ph.D.
graduate in geology and geophysics, led the new
study that is highlighted in a paper, titled «Reconciling Divergent Trends and Millennial Variations in Holocene Temperatures,» published today (Jan. 31) in Nature.
Other
studies have attempted to determine how the research activities
of MSTP
graduates differ from those
of other groups
of MD and MD / PhD recipients.7 - 10 Although the data from these
studies suggest that a large majority
of MSTP
graduates hold appointments in clinical
departments, and that most have clinical responsibilities, MSTP
graduates are less likely than other groups
of physician - investigators to publish in journals containing high proportions
of clinical observations and clinical
studies.
Following release
of a report by the National Academies
of Science Committee on Science, Engineering, and Public Policy (COSEPUP) entitled «Enhancing the Postdoctoral Experience for Scientists and Engineers», Vice Provost for
Graduate Studies and Research Linda Dykstra created a Postdoctoral Committee chaired by Sharon Milgram, an associate professor in the
department of cell and molecular physiology.
«We took a basically great material called lithium iron phosphate [LiFePO4] and we tried to improve it further,» says
study author Byoungwoo Kang, a
graduate student in M.I.T.'s
Department of Materials Science and Engineering.
«There's a trade - off,» says Mehdi Nourinejad, a recent PhD
graduate from the
Department of Civil Engineering and the
study's lead author.
In the second
study, another
of Worobey's
graduate students, Marlea Gemmel, analyzed HIV - 1 genetic material obtained from lymph tissue collected in 1960 from the University
of Kinshasa pathology
department in the Democratic Republic
of the Congo — only the second HIV sequence predating 1976 deciphered to date.
The lead author on the
study is Danielle Panoz - Brown, a
graduate student in the lab
of Jonathon Crystal, a professor in the IU
Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, who is also an author on the paper.
First author
of the
study, William Symes, a
graduate student from the
Department of Biological Sciences at the NUS Faculty
of Science said, «Protected areas are not static but instead dynamic, shifting institutions that change over time, and it is crucial for conservation planners to recognise this.
Graduate student Brandon Boor, in the Cockrell School's
Department of Civil, Architectural and Environmental Engineering, conducted the
study under the supervision
of assistant professor Ying Xu and associate professor Atila Novoselac.
«As a powerful model system for
studying adult stem cells, Drosophila female GSCs have revealed many novel regulatory strategies which have been later confirmed to be generally true,» adds Su Wang, a co-first author
of the paper and also a
graduate student in
Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology at University
of Kansas Medical Center.
Previous
studies have reported that trap - jaw ants sometimes jump with their jaws, «but it was unknown whether this behavior was meant to help them get away from a predator, and it wasn't clear that it actually improved their odds
of surviving an encounter with a predator,» said University
of Illinois
graduate student Fredrick Larabee, who conducted the
study with entomology professor and animal biology
department head Andrew Suarez.
The UC interdisciplinary team
of faculty and
graduate students from the
departments of geology, anthropology and geography published the conclusions and details
of the
study this month in the Journal
of Archaeological Science titled, «Evaluating soil salinity and water management in Chaco Canyon, New Mexico.»
Over that time, the BCI program has seen four
graduate students earn degrees from the
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at UBC, with four more currently still
studying.
Angela L. Curl, assistant professor in the
Department of Family
Studies and Social Work at Miami University, and Jessica Bibbo, a
graduate student at MU, contributed to the
study.
Lead
study author Ian Garrick - Bethell, then a
graduate student in the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology's
Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences, says that the dynamo theory, if correct, would provide great insight into the moon's interior.
The authors are Duflo; Moira R. Dillon, an assistant professor in New York University's
Department of Psychology; Harini Kannan, a postdoc at J - PAL South Asia; Joshua T. Dean, a
graduate student in MIT's
Department of Economics; and Elizabeth Spelke, a professor
of psychology and researcher at the Laboratory for Developmental
Studies at Harvard University.
«While an oral delivery platform will be beneficial to all hemophilia B patients, patients in developing countries will benefit the most,» said Sarena Horava, the
study's lead author who is a recent Ph.D.
graduate from the Cockrell School's McKetta
Department of Chemical Engineering and a National Science Foundation
graduate research fellow.
«The fungus lost a crucial energy - producing gene while the algae retained a full - length copy
of this gene,» said Cloe Pogoda, lead author
of the
study and a
graduate researcher in CU Boulder's
Department of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology.
He then moved to the State University
of New York in Buffalo where he held an Assistant Professorship in the
Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, and he served as the Director
of Graduate Studies in the Molecular Pharmacology and Cancer Therapeutics
Graduate Program.