Sign up for the 2019 NSU Scholarship Fishing Tournament

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On Saturday, January 12, the 2019 NSU Scholarship Fishing Tournament will begin with lines in at 7AM. This offshore fishing tournament supports endowed NSU Fishing Tournament Scholarship Fund.

Entries are currently being accepted and can be submitted up to and including during the Captain’s Meeting and Reception Party on Thursday evening Jan. 10, 2019 at NSU’s Ocean Campus.

The Fishing Tournament weigh-in is at 3pm on the January 12 at Pier 66 followed by the awards party and reception.

Please visit our website for more information on how to enter, be sponsor, or supporter of the tournament (http://www.nova.edu/fishingtournament). Net proceeds from Tournament donations create the endowed NSU Fishing Tournament Scholarship Fund. These scholarships attract, retain, encourage, and support high achieving and productive marine students at Halmos College who are engaged in outstanding research.

The Kapila Family Foundation Feeding Disorders Clinic at NSU’s Mailman Segal Center for Human Development to Offer Services for Free through June 2019

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The Kapila Family Foundation Feeding Disorders Clinic at Nova Southeastern University’s (NSU) Mailman Segal Center has received a grant in the amount of $669,282 from the State of Florida Department of Education that will fund feeding services through June 2019. The clinic is one of seven of its kind in the country and the only one of its kind in South Florida that provides comprehensive multidisciplinary treatment for children.

Senator Lauren Book and Representative Jared Moskowitz supported this award, which will cover the necessary costs for NSU’s Mailman Segal Center to provide clinical services and parent support for over 100 children in the State of Florida. feeding clinic

“We are honored and grateful to be the recipient of this funding for the Kapila Family Foundation Feeding Disorders Clinic,” said Roni Cohen Leiderman, Ph.D., Dean of NSU’s Mailman Segal Center for Human Development. “By offering these clinical services at no cost to children who reside in the State of Florida, many more children will receive our evidence-based treatment that has a remarkably high success rate.”

The Feeding Disorders Clinic works with an inter-professional team that treats children who refuse to eat an adequate volume of food or for those who eat an insufficient and limited variety of food. Without appropriate clinical treatment, many of these children may experience numerous hospital stays, medical crises and surgically implanted tube feedings to support their nutritional intakes. With the help of behavioral psychology, nutrition and speech pathology focusing on oral-motor concerns, the clinic provides comprehensive evaluation and intervention services.

“When a child has a problem with feeding, it is something that affects the whole family and often one simple solution does not exist,” stated Roseanne Lesack, Ph.D., BCBA-D, ABPP, director of the Feeding Disorders Clinic. “We have a multidisciplinary team that works with not only the child but the whole family which has resulted in a 92% success rate for patients treated here at NSU’s Mailman Segal Center for Human Development.”

Both intensive and outpatient services are available to best match each child’s specific feeding concerns. For more information, please call 954-262-CARE.

Save the Date for NSU’s Inaugural Digital Curriculum & Higher Education Conference in February

The Office of the Provost invites the NSU community to save the date for the inaugural “Going Deeply Digital: Promises and Challenges of the Digital Curriculum in Higher Education” regional conference, to be held at NSU during February 15-16, 2019. Faculty, staff, administrators, instructional designers, and students are invited to submit presentation proposals. Proposals are due December 10, 2018. The entire NSU community is invited to attend the conference.

The “Going Deeply Digital” conference is sponsored and hosted by the Association of Chief Academic Officers (ACAO) Digital Fellows Project and Nova Southeastern University (NSU). The Digital Fellows Project is supported by a grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to ACAO.

CAHSS Invites all NSU Students for “Crossroads of the Transatlantic Humanities Student Conference” Abstract Submission

NSU’s College of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences (CAHSS) extends an invitation to NSU students to submit an abstract for participation in an upcoming Humanities Student Conference to be held on Saturday, March 23, 2019, on NSU’s Fort Lauderdale/Davie. The conference theme is “Crossroads of the Transatlantic.” CAHSS’ Departments of History and Political Science and Literature and Modern Languages organize the conference.

The conference builds on the concept of South Florida as the crossroads of a Transatlantic world and asks students to develop presentations that explore the humanities and this convergence of cultures, values, and ideas not only in South Florida but throughout the Americas. The Humanities Student Conference strives to incorporate diverse perspectives and topics from a range of humanities fields including history, philosophy, literature, languages, cultural theory, and the arts. We also invite papers in legal studies, political science, national security, communication, conflict resolution studies, and international relations when approached with a humanities lens. Undergraduate and graduate students from all academic institutions are invited to submit abstracts of 150 words or less to Andrea Shaw Nevins, Ph.D., at  andrshaw@nova.edu no later than January 18, 2019.

2019 Lunch and Learn Grant Workshops

The Grant Writing Laboratory and the Office of Sponsored Programs provide Lunch & Learn Grant Workshops on a series of grant related topics. The annual 2019 Lunch & Learn Grant Workshop Series for NSU faculty and staff kicks off on Tuesday, January 22 with “How to Submit a Grant at NSU.” We are pleased to share that the 2019 series will feature nine sessions on a variety of topics. All workshops are scheduled from noon – 1:00 p.m. in the HPD Chancellor’s Dining Room. A light lunch is provided. Registration is REQUIRED so please RSVP at www.nova.edu/osp/lunchandlearn/ for any or all of the workshops. For more information, please contact Dr. Maryellen Maher at maherm@nova.edu.

How to Submit a Grant at NSU
Tuesday, January 22

Finding Grant Funding
Thursday, February 7

Grant Proposal Writing
Wednesday, February 27

NIH & DoD Grant Writing
Thursday, March 7

Federal Agency Reviwer’s Panel
Wednesday, March 13

Grant Budget
Tuesday, March 26

Managing Your Sponsored Project
Wednesday, April 3

CCR Core Facilities
Wednesday, April 10

How to Plan and Conduct a Clinical Trial
Tuesday, April 30

Location:
HPD Chancellor’s Dining Room

Time:
12:00 – 1:00 p.m.

NSU’S Lifelong Learning Institute to Host Former Chief Interpreter for Mikhail Gorbachev

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Pavel Palazhchenko will speak at NSU on Friday, December 7.

Nova Southeastern University’s (NSU) Lifelong Learning Institute will present “Negotiating the End of the Cold War: Lessons for Today” with speaker Pavel Palazhchenko. The seminar will take place on Friday, December 7 from 10:30 a.m. to noon in the university’s Knight Auditorium, located in the Carl DeSantis Building on NSU’s Fort Lauderdale/Davie campus

“NSU’s Lifelong Learning Institute offers a vibrant educational environment for those in the local community who seek out opportunities for intellectual stimulation,” said Linda Maurice, director of the Lifelong Learning Institute. “We often feature interesting and informative speakers who provide unique seminars to our members and guests. Mr. Palazhchenko is a testament to our ability to attract world renowned lecturers.”

Palazhchenko is a legendary translator who is well-known for his role as the chief English interpreter for Mikhail Gorbachev and Soviet foreign minister Eduard Shevardnadze. He participated in all US-Soviet summit talks that led to the end of the Cold War.

After serving as a long-time associate and aide to Mikhail Gorbachev, he served as the head of the International Department of the International Non-governmental Foundation for Socio-Economic and Political Studies, also known as The Gorbachev Foundation. In this role, he worked as an analyst, spokesperson, interpreter and translator.

Attendees will have the opportunity to listen to Palazhchenko speak about his front-row seat to history. Following the lecture, there will be a question and answer session.

This lecture is free and open to the public. For more information, call 954-262-8471 or email LLI@nova.edu.

Skip the Straw, Save the Planet – NSU Eliminating Use of Plastic Straws

Skip the Straw Graphic 1Joining an ever-growing list of corporations, organizations and municipalities that are taking steps to reduce their dependency on single-use plastics, Nova Southeastern University (NSU) will be eliminating the use of plastic straws, first at it’s Fort Lauderdale/Davie campus, then the other NSU locations.

“This was something we heard about from students, faculty and staff,” said Dr. George Hanbury, President of NSU. “The time has come for NSU to take a first-step in addressing single-use plastics on our campuses. It may be a small step, but every bit helps address the bigger issue.”

Dr. Hanbury hopes that by NSU taking this step, it may inspire public and private sector organizations to explore the possibility of doing so as well.

While NSU will be replacing plastic straws with more environmentally-friendly paper versions, the university will still have plastic straws on hand for individuals with disabilities or special needs who need to use them, and they’ll be made available upon request. The fact is in most cases, straws are not needed – they aren’t the product people are purchasing, they are an accessory. You can still buy a soda or cup of iced coffee and simply drink from the cup – the straw is superfluous.

The campus is home to third-party vendors (i.e. Starbucks) who are also exploring the possibility of  following NSU’s lead and switching to paper straws.

For many years the outcry about plastics polluting our oceans has been heard near and far. Almost weekly there are news reports of marine creatures washing up on beaches that have their digestive systems clogged with plastic trash. Plastics have been found in all of the world’s oceans, in the polar ice caps and even at the deepest part of the ocean, the Marianas Trench.

“Many people have said that, in the grand scheme of things, reducing straw usage is just a drop in the bucket when it comes to addressing plastic trash,” said Dr. Derek Burkholder,Skip the Straw Graphic 3 a marine research scientist in NSU’s Halmos College of Natural Sciences and Oceanography. “While that may be true, the fact remains that plastic straws are part of the problem, so we can start there and then see what else we can do to reduce our plastic footprint.”

Burkholder, who is also the director of the Broward County Sea Turtle Conservation Program and the Marine Environmental Education Center at the Carpenter House, said there are some reports that show that just in the United States and United Kingdom, nearly 550 million plastic straws are thrown away every day. In fact, approximately 50% of all plastic is single use, with an average “useful lifetime” of 12 minutes.

There are simple steps that people can take to help reduce their plastic footprint. From not using plastic straws to using reusable bags when grocery shopping, each action, no matter how small, helps remove plastic trash from landfills or the ocean.

Working with sea turtles, Burkholder and his colleagues have had to deal with the unfortunate reality of dead animals washing up on our beaches. And when they perform a necropsy he said that, inevitably, they find various bits of plastic in the turtle’s stomach.

Burkholder said it’s not just sea turtles – plastics are finding their ways into all sorts of marine creatures, great and small, from plankton to sperm whales. Even shore birds are being found with significant amounts of plastics in their digestive systems. Plastic isn’t biodegradable, it simply breaks down into smaller and smaller particles, including micro plastics, that are ingested.

“If you think about it, we’re polluting ourselves,” he said. “The fish eat the plastics, which metabolizes into their fat reserves and then we catch and eat the fish. We’re throwing plastics into the oceans and then, sooner or later, we wind up ingesting those same plastics.”

2018 NSU Distinguished Alumni Award Winners

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Nova Southeastern University salutes outstanding graduates at the Distinguished Alumni Achievement Awards ceremony, the highest and most prestigious honor that NSU bestows upon its graduates. The program recognizes alumni who have realized their potential around the world by demonstrating a record of distinguished service and extraordinary achievement in a particular profession, discipline, organization or community cause. The recognition event was recently held at NSU’s Alvin Sherman Library Cotilla Gallery in Davie, Florida.

“There are many ways to determine the value of a university,” said Dr. George Hanbury, President and CEO of NSU. “I believe that one of the most important ways is by what our graduates bring to the communities across the country and around the world after graduation. These honorees make NSU proud!”

2018 Distinguished Alumni Award Winners

Abraham S. Fischler College of Education Jeffrey Scarpiello
College of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences Michelle Cromwell, Ph.D
College of Dental Medicine Irene Marron-Tarrazzi, D.M.D., M.S
College of Engineering and Computing John (Jack) Freund, Ph.D.
Dr. Pallavi Patel College of Health Care Sciences Adrian Lane
Ron and Kathy Assaf College of Nursing Deborah Tedder
College of Optometry Denise Burns-LeGros, O.D., FAAO
Dr. Kiran C. Patel College of Osteopathic Medicine Randy Katz, D.O., FACEP
College of Pharmacy Dave Lacknauth, PharmD
College of Psychology Dwight Hollier, LPC, NCC
Halmos College of Natural Sciences and Oceanography Nicholas W. Carris, PharmD, BCPS
H. Wayne Huizenga College of Business & Entrepreneurship Chantal Leconte
Shepard Broad College of Law Gerald Morris
NSU University School Marla Neufeld

NSU Professor Weighs in on New Device that Promises 6-Pack Abs Results

Jose Antonio, Ph.D., FNSCA, FISSN, CSCS,  director of the exercise and sports science program at NSU’s Dr. Pavalli Patel College of Health Care Sciences, spoke with Local 10 about the new device that promises to give 6-pack abs without exercise.

Emsculpt, the latest non-invasive body contouring technique, creates muscle contractions through electromagnetic energy. The manufactures claims that it forces the muscles to tighten more than physically possible from traditional exercise. Dr. Antonio said that there is no data comparing this device to exercise.

 

It’s Time for NSU’s 16th Annual CommunityFest

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Join us for NSU’s 16th annual CommunityFest on February 9, 2019 from noon to 4:00 p.m. With an average of 5000+ participants each year, CommunityFest celebrates and connects NSU students, employees, and their families through a carnival-like atmosphere around Gold Circle Lake, located on NSU’s Fort Lauderdale campus.

NSU CommunityFest was initiated and developed in 2003 by Michelle Manley, an NSU student who wanted to bring the university community together and build school spirit. While this is a student-initiated event, Community Fest involves the collaboration of NSU staff and students, as well as community businesses and organizations. It is a great way to gain exposure for your college, department, student organizations, or business.

For more information on how you can get involved, we encourage you to check out the information below.

Where and When:
Saturday, February 9, 2019
Noon – 4:00 p.m.
Gold Circle Lake

How to Get Involved:

View Event Photos

WE HOPE TO SEE YOU THERE!

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