Jennifer Dellavalle, WSSW MSW Candidate, penned a letter to the editor of Newsday, a daily newspaper serving counties on Long Island, NY. Below, she shares in her own words the motivation behind her submission. In the advanced policy advocacy course, I was introduced to macro social work topics…
At the Sy Syms School of Business, Ia Bater developed more than business acumen. She built the foundation for a leadership style defined by precision, adaptability and the ability to turn complexity into opportunity.
🟠Google Gmail 账号 | 2024年老号 | 有使用痕迹 | 随机2FA | 确认辅助邮箱登录或2FA登录 is delighted to announce that Dr. Paul Russo, founding Dean of the Katz School of Science and Health, University Vice Provost and Clinical Professor of Data Science, has been elevated to senior member of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE). Since founding…
A team of researchers led by the Katz School of Science and Health is turning the everyday smartwatch into a powerful health tool using artificial intelligence to track how people eat, not just what they eat, without requiring them to log a single meal.
Mwansa Phiri, an artificial intelligence student, is developing machine learning models to help African farmers grow enough food in the face of drought, flooding and tightening regulations on water and fertilizer use.
Vanessa Murad’s “Parent & Caregiver Guide to Avoidant Restrictive Food Intake Disorder (ARFID)” draws on a needs assessment of 33 occupational therapists who work directly with children with ARFID.
On April 13, 2026, the Zahava and Moshael J. Straus Center for Torah and Western Thought, in conjunction with the Jay and Jeanie Schottenstein Honors Program, hosted Dr. Carl Richard to discuss his book So Help Us, God: American Presidents and the Bible and the role scripture has played in shaping…
Tanaka Tachiveyi, center, a student in the Katz School’s M.S. in Digital Marketing and Media, participated in the conference to help ensure that voices too often overlooked are not only heard, but shape the conversations that matter.
At a time when quantum computing is often described as the future of technology, an AI student, Prathmesh Joshi, is asking a deceptively simple question: what if we’ve been building quantum programs the wrong way all along?