4030 Results
1

UC program director discusses Teacher Pathway program growth

January 8, 2024

Associate Professor Jon Breiner, PhD, discusses the growth the UC BIPOC Teacher Pathway program has experienced in just two years. New partnerships, doubling the number of UC students involved, and expanding licensure programs all lead to the success of the program.

3

Procter & Gamble honors UC College of Medicine professor

January 8, 2024

In a commitment to collaborative ingenuity that took center stage at the Procter & Gamble (P&G) Americas Connect + Develop Awards, a spotlight shines on esteemed faculty member from the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine — Ana Luisa Kadekaro, PhD.

5

Study: Thirdhand smoke may harm children

January 8, 2024

UC tobacco researcher Ashley Merianos is looking more closely at thirdhand smoke, which is the presence of toxic tobacco by-products that remain on surfaces such as furniture, décor, walls and floors.

6

NP to a Higher Degree

January 5, 2024

Alumna Amanda Rumpke’s DNP project standardized privileges for advanced practitioners across a health system, improving care access and workforce agility.

7

Business visionaries SIT for pilot prototype at UC’s 1819 Innovation Hub

January 4, 2024

In a world where chaos often dictates problem-solving, the 1819 Learning Lab at the University of Cincinnati is rewriting the rules. Top innovators from Fifth Third Bank, marketing faculty from UC’s Lindner College of Business and the expertise of Matt Sias from InnovationAcceleration.ai all gathered for a ground-breaking pilot SIT+AI prototype workshop in UC’s 1819 Learning Lab.

9

UC invites students, faculty and staff to present at AI Symposium

January 4, 2024

University of Cincinnati Vice President and Chief Digital Officer Bharath Prabhakaran invites students, faculty and staff to share their knowledge and perspectives as part of the Digital Technology Solutions AI Symposium, Wednesday, Feb. 21, 2024, at Tangeman University Center.

10

The Washington Post: Marjorie Taylor Greene isn’t the only politician to be a swatting target

January 3, 2024

When the SWAT team arrives at your door it means there is serious trouble inside, unless the call is fake. "SWATing" or calling the police on innocent victims has seen an uptick in the past few years, with calls mostly targeting celebrities and politicians. Cybersecurity expert Gregory Winger says the increase is a way criminals have found to weaponize the very police force meant to protect.