Arthur J. Falcone, CEO and Chairman of the Falcone Group to Receive 2020 Horatio Alger Award

Arthur Falcone

Horatio Alger Association of Distinguished Americans, Inc., a nonprofit educational organization honoring the achievements of outstanding individuals and encouraging youth to pursue their dreams through higher education, today announced that Arthur Falcone, CEO and chairman of the Falcone Group, and co-founder and managing principal of Encore Capital Management, has been selected for membership in this prestigious organization. Mr. Falcone joins 13 other exceptional business, civic and cultural leaders from across North America in receiving 2020 honors. For more than 70 years, the Horatio Alger Award has been annually bestowed upon esteemed individuals who have succeeded despite facing adversities, and who have remained committed to higher education and charitable efforts in their communities.

Mr. Falcone was born in Queens, New York. His parents were first-generation Italian immigrants and who worked long hours to support their three children. Although they didn’t have much, Mr. Falcone was taught the importance of giving back at a young age. His father, a police officer, who was one of the first appointed officers to run the Police Boy’s Club and began mentoring at-risk and disadvantaged youth in their neighborhood. Although he took a few classes at Nassau Community College, Mr. Falcone never graduated and instead decided to join the workforce. After completing the McDonald’s Management Training Program, he became the company’s youngest franchisee at just 22. Due to his success in this role, he met Dave Thomas, founder and CEO of Wendy’s, who offered him territorial rights for 40 Wendy’s restaurants in South Florida.

As Mr. Falcone continued to build his franchise portfolio, he realized that he would much rather build his own restaurants than pay a construction company and then pay them rent. This sparked his interest in real estate and in 1988, he founded Transeastern Properties, which later become the largest homebuilder in Florida and the one of the top 25 homebuilders in the United States. Mr. Falcone sold Transeastern Properties for $1.6 billion. Since 2004, he has served as CEO and chairman of Falcone Group, a real estate company specializing in residential, retail and apartment assets. He is also the co-founder and managing principal of Encore Capital Management, which encompasses two private equity funds, a private multifamily REIT, and numerous other investments valued at $2 billion in capital and $10 billion in portfolio development value.

“For decades, Art Falcone has been living out the Horatio Alger mission in his own life,” said Terrence J. Giroux, executive director, Horatio Alger Association. “He embodies the values of hard work and integrity. His corporate achievements are to be admired and his charitable giving has impacted the lives of thousands – particularly those who need it most in his own community in South Florida. We are honored to present Art with the Horatio Alger Award in 2020.”

 Mr. Falcone has harnessed his entrepreneurial spirit to empower young people to improve their lives through the free-enterprise system. Inspired by the late H. Wayne Huizenga, past president of the Horatio Alger Association, he became involved in Junior Achievement of South Florida. Mr. Falcone funded Junior Achievement BizTown, an engaging, hands-on program that introduces fifth graders to business, finance and economics. Mr. Falcone serves on the board of trustees for Nova Southeastern University, where, in 2006, he was inducted into the H. Wayne Huizenga School of Business Entrepreneurship Hall of Fame.

“Throughout my career, I have been fortunate to have been inspired by those who are both great entrepreneurs and outstanding philanthropists, like Wayne Huizenga, who have shaped me into the person I am today,” said Mr. Falcone. “Wayne’s civic-minded approach to life and his belief that we must use our good fortune to help others set an incredible example for me and so many others.”

Thanks to the generosity of its Members, the Association awards need-based scholarships to outstanding high school students who are committed to pursuing higher education and giving back to their communities. The Association also educates young people about the limitless opportunities afforded to them by the free-enterprise system through hard work, honesty and determination. Like Association Members, Horatio Alger Scholars have faced significant adversities, but have also displayed unmatched resilience in overcoming their challenges. Since the scholarship program was established in 1984, the Horatio Alger Association has provided more than $180 million to 27,000 students in need, all of which has been funded solely through the generosity of Association Members and friends.

Mr. Falcone and the Member Class of 2020 will be formally inducted into the Association on April 2-4, 2020, during the Association’s 73rd Horatio Alger Award Induction Ceremonies in Washington, D.C. The annual three-day event honors the achievements of both Members and National Scholars, affording both groups the opportunity to meet and interact as well as exchange stories of hardships and triumphs.

 

Public Relations & Marketing Division Launch NSUFlorida.com

 

NSU’s Division of Public Relations and Marketing Communications (PRMC) recently launched NSUFlorida.com. The website serves a double-purpose. It highlights some of the university’s key brag points and showcases current ad campaigns. The URL (NSUFlorida.com) is exclusive to PRMC’s targeted ads and is being used to engage audiences in learning more about NSU’s impact on research, health care, education, the economy, and more. We invite you to check out NSUFlorida.com and continue to spread your Shark Pride.

Guy Harvey Research Institute Celebrates 20 Years

Halmos Faculty Member Mahmood Shivji, Ph.D. and Guy Harvey, Ph.D.

During November, the Guy Harvey Ocean Foundation (GHOF) celebrated the 20th anniversary of the NSU Guy Harvey Research Institute (GHRI). Housed in the Halmos College of Natural Science and Oceanography, GHRI specializes in pelagic fish conservation, or large open-ocean fish such as sharks, marlin and tuna. Their recent work focuses on satellite tagging and tracking, as well as genetic research, among other topics. They also led a team that has successfully decoded the White Shark genome, which could potentially have applications for human health research due to their low incidences of cancer and rapid wound healing.

“The work that’s being done at the GHRI is very cutting-edge, very high-level scientific research that’s had some tremendous results for the conservation of our oceans and the big animals that live there,” said Greg Jacoski, executive director of the GHOF. “I know there’s a lot of great research that the university turns out as a whole, but I think the work that is being done out of the Oceanographic Center and the Guy Harvey Research Institute specifically is some of the best going on in the world right now, and [NSU] should be proud of the work that’s being done there.”

NSU to Host the Qualitative Report 11th Annual Conference “Contemporary Qualitative Research”- Registration Now Open

Nova Southeastern University will be hosting The Qualitative Report 11th Annual Conference at Davie Campus in Fort Lauderdale, Florida from January 14 through 17, 2020. General registration for the TQR 11th Annual Conference is open.
For detailed information on registration click the below:

Registration Now Open
Official Conference Website
Pre-Conference Workshop

Conference Theme

Contemporary qualitative research is a diverse world of varied perspectives, designs, methods, products and purposes. We have descriptive, interpretive, scientific, artistic, critical, collaborative, participatory, indigenous, and provocative approaches to name just a few of the ways qualitative researchers conceptualize, conduct, and communicate their work. Qualitative research is now an international phenomena practiced by more people in more disciplines and professions than ever before.

Technological advancements also make qualitative research today a quickly evolving craft. Breakthroughs in artificial intelligence, recording apps and equipment, voice-recognition and translation software, computer-assisted qualitative data analysis programs, and augmented reality present today’s researchers with new and interesting ways to carry out their work faster and more efficiently and to consider emerging multi-dimensional ways to generate, collect and analyze data. Innovations in communication too present new options how we present and publish our work and receive feedback from our audiences.

What we teach and how we learn qualitative research today also reflect this wonderful diversity. It can be challenging to manage this variety in a curriculum, so today’s teachers and students are learning and instructing via emerging alternative and complementary means and media. Inside and outside the academy, formally and informally qualitative research education and training has never been so wide-ranging.

Teaching and Learning Qualitative Research Track

At the 11th Annual TQR Conference, we will also feature a Teaching and Learning Qualitative Research Track of paper presentations, panels, and workshops throughout the three-day event. We have invited folks to share their lessons learned from practicing, teaching, and writing qualitative research: How do you teach qualitative research? What exercises work well in helping your students master these skills? What learning technologies do you use? How should qualitative research degrees, certificate, curricula, and courses be organized to maximize effective learning?  What innovations did you create to help you complete your first qualitative project? We want to hear these reflexive tales in your proposed papers, panels, and workshops so we all can learn lessons learned of qualitative research.

Pre-Conference Workshop

An Introduction to Qualitative Data Analysis: A Three-Hour Workshop by Johnny Saldaña.

Johnny Saldaña, Professor Emeritus from Arizona State University-Tempe, facilitates a participatory workshop on “An Introduction to Qualitative Data Analysis.” The purpose of the workshop is to survey how narrative data can be inductively analyzed through different methods from the canon of qualitative inquiry heuristics.

Three approaches to the analysis of interview and survey data will be demonstrated, and participants will explore each of these methods with authentic data sets. The first is coding and categorizing the story of a man with depression and anxiety. The second is thematic analysis of a teacher’s narrative about her relationship with students. And the third is the development of assertions about a woman recounting her troubled adolescence. Additional workshop topics include constructing diagrams and matrices, analytic memos, and analytic writing.

The workshop content and participatory exercises are designed to provide participants with a sampling of analytic approaches to non-numeric data. These approaches can be utilized with written and oral empirical materials for research, practice, and professional development. The workshop is targeted to graduate students and novices to qualitative research.

Please see the links at the top to visit our official website where you may register for the conference and workshop.

As always, please let us know your questions and comments by sending us your emails to tqr@nova.edu, posting to our Facebook page, or by tweeting us!

NSU Art Museum Fort Lauderdale Announces Appointment of Francie Bishop Good as Board Chair

NSU Art Museum Fort Lauderdale announces the appointment of Francie Bishop Good as Chair of its Board of Governors. She succeeds Dr. Stanley Goodman, who will continue to serve on the board’s executive committee.

An artist and leading advocate for the arts, Good has been a member of NSU Art Museum Fort Lauderdale’s Board of Governors for over 20 years, and served as Co-Chair of the collections committee. Good’s artwork has been exhibited nationally and internationally and she is represented by Mindy Solomon Gallery in Miami. She lives and works in Fort Lauderdale and New York, and is a longtime champion and supporter of women artists.

With her husband David Horvitz, Good established the Fort Lauderdale-based alternative arts space, Girls’ Club, with a mission of educating the public, nurturing careers of female artists and serving as a resource on the contributions of women to the field of contemporary art. She also co-founded the non-profit organization Funding Arts Broward (FAB!).

In 2018, Good and Horvitz filled a major gap in NSU Art Museum’s collection with their promised gift of 100 works by women and multicultural artists from their highly regarded collection. Artists include Cecily Brown, Tracey Emin, Teresita Fernandez, Ana Mendieta, Catherine Opie, Cindy Sherman, Lorna Simpson, Mickalene Thomas, Kara Walker and others.

“Francie is a visionary who understands the tremendous impact that the arts can have in our communities, said Bonnie Clearwater, director and chief curator, NSU Art Museum Fort Lauderdale. “She has been instrumental to our growth as a vibrant center of culture and education and has also helped advance Fort Lauderdale in the broader cultural landscape. With Francie’s commitment and leadership, we look forward to continuing to expand NSU Art Museum’s reach to new and diverse audiences.”

Good stated, “I am thrilled to take on this new role. Art has always been paramount in my life. It bridges gaps between cultures, elevates our humanity and applauds differences and uniqueness.  Museums are the platform to open our minds to accepting these differences.”

NSU Art Museum Fort Lauderdale has launched a $1 million capital campaign in Francie Bishop Good’s honor, a portion of which will be matched by the David and Francie Horvitz Family Foundation. The funds will further the Museum’s exhibition and education programs and community outreach.

For additional information, visit nsuartmuseum.org or call 954-525-5500. Follow the Museum on social media @nsuartmuseum.

 

Huizenga College of Business and Entrepreneurship Student Tops City Furniture Case Competition

This fall semester, NSU’s Department of Career Development collaborated with City Furniture to host a case study focused on developing a marketing/business solution plan to entice millennials and Gen Z students to use City Furniture for their apartment furniture needs and compete with companies such as IKEA.

Seven teams (11 students total) competed in the competition, 9 out of the 11 students represented the Huizenga College of Business and Entrepreneurship. Students were able to share solutions that would help expand City Furniture’s target audience and get buy in from Millennial and Gen Z customers. One of our undergraduate business students, Krystian Dear, won the competition and received the $1,000 prize.

City Furniture was so impressed with our students that they plan to host another competition at NSU. In addition, City Furniture will be looking to implement the solutions provided by students into their future business plans.

NSU has been hosting case competitions for four years and counting, and the variety of topics as well as experiences and prizes will continue to grow as opportunities expand and more students participate. If you are interested in potentially joining a future case competition, please contact the NSU Career Development at (954) 262-7201 or visit https://www.nova.edu/career/students/professional-development.html.

KPCOM Mourns the Loss of Howard Neer, D.O.

In the early morning hours of November 24, the osteopathic profession and Nova Southeastern University’s Dr. Kiran C. Patel College (KPCOM) lost a beloved and respected leader when Howard Neer, D.O., FACOFP, passed away at the age of 90.

Neer, who joined the KPCOM in 1992 and served in various roles throughout his 25-year NSU career, spent nearly seven decades furthering the cause of osteopathic medicine both statewide and nationally. After being named associate dean of clinical affairs in 1992, Neer transitioned to his longstanding position as the college’s associate dean of alumni affairs in 1993. His NSU career culminated when he was named executive associate dean for professional affairs for the Health Professions Division.

During a career overflowing with accomplishment, Neer, a 1954 graduate of the Chicago College of Osteopathic Medicine, became an impactful leader, becoming president of the Broward County Osteopathic Medical Association in 1960. He also served as president of numerous other organizations, including the Florida Osteopathic Medical Association in 1976 and the American Osteopathic Association in 1995.

Not surprisingly, Neer’s dedication to the osteopathic medical profession earned him innumerable accolades.

1986 – Chicago College of Osteopathic Medicine Distinguished Service Award

1997 – Florida Osteopathic Association Physician of the Year Award

2001 – American Osteopathic Foundation Horizon Award

2001 – Florida Society of the American College of Family Physicians Lifetime Achievement Award

2007 – Florida Osteopathic Medical Association Lifetime Achievement Award

2007 – NSU Health Professions Division Distinguished Service Award

2016 – Broward County Osteopathic Medical Association Lifetime Achievement Award

2020 Golf in the Library Volunteer

Sherman’s Golf in the Library is back! Two floors of the Library will be transformed into an 18-hole miniature golf course with a classic children’s book theme. The library needs your help to create this unique mini golf experience. You’ll earn service hours and help raise funds for the Alvin Sherman Library’s early childhood literacy programs and more.

Sign up to volunteer at https://www.signupgenius.com/go/10C0B48ADA828A2F49-golf

For those interested in volunteering on Thursday, January 9 from 2-4 p.m. and Sunday January 12 from 4-6 p.m., you must be able to lift 20-40lbs.

For more info, contact Tanja Rodriquez at trodriguez@nova.edu.

Nominations for President’s 64 for 2020-2021 are Now Open

Nominate a stand-out student leader for President’s 64!

Do you know a student that goes above and beyond and has a strong sense of Shark Pride? Someone who would be a great ambassador or representative for the university, community, and within your program? Nominations for The President’s 64 group for the 2020-2021 year are now open!

Established by NSU’s 6th President, George L. Hanbury II, Ph.D., The President’s 64 is an elite body of student leaders whose purpose is to strengthen the relationship between Nova Southeastern University and its surrounding community. Members of The President’s 64 provide targeted feedback to the President, and serve as student ambassadors and representatives at University events.

Selection is based on nomination only. NSU staff and faculty members may elect to nominate an NSU student by completing the President’s 64 Nomination Form (hyperlink to https://opinio.nova.edu:443/opinio/s?s=18214). Upon review we will offer interviews for prospective President’s 64 members.

Please note that the deadline to submit a nomination is January 17, 2020 by 5:00 p.m.

For more information, please visit The President’s 64 website, or email presidents64@nova.edu.

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