Facing soaring health care costs, inmate deaths linked to shoddy care and a subsequent federal lawsuit with no end in sight, Virginia’s prison system is turning to the state’s university hospital systems for help. It’s a partnership that could end with the UVA Health System taking over the medical wing of Fluvanna’s Women Prison – a facility under strict and ongoing scrutiny by a federal judge, who made clear during a hearing last month he was not impressed by the department’s efforts so far to improve the situation.
Sara Dexter, an associate director in UVA’s Curry School of Education and Human Development, says teachers will be implicated as the cause of the students’ shortcomings – and that they do have a role in students acquiring these critical 21st-century skills – but the best place to start to address the problem is in the area of state licensure rules and federal funding.
(Commentary by Saikrishna Prakash, law professor and Miller Center senior fellow) Virginia’s ratification will be stillborn and the Equal Rights Amendment will still be dead. Under a proper reading of the Constitution, it perished decades ago.
“How Things Work: An Introduction to Physics”: A great intro course that looks at physics in the context of everyday objects and processes. The course uses the cases of ramps, wheels, bumper cars and more to illuminate the physics of life around you. It is taught by the UVA physics professor Louis A. Bloomfield, a noted science educator, lecturer, author, as well as TV host.
The University of Virginia and George Mason University will also benefit, with GMU planning to expand its programs in Arlington.
Ahead of Friday’s UVA-Virginia Tech football game, a fraternity with chapters at both schools is putting aside the rivalry to raise money for cancer research.
The tobacco industry wasn’t regulated overnight. That’s the key takeaway from Sarah Milov’s new book, “The Cigarette: A Political History.” According to Milov, a UVA historian, Americans were reluctant to ditch cigarettes – even after the federal government linked smoking to lung cancer and heart disease in the Surgeon General’s 1964 report on smoking and health.
UVA football coach Bronco Mendenhall saw signs of progress everywhere on Saturday during the Cavaliers’ 55-27 victory over Liberty at Scott Stadium. But most importantly, Mendenhall saw the progress of the program as a whole.
“Trump may keep a lot of the Obama-to-Trump voters,” said Kyle Kondik, managing editor of Sabato’s Crystal Ball at UVA’s Center for Politics, but if “he loses even 10 to 20% of them, that’s enough to flip these states where you saw pretty significant overall swings from Obama to Trump.”
(Commentary co-written by Deborah Parker, a professor of Italian) President Trump’s mysterious hospital visit this weekend prompted lots of questions– but White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham doesn’t understand why. “He’s got more energy than anybody in the White House,” she recently told Fox News commentator Jeanine Pirro. “That man works from 6 a.m. until, you know, very, very late at night.” That might sound excessive, given what we know about this president’s work habits. Yet Pirro still felt compelled to one-up her guest. “He’s almost superhuman...
Although the Second Amendment sanctuary movement is picking up steam, UVA professor Rich Schragger, who specializes in constitutional law, says any measure will be limited because state law takes precedence over local laws in Virginia. “What they can do as a practical matter is quite limited," Schragger said.
Choosing one approach – clinical or actuarial judgment – exclusively over the other represents a false dichotomy. The acceptance of quantitative prediction does not demand the rejection of purely human decision-making. Quite the contrary. Human decision-making will always exist, but, as John Monahan of the University of Virginia School of Law argues, it “must be disciplined and checked and it is crucial that the process start with an actuarial estimate of risk.”
Elaine Westbrooks, vice provost of university libraries at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and Brandon Butler, director of information policy at the University of Virginia Library, wonder whether Elsevier would be willing to strike a similar deal with an institution with a much higher research output in the life sciences.
The ads slam Democrats, many of whom hail from districts Trump won in 2016, as promising to be “different” but instead aligning with national Democratic figures to focus on impeachment rather than other legislative priorities, such as trade. “Republicans want to use impeachment as a weapon against Democrats,” said Kyle Kondik, who analyzes politics at UVA’s Center for Politics. “The whole battle over impeachment is part of a Republican pitch to try to make the presidential elections more of a choice next year as opposed to a referendum on the president.”
More than 200 physicians at UVA Health have been honored by their peers. According to a release, 233 physicians were named in the 2019-20 Best Doctors in America List, and Best Doctors says about 4% of doctors in the country are named.
More than nine out of 10 teachers say they seek out academic research from journal articles at least once a year, although they are ambivalent at best about the timeliness of that material, whether it’s decipherable, and their ability to apply it to their work, a new survey finds. The results were published in a report, “Educator Voices on Education Research,” by the Jefferson Education Exchange, a nonprofit backed by the University of Virginia’s Curry School of Education and Human Development and the Strada Education Network, an organization focused on education and employment.
The $397,668 grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Distance Learning and Telemedicine grant program will enable UVA to implement the Virginia Telemedicine Network for cardio-metabolic disease, opioid use disorder, ophthalmology, black lung disease and cancer.
With Ukraine in the political spotlight during President Trump's impeachment hearings, UVA’s School of Continuing and Professional Studies held a talk on the country's history.
“The women being called in are not administrative assistants who might have heard something,” but accomplished experts, says Jennifer Lawless, a UVA professor of politics who’s written extensively about women in office. “That matters, that level of growth.”
Educators routinely access education research and prefer journal articles, news stories and presentations at conferences over other sources. But their views on whether education research is timely, easy to find, understandable or transferrable to their practice fall in the 4.5-to-4.9 range on a 1 to 7 scale, according to a new report from the Jefferson Education Exchange, a nonprofit supported by UVA’s Curry School of Education and Human Development.