CAHSS Offers New Spanish course for those in or Pursuing Healthcare Careers

Yvette Fuentes, Ph.D.

NSU’s College of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences (CAHSS), is pleased to announce a new course, SPAN 1211, Elementary Spanish for Health I, to be offered in the fall 2019. This course is designed for those pursuing a career in healthcare or those already in the field.

SPAN 1211: ELEMENTARY SPANISH FOR HEALTH I D01 (CRN 24786) MWF 11:00 a.m.-11:50 a.m.)

This three-credit elementary level course is the first of a two-part sequence designed for students with little or no background in Spanish who are pursuing a career in healthcare, or already in the field. Students will learn the necessary vocabulary, medical terminology, and grammatical structures needed to communicate effectively with Spanish-speaking clients and their loved ones. Special emphasis will be placed on developing a cultural understanding of medicine and illness in the Spanish-speaking world. No prerequisite (closed to native and/or heritage learners).

Yvette Fuentes, Ph.D., associate professor of Spanish in the Department of Literature and Modern Languages, will teach the course. Fuentes teaches courses such as Elementary Spanish I & II, Business Spanish, and Conversation and Composition. For more information, please contact Fuentes at yf60@nova.edu.

Halmos Faculty, Students, and Alumni Present Research at National Conference in Orlando

Protein Modeling Team with Dr. Christine Dunham, ASBMB Award Winner (holding molecular models of ribosomes and HigB protein) Pictured left to right: Professor Emily Schmitt Lavin. Ph.D., Helana Ghali, Chandni Patel, Carolina Alzamora, Shreja Patel, Christine Dunham Marina Handal, Alexander Martinek, Alesa Chabbra, Jenny Nguyen, Antoine Pham, Mahima Kathiria

Halmos College Professor Emily Schmitt Lavin, Ph.D. traveled to attend the American Society of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology (ASBMB) conference with 13 undergraduate students and other faculty members. There, they joined the Experimental Biology 2019 meeting to present their research and serve as an invited workshop panel presenter for the workshop titled, “Transforming Science Research into Science Outreach”. Additionally, three of the projects the team presented were:

J. Torruellas Garcia, R.L. Sims, M. Ballester, M.L. Dore, L. Macias, and M. McDermott. Introducing Experiential Science and Math Activities to At-Risk Girls: The E-STEAM Project.

Svilen Guenov, Samantha Burgess, Alexander Martinek, Hanna Stewart, Morgan Will,  Michele Parsons, Aarti Raja, and Emily Schmitt Lavin. Science Alive: Connecting College Students with the Community to Promote Science Literacy.

Alesa Chabbra, Carolina Alzamora, Helana Ghali, Marina Handal, Mahima Kathiria, Alexander Martinek, Jenny Nguyen,Chandni Patel, Shreja Patel, Antoine Pham, and Emily Schmitt Lavin. Developing a physical model of HigB toxin and its endonuclease cleavage mechanism.

While at the conference, the protein modeling team was able to discuss their project with the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology (ASBMB) young investigator award winner, Dr. Christine Dunham as part of the National CREST (Connecting Researchers, Educators, and Students) Project of the Center for Biomolecular Modeling. The team was also able to connect with B.S. Biology alumni, Drs. Veronica Akle (Class of 2003), Tridi Blackellar Delk (Class of 2006), and Lauren Douma (Class of 2010) who were attending along with their current research teams.

For more information:

American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology

https://www.asbmb.org/

Office of Human Resources to Host Wellness Seminars

During the month of May, HCA Hospital will host two seminars on Women’s Health and Hypertension and Stroke Awareness.  The HCA sessions will be available in person and via GoToTraining.  The other two seminars will be on the Rally program for employees enrolled in NSU ICUBA Medical Plan.  You can only attend one of the Rally seminars.  All seminars will begin at 12:00 p.m.

 

May 16, 2019

Employee Wellness Seminar: Women’s Health

May 21, 2019

Employee Wellness Seminar: Hypertension and Stroke Awareness

May 28, 2019

Rally Session 101: Learn all about Rally with Ronenia Jenkins

May 29, 2019

Rally Session 101: Learn all about Rally with Ronenia Jenkins

 

$10 in Rally Rewards will be offered per seminar.  If you are attending the HCA seminar in person, please register via SharkTalent.  If you are attending via GoToTraining, you are required to complete a quiz at the end of the session for the Rally dollars.  As a reminder, spouses and/or domestic partners covered under the medical plan can attend the sessions via GoToTraining for Rally credits.

For wellness related questions contact your Employee Wellness Program Administrator:

Ronenia Jenkins at rjenkins@nova.edu or ext. 27879.

Visit our website at http://www.nova.edu/hr/wellness/index.html

Students Get Career Boost During Pre-Health Day

Selection of medical students from the Kiran C. Patel College of Allopathic Medicine who participated in mock interviews led by B.S. Biology Alumnus, Romany Harkas, Class of 2017; along with faculty members (far right), Emily Schmitt Lavin, Ph.D. and Mark Jaffe, MD. Department of Biological Sciences, Halmos College of Natural Sciences and Oceanography

Recently, Pre-Health day brought together the NSU and the community to provide real-world career advising to undergraduate students interested in health-related careers. Career Development (Emilio Lorenzo) and the NSU’s Halmos College of Natural Sciences and Oceanography Professor Emily Schmitt Lavin, Ph.D., collaborated to present the annual Pre-Health Day along with colleagues from the Colleges of Dental Medicine, Pharmacy, Optometry, Health Sciences, the Dr. Kiran C. Patel Colleges of Allopathic and Osteopathic Medicine, The Tutoring and Testing Center, and Undergraduate Academic Advising. During the program undergraduate students were able to participate in mock interviews with professional (many of whom were NSU alumni). Students were able able to learn about a variety of graduate opportunities in health-related studies including the Masters in Biological Sciences Program, along with the Master of Public Health and Physician Assistant programs. Students also learned about medical scribe opportunities from representatives from ScribeAmerica. A group of medical students from the Dr. Kiran C. Patel College of Allopathic Medicine led by NSU Alum, Romany Harkas (B.S. 2018) assisted with the mock interviews.

Participants were welcomed by Richard Dodge, Dean of the Halmos College of Natural Sciences and Oceanography (HCNSO), followed by presentations by professionals in the health care field, many of whom were alumni of the undergraduate biology program and various NSU graduate schools. These presentations included career advice from Nergess Taheri, D.O. (HCNSO Class of 2011; MSBI Class of 2017; D.O. Class of 2017), Ahmed Sirage (HCNSO Class of 2009; NSU DMD Class of 2015); Nicholas Carris, pharmacist (HCNSO Class of 2008), Adriana Strimbu, podiatrist, Debra Stern, Physical Therapist, Faculty NSU Physical Therapy Department, Andre Kerr, Physician Assistant (HCNSO Class of 2010), Nicole Cook, faculty member (Dr. Kiran C. Patel College of Osteopathic Medicine), Samantha Krueger (HCNSO Class of 2017, NSU College of Optometry Student, Class of 2020), Tambi Braun, Speech Language Pathologist and NSU Faculty at the Dr. Pallavi Patel College of Health Care Sciences and Melissa Boguslawski, NSU Faculty at the Dr. Kiran C. Patel College of Osteopathic Medicine.

The full list of presenters and their abstracts are available at: http://nsuworks.nova.edu/prehealth-day/.  More information is available about various alumni of the Halmos College of Natural Sciences and Oceanography Biology Major at the website: https://nsuworks.nova.edu/cnso_alumni/ New alumni are also encouraged to join by selecting the submit bio option on the right hand side of the page.

Pre-health day provides a great opportunity for students to network with professionals and learn skills to make them better candidates for graduate school. For more information about this event, contact Mr. Emilio Lorenzo el541@nova.edu, Associate Director of Employer Relations, Career Development.

 

 

Dr. Emily Schmitt Lavin, Chair Department of Biological Sciences (DoBS); Romany Harkas (HCNSO Class of 2017; Dr. Kiran C. Patel College of Allopathic Medicine, M1 student conducted mock interviews at the event.

NSU Graduate Students and Faculty Present at the 2019 Pop Culture Association National Conference

Pictured left to right: Veronica Diaz, Melissa Bianchi, Ph.D., Darius Cureton, M.A., and Nichole Chavannes

Students and faculty from NSU’s Department of Writing and Communication (DWC) at the College of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences (CAHSS) presented on four panels at the 2019 Pop Culture Association / American Culture Association (PCA/ACA) National Conference, hosted by the Marriott Wardman Park in Washington, D.C., Apr. 17-20. This group included:

  • two assistant professors from the DWC
  • two students from the CAHSS DWC M.A. in Composition, Rhetoric, and Digital Media (CRDM) program, who also serve as graduate assistant coordinators in the Write from the Start Writing and Communication Center (WCC)

About the Panels

Title: “Ocean Ecologies and Dinosaur Zoos: How Games Make Arguments about Nature”

Presenter: Melissa Bianchi, Ph.D., DWC Assistant Professor

Summary: In this presentation, “ecoplay” was proposed as a concept for understanding how video games simulate nature in ways that are distinctly rhetorical, using ABZÛ and Jurassic World Evolution as examples. Video games often attempt to capture the operation of real-world processes and systems, influencing how players engage with these processes, systems, and their governing ideologies through play. These games are well-suited for applying a theory of ecoplay because of their engagement with environmental topics and their apparent connections to other environmentally focused media and rhetorics.

Title: “The Korvac Saga: The Avengers Teach Writing, Defeat the Supervillains, and Save the Universe and the University (A Live Comic Book Performance)!”

Presenter: Darius Cureton, M.A., DWC Visiting Assistant Professor; with colleagues from Indiana University of Pennsylvania and East Stroudsburg University

Summary: In this session, the presenters brought to life a comic book story of superhero teachers struggling valiantly to help their students learn to write by employing the use of comic books and graphic novels in their composition classrooms. In the world of comic books, when a publisher wants to increase sales, they reboot the title by giving the superhero a new costume or changing the members of the super team. The presenters proposed the need to reboot composition, English studies, and the academy.

Title: “The Unforgivable Curse of Consumerism: How ‘Official’ Fan Spaces in J.K. Rowling’s Wizarding World Exploit Fandom”

Presenter: Nicole Chavannes, CRDM student and WCC graduate assistant

Summary: Since The Sorcerer’s Stone was released in 1997, the Harry Potter series has spawned seven books, eight film adaptations, a play, and a second film franchise, along with a handful of secondary texts. However, the franchise has expanded beyond offering content for passive consumption; participatory fan spaces exist both online and in-person. This presentation explored how Rowling’s wizarding world exemplifies both transmedia storytelling and transmedia world-building through “official” fan spaces, and how those spaces are inextricably linked with consumerism.

Title: “The Beguiled: Blurring the Line Between ‘Gothic Misogyny’ and Contemporary Female Rage”

Presenter: Veronica Diaz, CRDM student and WCC graduate assistant

Summary: Adaptations offer authors and audiences the ability to reinterpret controversial themes in a different context, contributing to the additive comprehension surrounding a particular text or genre. This presentation explored the affective and effective elements at play in all three iterations of The Beguiled – the original 1966 novel by Thomas P. Cullinan, the 1971 film by Don Siegel, and the 2017 film by Sofia Coppola – that offer audiences transmedia via multiplicity, with drastically different retellings of the same story.

 

Regional Nurses Attend Meeting on Addiction Intervention in Tampa

NSU’s Ron and Kathy Assaf College of Nursing at the Tampa regional campus recently hosted a regional meeting of the Florida Nurses Association (FNA).

Linda Smith, a consultant for the Florida Intervention Project for Nurses (IPN) and the Florida Department of Health, spoke to nurses about how to recognize when healthcare professionals need treatment for drug use and addiction.

Smith also discussed efforts to rehabilitate rather than prosecute workers struggling with drug use, an idea that has gained favor with employers since IPN began. Participants learned how to recognize nurses who may need treatment and how to provide important resources.

NSU’s College of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences Alumnus is Investigative Analyst in Criminal Investigations Division at BSO

Ryan Johnston, M.S.

Ryan Johnston, M.S. 2018 graduate of NSU’s College of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences (CAHSS), is an investigative analyst for the Criminal Investigations Division at the Broward Sheriff’s Office. He started work a few months after completing the M.S. in National Security Affairs and International Relations. Johnston reports that he is excited to take on this new challenge. “I will be able to put skills that I acquired from my time as a graduate student to good use. The NSAIR program was instrumental in my getting this job because it gave me an opportunity to get professional work experience through networking and internship opportunities.”

As a graduate student, Johnston completed an internship for credit with the Broward Sheriff’s Office. He also was able to tap in to the program’s facilitation of networking with current and former students working in the field of national security. Johnston distinguished himself during his time at NSU by founding the graduate student led Department of History and Political Science Leadership Council. He also served as the DHPS representative on the CAHSS Graduate Student Government Association.

The Broward Center for the Performing Arts and The Performance Project School of the Arts to host Summer Theater Camp

SEE YOUR CHILD LIVE ON THE BIG STAGE
Get in on the Act for the Ultimate Theater Camp Experience

Discover the star within! Don’t miss the fun when the curtain rises for a summer filled with the excitement and magic of live musical theater. As a world-class performance arts center and leader in the development of arts-integrated learning for our youth, the Broward Center for the Performing Arts is thrilled to again partner with The Performance Project School of the Arts for our popular theater camp experience.

Under the direction of artistic professional and teaching veteran Nina Felice, campers gain hands-on experience in musical theater, acting, dance, voice and technical production. With three locations, two sessions and age-specific groups and shows, there is no reason to miss out on the fun. Each session culminates with a live performance in the Amaturo Theater at the Broward Center. Plus, every camper performs because everyone is cast in the show. As they experience the joy of live musical theater, campers build self-confidence, engage their imaginations and learn the importance of teamwork.

Date: Summer 2019
Venue: The Rose and Alfred Miniaci Performing Arts Center

CAMP HOURS
Monday – Friday, 9 AM – 4 PM
Early drop-off (8 AM – 9 AM) and late pickup (4 PM – 6 PM) are available.

NSU Faculty, Staff, and Student Discount Available! 

Please call 954.414.6904

College of Education and School of Criminal Justice Graduate Authors Book on Christianity

David P. Diaz, Ed.D., graduate of NSU’s Abraham S. Fischler College of Education and School of

Criminal Justice (FCE&SCJ), recently authored the book, “The Genesis Labyrinth: Investigating Alternatives in the First Eleven Chapters of Genesis.” The book is a thought-provoking account that contains teachings taken from the book of Genesis that define its essence upon the Christian faith.

Diaz is an author and retired college professor. His writings have spanned the gamut between peer-reviewed technical articles to his memoir, “The White Tortilla”, which won the 2006 American Book Award. He holds B.S. and M.S. from California Polytechnic State University and earned his doctoral degree from FCE&SCJ in 2000.

Lost Dean’s Son Returns to Oceanographic Campus

In the last week of April, Jim Richardson visited the Oceanographic Campus. This was a bittersweet visit, as his father was with a group of researchers who was lost at sea in 1975.

William Springer Richardson (1928-1975), was a Professor and Director of Nova University Oceanographic Center, he was also active as a scientist, inventor, sailor, flier and author. Richardson was head of a team on board Nova’s research vessel Gulf Stream which was lost at sea off the coast of Maine in 1975.

Mr. Richardson was very happy to see how his father’s legacy has expanded into the Halmos College of Natural Sciences and Oceanography.

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