CAHSS Alumna is Associate Director of Housing and Residence Life at Lynn University

Hannah Link, M.S.

Hannah Link, M.S., graduate of the College Student Affairs master’s program in NSU’s College of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences (CAHSS), is the Associate Director of Housing and Residence Life at Lynn University. Link began her career as an Area Coordinator at Lynn University and her dedication led to her position as the Associate Director.

Link recalls her days at NSU with fondness. She attributes the staff, students, and fellow graduate assistants, as why she wanted to attend and work at work at NSU.  She especially recalls Dr. Gay Holliday and her enduring words “trust the process.”

CAHSS Faculty Presents Workshops on De-escalation and Having Difficult Conversations for Religious Education Directors and Teachers at the ADOM

Judith McKay, J.D., Ph.D., faculty in the Department of Conflict Resolution Studies (DCRS) in NSU’s College of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences (CAHSS), presented two workshops for Directors of Religious Education and Religion Teachers for the Archdiocese of Miami. McKay was one of two invited presenters at a Professional Development Day for over 100 attendees. At the request of the participants, she focused on “De-escalation Strategies and Techniques,” and “Having Difficult Conversations.”

McKay’s research and teaching interests include crisis intervention, family violence, public policy, conflict coaching, transformational narrative, conflict resolution applied processes, strategic community planning, and organizational conflict. She regularly trains law enforcement officers for Crisis Intervention Teams. She works with practicum students and student volunteers in Community Resolution Services (CRS), in the local communities. For more information, please contact McKay at mckayj@nova.edu.

CAHSS Announces New Internship Opportunity through Gift from Tír na mBláth

NSU’s College of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences (CAHSS), is delighted to announce a new internship opportunity through the Department of History and Political Science (DHPS) for undergraduate students, supported by a generous gift from Tír na mBláth, the Irish Cultural Organization of South East Florida.  The Tír na mBláth Internship will be offered each Winter semester and is open to all undergraduate students who demonstrate a genuine interest in learning about and promoting Irish culture.  Preference will be given to students pursuing the Irish Studies Minor offered by DHPS.  Tír na mBláth is one of hundreds of branches around the world of Comhaltas Ceoltóirí Éireann, the Irish cultural organization dedicated to the preservation of Irish music.  The successful applicant will receive a one-time $500 award and will intern with Tír na mBláth for the duration of the semester in which the award is granted.  The internship will be taken for 3 credits through DHPS and can be applied towards the 15 credits required for the Irish Studies minor.  The student intern will help manage the organization’s social media outreach, assist in editing and distributing its newsletter, and assist in planning and organizing its annual Fleadh Cheoil (Music Festival) and other cultural events.

According to David Kilroy, Ph.D., who teaches courses in the Irish Studies Minor, “The gift from Tír na mBláth represents another significant example of the rich relationship between the Irish Studies program and the Irish community in South Florida.  It builds on the significant role that NSU already plays in promoting Irish culture in the region, most notably through my own role in running CAHSS’s annual South Florida Irish Film Festival and Jim Doan’s (faculty in Department of Literature and Modern Languages) role as director of the South Florida Irish Theatre. Having one of our students intern with Tír na mBláth will not only allow that student to be immerse in the richness of Irish culture but it will also strengthen our already strong bond with this vibrant community in South Florida.”  For more information about the internship, please contact Kilroy at dkilroy@nova.edu

 

Huizenga Professor Promotes Locally-Sourced Produce

When Albert Williams, Ph.D., looks out the windows of his South Florida home, he sees more than just coconut trees – he sees money. And in the June 2019 issue of Fort Lauderdale Magazine, he’s sharing his perspective on Florida agriculture and supporting local farmers in a feature titled, “Farm Fresh Florida”.

“Agriculture in Florida is big business, over $160billion per year and second only to the tourism industry,” says Williams, who serves as associate professor and acting chair of the Finance and Economics Department at the H. Wayne Huizenga College of Business and Entrepreneurship. The professor received an education in agricultural and applied economics at the University of Georgia. Prior to joining Nova Southeastern University, he held the position of CEO at an agricultural marketing firm in Belize and worked as a commodity analyst at Restaurant Services Incorporated (the purchasing arm of the Burger King Corporation).

“Can people in Florida eat foods directly from the farm, implying little or no processing?” he asks. “The answer is yes.” Williams also believes that the option to eat more organically grown products is becoming more common, as the number of South Florida farms becoming “certified organic” continues to grow.

Additionally, Williams offers tips to South Florida residents looking to purchase farm-fresh produce. “Go to the farmer’s markets! Even though there are many middle men and women, many are selling produce that are from local farms. Purchasing local produce supports the farmers of South Florida, and Florida, in general.” Plus, Florida farmers have a lot to offer in terms of produce variety, including tropical favorites like mangoes, mamey sapote, bitter melons, and callaloo.

For an agricultural scenic drive, Williams suggests taking US-27 from South Florida to Tampa. The route offers miles and miles of sugar cane and citrus orchards, and helps put into perspective the billions of agricultural dollars at play. “We need to educate people about the importance of South Florida’s agriculture and we need young entrepreneurs to consider getting into the business.”

Human Resources to Host Coping with Change – June 2019

In today’s organizations, change is the rule rather than the exception. Reorganization, rapid growth and new technology are among the major changes. The purpose of this workshop is to highlight practical and proven methods for coping with organizational change.

We’ll discuss: Low- and high-magnitude organizational change, Personal impact of change, the
seven stages of change, and coping skills for work and home.

Dates Offered: 6/12/19 12:30 p.m.- 2:00 p.m.
Location: Knight Auditorium, Carl DeSantis Building

Don’t forget to check out upcoming sessions in the Employee Professional Development Catalog for FY2020 HERE: http://www.nova.edu/hr/training/index.html

NSU’s College of Pharmacy Hosts: A Day for the Next Generation of Pharmacists

The College of Pharmacy-Palm Beach Campus hosted “A Day for the Next Generation of Pharmacists” event in May. This collaborative effort of pharmacy educators was designed to bring knowledge and understanding of the evolving pharmacy profession.  The event was geared to individuals seeking to gain insight into the pharmacy profession as they pursue their interests in becoming a pharmacist. Eighteen program participants from Florida, Georgia, and Texas attended the free event. The day included of mini lectures in core pharmacy pillars, as well as interactive activities focused on compounding, blood pressure monitoring, and simulated patient counseling.

“We are excited to increase the public’s knowledge about the impact pharmacists can have on their patients’ lives and to showcase our Palm Beach campus” said Rochelle Nappi, Ed.D., the assistant dean of the college in the Palm Beach.

NSU Student Academy of Audiology Travels to Capitol Hill

From left, front row, Doctor of Audiology students, Jessica Rubin, Mary Buckman and Erin Kelly. From left, middle row, audiology students, Ali Silverman, Samantha Englaish, Briana Stanikmas, and Tasha Takeshita. From left, top back row, faculty members, Patricia Gaffney and Alyssa Needleman.

On Friday, May 10, 2019, seven Nova Southeastern University Au.D. students and two faculty members, Patricia Gaffney, Au.D., associate professor, and Alyssa Needleman, Ph.D., clinic director and associate professor, traveled to Capitol Hill to advocate for the field of audiology.

This is the fifth consecutive year that NSU’s Student Academy of Audiology (SAA) has sent a group of students to Washington, D.C., to advocate for their future profession. As NSU’s SAA chapter strongly encourages members to be active participants in their future profession, this trip provides students with an unforgettable opportunity to raise awareness of the current legislation affecting the field of audiology on Capitol Hill. The success of previous trips enabled the chapter to continue this opportunity.

This year’s advocacy trip featured a group of NSU Au.D. students who come from all over the United States. The six second year Au.D. students and one first year Au.D. student collectively represented Florida, Tennessee, Hawaii, New York, and Massachusetts. All but one of the students, this was their first time advocating on Capitol Hill. Ali Silverman, NSU’s SAA Government Relations chair, attended last year’s advocacy trip and was passionate about sharing the experience with other SAA members by planning this years’ trip. Working with Susan Pilch, J.D., senior director of Government Relations, and Kathryn Werner, M.P.A., vice president of Public Affairs at American Academy of Audiology, it was possible for meetings with various congressional offices from the NSU students’ home-states to be arranged. Additional support was offered by Jodi Baxter, Au.D., assistant professor at Ohio State University, who was also on hand to assist the students with their meetings.

The day began with breakfast and a briefing of the legislation that would be discussed throughout the day. Students then attended meetings with the representatives of their home states. The home-state representatives were from the offices of Senator Marco Rubio (R-FL), Senator Chuck Schumer (D-NY), Representative Ted Deutch (D-FL), Senator Marsha Blackburn (R-TN), Representative Ed Case (D-HI), Senator Lamar Alexander (R-TN), Representative Peter King (R-NY), Representative Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-FL), Representative Francis Rooney (R-FL), and Representative Timothy Burchett (R-TN). The NSU student advocates were all able to attend meetings in small groups ensuring each participant had the opportunity to take the lead and share their personal stories.

The Medicare Telehealth Parity Act of 2017 and the Access to Frontline Care Act of 2017 were previously introduced during the 115th Congress. Students were eager to continue to advocate for the passage of these bills. Additionally, students were granted a unique look at the development of a bill that will hopefully be introduced to Congress this year. The Hear Act will be a bill jointly proposed by American Speech-Language-Hearing Association, Academy of Doctors of Audiology, and Academy of Audiology to amend Medicare to recognize audiologists as practitioners, allowing direct access and coverage for both diagnostic and treatment services.

This trip is an opportunity for students to get involved in a different aspect of their future profession. Collectively, all of the NSU student advocates felt that the trip provided insight into the positive and negative impacts that current legislation can have on the field of audiology. The students and faculty would like to thank everyone involved in the planning of this trip and those who contributed to its success!

 

NSU Art Museum Fort Lauderdale Presents, Remember To React II: Drawings and Prints From The NSU Art Museum Collection

L: Wangechi Mutu, Howl, 2006, archival pigment print with screen printing collage, NSU Art Museum Fort Lauderdale, promised gift of David Horvitz and Francie Bishop Good
R: Guerrilla Girls, Women in America Earn Only 2/3 of What Men Do…, n.d. Poster, NSU Art Museum Fort Lauderdale; gift of Bernice Steinbaum 2008.2.3

NSU Art Museum Fort Lauderdale presents Remember to React Part II, an exhibition comprised of over 50 works from its permanent collection by artists including Nicole Eisenman, Helen Frankenthaler, Quisqueya Henriquez, Lee Krasner, Frank León, Ana Mendieta, Wangechi Mutu, Jorge Pantoja, Raymond Pettibon, Nancy Spero, Andy Warhol, and the Guerilla Girls. On view from June 15 – September 29, 2019, it continues the theme of the institution’s 60th anniversary exhibition, Remember to React (on view through June 2020), with its emphasis on women artists, as well as works representative of the current global art world. The exhibition is curated by Bonnie Clearwater, NSU Art Museum Director and Chief Curator.

Remember to React II also runs concurrently with the exhibition William J. Glackens: From Pencil to Paint, which is drawn exclusively from the museum’s permanent collection of this early American modernist’s work. “The focus on drawing and prints in both of these exhibitions further demonstrates the richness and depth of NSU Art Museum’s collection,” states Bonnie Clearwater.

Among the works featured in Remember to React Part II is Los Angeles-based artist Raymond Pettibon’s first video, Repeater Pencil, 2004, in which he animated his own drawings to create a non-linear narrative that suggests the dark side of the American dream.  Pettibon’s drawings hark back to the heyday of twentieth-century American illustrators, including William Glackens, whose drawings are on view in the adjoining Glackens gallery. Nicole Eisenman’s monumental ink drawing, The Anxiety of Adolescent Boys Hanging onto the Last Moments of Their Innocence, 2001, is a satirical battle of the sexes that similarly displays a drawing style that recalls early twentieth-century popular illustrations for the masses.

Works on view by Cuban artists Quisqueya Henriquez, Jorge Pantoja and Frank León are wry observations on life in Miami that contrast with Cuba’s economic and social structure, while Andy Warhol’s print of Senator Edward Kennedy, created for Kennedy’s unsuccessful presidential bid in 1980, is overtly political, as is social realist William Gropper’s satirical drawings of the Watergate scandal of the early 1970s.

The museum’s significant holdings of work by women artists is reflected in the selection of drawings and prints in this exhibition, including nine watercolors by Edith Dimock who was the wife of William Glackens. Dimock and her husband marched in the famous 1913 Women’s Suffrage Parade for women’s voting rights (obtained in 1920), alongside thousands of other men and women. A highly skilled watercolorist, her work parallels the subject matter of the American Ashcan School painters of the late nineteenth to early twentieth century, including Glackens, who distinguished themselves with their depictions of urban life. While Dimock chose to remain in her husband’s shadow, destroying most of her work, the abstract expressionists Helen Frankenthaler, Lee Krasner (both represented in the exhibition by prints), and Elaine de Kooning, whose paintings are on view in Remember to React Part I, challenged the male-dominated art world with their breakthrough works in the mid-twentieth century.

Nevertheless, continued under-representation of women in the art world, galleries and museums, led an anonymous group of female artists to form the Guerrilla Girls in 1985 to draw attention to this inequality by producing message-driven works such as the posters on view in this exhibition. Also on view is a recent acquisition of a rare drawing by Cuban artist Ana Mendieta, a contemporary of the Guerrilla Girls, that she based on archeological images of powerful earth goddesses.

The exhibition includes several recent gifts to NSU Art Museum from Miami collectors Paul Berg, Rosa and Carlos de la Cruz, Vanessa Grout, and Dr. Arturo and Liza Mosquera, and promised gifts from Fort Lauderdale collectors Francie Bishop Good and David Horvitz.

Remember to React Part I, which opened in 2018 in celebration of the Museum’s 60th anniversary, marks the first comprehensive installation of NSU Art Museum’s collection. Representing various periods and developments in the history of art, and installed as an interlocking narrative, it also traces the collection’s growth from its origins to today,

Following the Museum’s establishment in 1958, its founders launched the institution’s collection with African, Native American and Oceanic traditional art as its core. Today, in addition to these areas, NSU Art Museum holds the largest U.S. collection of the post-World War II experimental Cobra group, an extensive collection of Latin American and Cuban art, and a concentration of modern and contemporary art with a special focus on work by women and multi-cultural artists. Additionally, it houses the largest collection of works by the early American modernist William J. Glackens, a leader of the progressive Ashcan School.

NSU Art Museum Fort Lauderdale is located at One East Las Olas Blvd., Fort Lauderdale, FL. For information, visit nsuartmuseum.org or call 954-525-5500. Follow the Museum @nsuartmuseum.org

Exhibitions and programs at NSU Art Museum Fort Lauderdale are made possible in part by a challenge grant from the David and Francie Horvitz Family Foundation. Funding is also provided by the City of Fort Lauderdale, AutoNation, Community Foundation of Broward, Funding Arts Broward, Broward County Board of County Commissioners as recommended by the Broward Cultural Council and Greater Fort Lauderdale Convention & Visitors Bureau, the State of Florida, Department of State, Division of Cultural Affairs and the Florida Council on Arts and Culture. NSU Art Museum Fort Lauderdale is accredited by the American Association of Museums.

Goodbye Lynda, Hello LinkedIn Learning

 

On Monday, June 17, Nova Southeastern University Alvin Sherman Library will be upgrading Lynda.com to LinkedIn Learning. LinkedIn Learning, which acquired Lynda.com, has the same great content but provides an even more personalized experience. And, it’s still free to you!

As of June 17th, you will no longer be able to access Lynda.com — instead you will be redirected to LinkedIn Learning. Don’t worry, all your learning activity and history from Lynda.com was seamlessly transferred to LinkedIn Learning.

About LinkedIn Learning

With LinkedIn Learning, you’ll experience the same things you love about Lynda.com like:

  • High-quality content: At the core of LinkedIn Learning is high-quality Lynda.com content. If you have favorite content on Lynda.com, don’t worry, it is still there!
  • Comprehensive data and progress: Data, including groups, playlists, assigned content, account settings, and histories were automatically migrated.
  • Learner course video page: All of the features and functionality of this page remains the same. This includes transcripts, exercise files, mobile viewing, and bookmarking.

You’ll also experience many new and improved features including:

  • A new, easy-to-use interface
  • Personalized course recommendations
  • Social curation, and more

Activating your LinkedIn Learning account

Current Lynda.com users will be receiving emails from LinkedIn Learning a couple of days prior to June 17th with a link to activate their LinkedIn Learning accounts. If you are not a current Lynda.com user or did not receive an email, simply visit lib.nova.edu/linkedin

Here are some tips to successfully activate your account and begin enjoying LinkedIn Learning:

  • For the very best user experience, log out of your LinkedIn account prior to activating your LinkedIn Learning account.
  • After clicking the link to activate your account: If you are not already authenticated with your NSU Sharklink ID or Alvin Sherman Library card, you will be directed to the LinkedIn Learning Alvin Sherman Library login page, where you can enter your credentials. If you are already logged in, you will be directed to your LinkedIn Learning account.
  • Upon activation, you will have the option to connect your LinkedIn profile or create a separate Learning account during activation. If you choose to connect your LinkedIn profile, you’ll receive benefits such as personalized recommendations for your skills and position, as well as what’s trending on LinkedIn Learning based on LinkedIn data. This will give you a learning experience that’s tailor made for your needs.

Learn more

Check out this website for more information on upgrading to LinkedIn Learning, or ask a librarian.

 

 

All NSU Students to Have Health Insurance Coverage

Starting fall 2019-2020, NSU will require all students, to carry health insurance coverage. Students were notified of this requirement by President Hanbury in an email sent May 17, 2019. Students may meet the university’s student health insurance requirement in two ways:

1. NSU Student Health Insurance Plan: NSU has partnered

NSU has partnered with Aetna to provide NSU students with a comprehensive nationwide plan that includes prescription and emergency care coverage at a price well below comparable plans available through the Affordable Care Act (ACA) exchange markets in Florida. The average monthly premium for the 2019 NSU Aetna Student Health Insurance is $191, which is roughly $280 less than the $477 average monthly premiums charged in Florida, according to Consumer Reports. The NSU-endorsed plan has an annual deductible of $400, which is significantly less than the national average. For detailed information about the NSU plan, visit nova.edu/studentinsurance.

2. Proof of Existing Insurance Coverage and Opt-Out Required

When students register for classes, they will automatically be enrolled in the NSU Student Health Insurance Plan, and the insurance premium for the semester will be charged to their NSU student accounts. Students who already have comparable health insurance coverage and do not need the NSU Student Health Insurance Plan must waive out of the NSU plan to have the charge reversed.

Waivers must be completed at the start of each academic year by each program’s waiver deadline and are valid for one academic year. Once a program’s waiver deadline has passed, students will no longer be able to reverse the charge for the first semester because the university will have submitted the student’s information to Aetna for enrollment. Students will have another opportunity to waive out of the NSU plan for the second semester.

For more information, visit the NSU Student Health Insurance Department online at nova.edu/studentinsurance online or call (954) 262-4060.

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