Historians Ed Ayers, Peter Onuf and Brian Balogh, hosts of the public radio show and podcast "BackStory with the American History Guys," explore the history of beer and spirits in America, and what it tells us about life in the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries. Live from the Organization of American Historians annual meeting in Milwaukee. [Onuf is Thomas Jefferson Memorial Foundation Professor of History and Balogh is Dorothy Danforth Compton Professor of History. Ayers, president of the University of Richmond, is the former dean of the College of Arts & Sciences.]
Fewer people are giving more money to American colleges, and the industry may be staging a modest rebound from the slowdown in higher-education fundraising that accompanied the 2008 economic downturn, according to a new report.
As the state's colleges and universities prepare to set tuition rates, Gov. Bob McDonnell has written school presidents and board members urging them to keep increases below 3 percent. …
McDonnell noted in his letter that the General Assembly approved a two-year budget that provides more than $230 million in new funding for higher education "with the clear understanding" that in-state rates would be held down. So far only the University of Virginia has set rates for the next academic year. U.Va.'s board increased in-state tuition and mandatory fees by 3.7 percent, which was the lowest increas...
Kathleen Eleanor Sheehy was born in Lawrence, Mass. She was a 1966 graduate of Merrimack College in North Andover, Mass., and received a master's degree in education from the University of Virginia in 1977.
Jeanne Addison Roberts, 86, a Shakespeare scholar who taught at American University for three decades until her retirement in 1993, died April 3 at her home in Chevy Chase. … She received a bachelor's degree in 1946 from Agnes Scott College in Decatur, Ga., a master's degree from the University of Pennsylvania in 1947 and a doctorate from the University of Virginia in 1964, all in literature.
Mark Changizi (College '91) and Tim Barber (College '91) have formed a venture called 2AI Labs ("To Artificial Intelligence" is their favored interpretation of the acronym for the business). Its mission is "researching the mind, what it does and where it's headed," according to 2AI's website.
Former U.S. Rep. Virgil Goode of Rocky Mount [Law '73] secured the Constitution Party's nomination for president at the party's convention Saturday in Nashville, Tenn.
Andrew Block
Director of the Child Advocacy Clinic in the Law School
Road Back to School Is Rocky for Ex-Offenders
Education Week / April 23
Kyle Kondik
Center for Politics
Gov. McDonnell Still Undecided On Voter ID Bills
WAMU Public Radio, Washington, D.C. / April 23
Larry Sabato
Politics professor and director of the Center for Politics
Does Mitt's Mormonism matter? Recent comments raise questions over what role faith will play in 2012
Fox News / April 23
Daniel Willingham
Psychology professor
Concern Abounds Over Teachers' Preparedness for Standards
Education Week / April 24
We need strong regulations to check what social-networking sites are sharing about us, says Siva Vaidhyanathan, Robertson Professor in Media Studies Chair, Department of Media Studies, University of Virginia. Vaidhyanathan, who has written four books, including The Googlization of Everything - and Why We Should Worry, says we should never believe what Google delivers is the last word.
Most psychology research takes place under laboratory conditions allowing tight control over the exact interventions and procedures participants are exposed to. That makes for neater science but leaves the discipline vulnerable to claims that the results aren't relevant to real life where things are far messier. Now Gregory Mitchell at the University of Virginia has tested this very issue by poring over the literature looking for previously published meta-analyses that compared findings in the lab to the same issue addressed in a field experiment.
Interview with Tim Laseter, lecture in the Darden School, about the General Services Administration's efforts to track greenhouse gas emissions by federal agencies and promote sustainable procurement practices.
"What that plays on is that we want to see Edison as the early grounded, highly practical commercially minded inventor and that [Nikola] Tesla as the more intuitive, spiritually tuned in, person who is reaching for, discovering the secret forces of the universe," said Bernard Carlson, a professor of science, technology and society at the University of Virginia.
The University of Virginia Alumni Association has awarded 13 Jefferson Trust grants to support university projects.
Researchers from nursing schools at the University of Virginia and Johns Hopkins University said their primary goal is to identify pregnant abused women and help them move toward a better, sounder, safer future — for themselves and their children.
Automatic expulsions for students who threaten or commit acts of school violence may be politically popular, but research raises questions about the policy's effectiveness. University of Virginia professor Dewey Cornell finds that careful assessment and measured action is a more effective response to school violence than a one-size-fits-all.
The plan to energize public support was outlined Monday in a report by transportation experts brought together by the Miller Center at the University of Virginia.
Most public research universities "undercharge for their services," [former Board of Visitors member] Austin Ligon, co-founder and former chief executive officer of CarMax, told a crowd attending the Association of Governing Boards of Colleges and Universities 2012 National Conference on Trusteeship.
One hundred cancer patients at the University of Virginia Medical Center got a welcome surprise Friday. Staff members and volunteers delivered floral arrangements to care units. Patients received daisies, mums, carnations and a card with words of encouragement including "we're here for you."
Dr. William Muller began the open-heart surgery program at the University of Virginia; he developed the pulmonary artery banding procedure for infants and children with certain types of congenital heart disease; and he oversaw the construction of a new U.Va. hospital.
L. Harvey Poe Jr., a former professor at St. John’s College in Annapolis and a lawyer who had his own practice in the District, died March 30 at Washington Hospital Center. He was 96…. Luke Harvey Poe Jr., a Richmond native, was a 1938 mathematics graduate of the University of Virginia and a 1941 graduate of its law school.