Graduate Students Awarded Ashley Kaye Hess Scholarship

Many people knew and loved Ashley Kaye Hess, a cheerleader, dancer, teacher, and NSU speech-language pathology master’s candidate, before she was killed in a tragic car accident on May 14, 2016, at the age of 28.

On May 14, 2022, Jaclyn Keats, B.S., and Cassidy Howell, B.S., were awarded the 2022 “Make the Most of the Dash and Ashley Kaye Hess Changing Lives Scholarship.”

Jaclyn and Cassidy are both currently graduate students at Nova Southeastern University pursuing their master’s degree in speech-language pathology. Both are strong advocates for individuals with communication disorders. Like Ashley, both have always had a passion for dancing/performing and wanting to make a difference in the lives of others. They were honored and excited to win the award and plan to remember and reflect on Ashley’s life through their future clinical work.

Contributed by Tambi Braun, SLP.D., CCC/SLP, is an associate professor and NSSLHA mentor in the Department of Speech-Language Pathology.

Posted 06/07/22

Business Spotlight: Solutions to Poverty Drive Entrepreneurial Professor

When Jose Brache was growing up in the Dominican Republic back in the ‘70s and ‘80s it was easy to find poverty – in fact, it’s still prevalent there. The key for Brache, a professor at the H. Wayne Huizenga College of Business and Entrepreneurship, was learning from such conditions.

“I was a Boy Scout and visited many regions of my country and saw the tough reality of many people who were living in the ‘poverty trap,’” he said. “That raised questions and made me think of potential solutions.”

Jose Brache, Ph.D.

Brache’s parents came from humble beginnings and his father became an entrepreneur out of necessity, building a successful real estate development company from nothing. As he watched his father’s progress in the business world, Brache took notes.

“I learned that fundamentally if you are able to find a spot in life where you can create value – and you are flexible and willing to learn from your experiences – you can make a substantial contribution in any field,” he said.

Brache has been living, breathing, and preaching entrepreneurship ever since. He is an economist with a Ph.D. in Management from Adolfo Ibanez University and a Master’s in Applied Economics from Georgetown University. His research interests include international entrepreneurship, open innovation, inter-firm cooperation, SME´s internationalization, technology commercialization, geographic co-location, and innovation management.

Assisting both established and aspiring entrepreneurs with the challenging task of value creation is one of Brache’s passions. He says he strongly believes in building and nurturing innovation and entrepreneurship ecosystems as a pathway toward stronger and better economies.

Brache, also director of the Huizenga Business Innovation Academy, says that coming to NSU gave him an opportunity to see entrepreneurship from its inception.

“The academy is a fantastic academic and scholarship program,” he said. “Students have the opportunity to get funding and run on-campus businesses. They also have a chance to get seed funding at the end of their program. The sheer possibility of making a contribution to the academy and its students was enough to bring me here.”

Brache’s relocation was quite a testimony to Shark Nation’s magnetism. He arrived at NSU in August 2021 from the University of Auckland in New Zealand, where he spent three years as the director of the Master of Commercialization and Entrepreneurship program.

From an entrepreneurial perspective, New Zealand and Florida see the world through different lenses, Brache says, because of their stark differences in other characteristics.

“New Zealand is a developed nation with one of the highest living standards in all of the world,” he said. “Many of the companies that I had the chance to work with had an orientation toward foreign markets because New Zealand only has a population of about five million people.

“In Florida, nascent businesses are exposed to more growing opportunities because of the size of the market in the country. I observe that many startups have a regional or national orientation instead of an international orientation.”

For Brache, those characteristics create an educational opportunity to instill a broader perspective in the students he teaches at NSU.

“I think that it is our responsibility as educators to show that there are many opportunities for Florida startups in foreign markets,” he said.

Knowledge is a two-way street, Brache says, adding that students at NSU are creative and savvy at identifying and developing innovative business opportunities.

“They are interested in topics that are ‘Best for our World,’” he said. “We have academy students with projects that try to solve environmental challenges, develop healthier foods, improve the wellness of people in the community with apps that tackle anxiety and depression, and contribute to those that are more vulnerable with not-for-profit initiatives.”

Posted 06/05/22

HCAS Faculty, Grad Student Spearhead Literacy Program

Kelly Concannon, Ph.D., Faculty Coordinator at the NSU Writing and Communication Center (WCC), and Autumn Bishard, WCC Graduate Assistant Coordinator, initiated a Literacy Outreach Program with Just for Today in Summer 2021, designed to help individuals in addiction recovery programs reach their literacy goals. Concannon is an Associate Professor in the Department of Communication, Media, and the Arts in the Halmos College of Arts and Sciences (HCAS). Bishard is an HCAS Master’s student in Composition, Rhetoric, and Digital Media.

The Literacy Outreach program is a community outreach project headed by Concannon. Just for Today is aimed at helping women prepare for the writing portion of the GED test. Future plans for the program include working with additional facilities and locating clients invested in pursuing multiple literacy goals such as taking the GED Exam, writing a memoir, starting a blog, and more.

According to Bishard, “This program has only further sparked my passion to become an educator one day and has really motivated me to help others succeed. Seeing individuals realize their full potential and achieve the goals that they have set out for themselves is a feeling that I will never forget.” Likewise, Concannon says that “The program allows us to put much of the work that we do at the WCC into practice. Further, we are able to participate in multiple opportunities for mentorship.”

Learn about the NSU Writing and Communication Center by visiting www.nova.edu/wcc.

Posted 06/05/22

USchool Robotics Team Advances as Finalist Champion

The NSU University School Robotics Team 4154X is the WORLD Division Tournament and Finalist CHAMPION! The team advanced to finalist standing and ranked 2nd among the best teams from around the globe, making VEX Robotics history as the first Florida team to win a high school division world championship and make it to the final round.

The Middle School Teams also took home awards at the Vex Robotics World Championship. Team 64883A earned the Energy Award for showing a high level of enthusiasm, passion, excitement, and energy and placed in the top 200 teams out of more than 785. Our Middle School Girls Team 63724A finished in the top 100 out of more than 507 teams in the individual skills competition.

Posted 06/05/22

Business Spotlight: Albert Williams Stays in Tune with Students

Dr. Albert Williams

If you’ve ever heard Albert Williams play his Fender Stratocaster axe, you would think his chosen profession was music. But on the contrary, teaching business at NSU is his full-time gig.

Albert Williams, Ph.D., the Chair and Associate Professor of Finance and Economics

Williams, Ph.D., the Chair and Associate Professor of Finance and Economics, says his guitar reflects his “artistic side.” But don’t be surprised if a jam session breaks out in one of his classes, he says. He’s been known to mix music and business when the situation calls for it.

Besides entertaining and educating students at the H. Wayne Huizenga College of Business and Entrepreneurship, Williams’ life has been full of adventures and exciting job opportunities.

But he doesn’t brag about his career. He brags about his students. In fact, his office walls are adorned with accolades he has received from some of the thousands of students that have crossed his path. Williams was nominated and received a Student Life Achievement Award, or STUEY, for Professor of the Year in 2017.

“I don’t teach economics and finance,” Williams says. “I teach people. I encourage, motivate, and care about my students.”

Williams says his recipe for student success is to help them grow by seeing how they can improve their lives from the knowledge gained from his classes. His lectures tap into his prior professional career, which enables Williams to share a variety of real-world examples with his students.

Before coming to NSU in 2003, Williams was a jack of many trades: a high school math teacher, banker, agricultural economist, CEO of an agricultural marketing firm, and analyst for Burger King Corporation.

He takes those experiences to the classroom and combines them with his ability to dissect complicated economic concepts and make them easier to understand. But he doesn’t stop there.

“I also bring current issues to class and have students discuss them,” Williams says. “This makes economics and finance more applied and alive!”

During his years at NSU, Williams has become a Shark through and through. He is the faculty adviser for the Graduate Business Student Association (GBSA). In this role he helps student leaders practice leadership by developing projects and implementing them for the benefit of all students. He also has played an active role in the Honors College and still speaks to new students and parents on the importance of being in the college.

When it comes to undergraduate recruitment, he doesn’t hesitate to speak to parent groups and answer their questions while promoting the advantages of attending NSU.

Williams also takes his expertise to the airwaves from time to time appearing on television and radio as one of NSU’s business experts. NBC and PBS have featured him locally and he frequently provides expert opinions on Love FM in Belize, his country of origin.

Despite his many roles, Williams’ headliner is teaching, which he considers as much an art form as playing his guitar.

“You have to put passion and knowledge into it and that makes learning exciting for students,” he says.

Posted 05/20/22

Halmos Biology Students Present at NSU Undergraduate Symposium

From left, Luzcarime Saco Vertiz; Santanu De, Ph.D.; and Monica Aguiar.

Students in the Department of Biological Sciences in the Halmos College of Arts and Sciences and Guy Harvey Oceanographic Research Center (HCAS), co-mentored by Arthur Sikora, Ph.D. (Department of Chemistry and Physics) and Santanu De, Ph.D. (Department of Biological Sciences), jointly presented a poster on an interdisciplinary research collaboration.  The title was “Substantiation and Validation of the Benefits of CUREs in STEM using a Combination of Self-Reported Gains and Alignment with Learning Objectives.”  The presenters were Monica Aguiar and Luzcarime Saco Vertiz. The student co-authors also included Mina Ghali, Rachel Keating, Ane Mashiach, Rajin Persaud, Kayla Rubalsky, Akshata Sastry, Irene Stepensky, and Trisha Sudhakar.

Posted 05/22/22

Fischler Academy Students Visit Ruth K. Broad Harbor K-8 Center

Fischler Academy students meeting with Principal Saperstein.

Students within NSU’s Abraham S. Fischler College of Education and School of Criminal Justice’s Fischler Academy, got a sneak peek into the teaching field and a head start on networking after a visit to a Miami school.

The group of students paid a special visit to the Ruth K. Broad Harbor K-8 Center in Miami on May 5.  After a meet-and-greet with Principal Scott Saperstein and his team, the Fischler Academy students were given an in-depth tour and were able to check out the pre-kindergarten, lower and middle schools.

Following the tour, the future educators came face to face with veteran educators who were able to give insight into what it’s like working and teaching at the school.

“It was clearly an excellent place to be a teacher, which is a testament to the culture that Principal Saperstein and his team have created at the school,” said Fischler Academy Director Lucas Williams.

Williams said that while this visit is the first, it surely won’t be the last. A series of campus visits are in the works for Fischler Academy students with an overall goal of exposing future educators to a variety of potential employers so they can begin establishing a professional network.

Posted 05/22/22

Halmos Faculty Presents at Conference in Nashville

Cheryl Duckworth, Ph.D.

Cheryl Duckworth, Ph.D., faculty in the Department of Conflict Resolution Studies in the Halmos College of Arts and Sciences and the Guy Harvey Oceanographic Research Center (HCAS), presented at the 2022 Annual Conference of the International Studies Association (ISA) held in Nashville, TN, on March 29-April 2.

The conference theme was “A Wider Discipline for a Smaller World.” ISA has more than 6,500 members representing 100 countries. Duckworth’s presented on the contributions of famed educational theorist Dr. Maria Montessori.  In her presentation called, “Why IR scholars need Dr. Maria Montessori”, Duckworth made the case that Montessori’s contributions go far beyond early childhood education.  Rather, she is best understood as a global peace and security thinker.

Duckworth is the faculty facilitator for the Peace and Conflict Education Working Group in DCRS. The group seeks to equip and empower schools worldwide to be examples and builders of peace, and to promote activities and curriculum that can help extend peace into the local communities. She teaches qualitative research methods, foundations of conflict resolution, History, Memory and Conflict Resolution, and peace education.

Posted 05/11/22

USchool Students Win Big at Physics Olympiad

Join us in congratulating the following Middle School students on their success as top performers in the U.S. Physics Olympiad! As part of the event, students were challenged with answering a set of questions and solving problems in the fields of mechanics, optics, and electricity and magnetism. Participation in this nationwide event provides positive momentum for their further study of physics, math, and other sciences.

  • Daniel Chin-Ambrose: 2nd place award
  • Miles Ellman: 2nd place award
  • David Liebowitz: 2nd place award
  • Michael Oliverio: 2nd place award
  • David Palatnik: 2nd place award
  • Gael Schneider: 2nd place award
  • Nina Anderson: 3rd place award
  • Nicole Janoff: 3rd place award
  • Rashad Kaiyal: 3rd place award
  • Nina Morozova: 3rd place award
  • Abigail Potter: 3rd place award
  • Victoria Rybalka: 3rd place award
  • Ethan Scharf: 3rd place award
  • Raven Wallace-Ross: 3rd place award
  • Mateo Tellez: High Achievement Award for placing in the 10th percentile nationwide

Posted 05/08/22

University School JA Fellows Team Wins Company of Year

Congratulations to the Ecossentials team of USchool student entrepreneurs on winning Company of the Year at the Junior Achievement of South Florida Spark Tank Finale! In addition to this recognition, the team brought home the following top awards:

  • Company of the Year
  • Company President of the Year: Kayla Bigelman
  • Best Annual Report
  • Highest Gross Profit
  • Best Video Commercial
  • Best Stage Performance
  • Best Website Design

Student officers Kayla Bigelman (CEO), Roni Saiegh(CSO), Noam Altman (CMO), Dylan Liberty (CFO), Elliot Perel (CSCO), and Jonathan Feinstein (COO) worked hard and performed exceptionally throughout the fellowship experience as they conceptualized, capitalized, and managed their very own small business.

Posted 05/08/22

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