Trump's tweets Tuesday marked a dramatic change in tone from last month when the president described Google as "one of our great companies." "Trump is doing this because he gets to define an enemy and churn up reaction," said UVA media studies professor Siva Vaidhyanathan, the author of books on Facebook and Google.
About 3,840 UVA first-year students have headed into their first college courses. UVA says this first-year class is the largest and most diverse in its history.
Zeroing in on college students makes sense for Instagram and Tinder, experts say. Both platforms enjoy tremendous popularity among young adults and these features could help them expand their user bases — and keep people from moving on to competing platforms. “User attention is divided basically more than ever before. There are apps for networking, dating … news, shopping and entertainment,” said Lalin Anik, a marketing expert at University of Virginia’s Darden School of Business who studies the impact of social connection on consumer behavior. “Social media giants are seeking novel ways to at...
With images of the torch-bearing white nationalists who rallied in Charlottesville last year, a flyer distributed by the Republican Party of Virginia accuses a Democrat running for Congress of being anti-Semitic. Geoffrey Skelley, associate editor at the University of Virginia's Center for Politics, saw the GOP mailer as an effort to help down-ticket Republican candidates such as Riggleman distinguish themselves from the party's U.S. Senate nominee, Corey Stewart.
Over the years, public response to these types of attacks on candidates have shifted, especially in the wake of the #MeToo movement, said Jennifer Lawless, a professor at the University of Virginia who has spent years studying the intersection of gender and politics. Research shows women who push back and call out the behavior are often rewarded. But the threat of such harassment can still deter women from running.
(Video) The University of Virginia’s Center for Politics is remembering the life and legacy of John McCain.
According to UVA’s Weldon Cooper Center for Public Service, which conducted an economic impact analysis for the county, the construction project alone will generate 93 jobs and $6.6 million of “value added” economic activity.
A 2016 working paper by researchers at the University of Michigan, the Urban Institute, the University of California, San Diego and the University of Virginia estimated that a 10 percent reduction in state funding is associated with a 12 percent bump in enrollment of international students at public research universities, suggesting that colleges are seeking out foreign students to fill the budget gap.
A study published Aug. 27 in Nature Human Behaviour showed that scientists are skilled in detecting questionable and/or unreliable results. Corresponding author Brian Nosek, with the University of Virginia and colleagues tested 21 studies from Science and Nature, two highly regarded journals. Most were psychological studies with student subjects. Experimenters were able to reproduce results of 13 studies, results that were better than previous research.
(Video) Many UVA students may be spending their final days of summer relaxing before classes ramp up, but one group of students spent Monday volunteering around the Charlottesville community. Students from UVA’s Frank Batten School of Leadership and Public Policy spent the day helping out the community.
A new ranking puts University of Virginia as the No. 2 public university in the United States. The national assessment organization Niche released its 2019 rankings on Monday.
(Video) Aug. 28 marks the first day of classes for students at the University of Virginia, and for more than 3,000 of them, this is their first day of college.
We’ve only, for the most part, seen him in a suit-and-tie around the Grounds… so maybe some first-years and their parents can be excused for not recognizing new University of Virginia President James Ryan in plain sight this past weekend. President Ryan put on some elbow grease, an orange “greeter” t-shirt, white shorts, and a baseball cap — blending in as one of the student and alumni greeters who come out in force each year to welcome new students. He had a mic in his hand, and was followed by a video camera speaking with persons on the Grounds … and even helping move some things.
Do ethical values and rules hinder the innovative spirit of Silicon Valley to invent new and exciting things? Two of the world’s leading experts in corporate ethics, R. Edward Freeman and Bobby Parmar of UVA’s Darden School of Business, don’t think so.
(By Emily Ogden, assistant professor of English and author of “Credulity: A Cultural History of U.S. Mesmerism”) In our historical moment, the mesmerists are worth considering, for they were frequently debunked, but the debunkings rarely had much of an effect.
Doctors and medical scientists have long believed that our nervous system and brain were completely separate from our immune system, but Dr. Jonathan Kipnis, chair of UVA’s Department of Neuroscience, is compiling evidence to the contrary. He’s shown, for example, that mice don’t learn well without a healthy immune system.
“In the Senate, you need two-thirds of the Senate to convict a president and that has never happened before,” said University of Virginia legal analyst Saikrishna Prakash. “Two presidents have been impeached, Andrew Johnson and Bill Clinton. No president has actually been removed (from office).”
Losing just one of the Democratic seats in West Virginia, Indiana, North Dakota, Montana and Missouri – all won by Trump in 2016 – could doom any shot of retaking the Senate. “Those five states are clearly the biggest targets for Republicans,” said Geoffrey Skelley, a non-partisan analyst at UVA’s Center for Politics. “There’s two ways to look at the Senate map. It’s really bad for Democrats, but the flip side of this is that this is a perfect year for them to be defending it.”
English literature scholar and teacher Mark Edmundson of the University of Virginia describes how many college students actively avoid the classic literature of the 19th and 20th centuries because they no longer have the patience to read longer, denser, more difficult texts. We should be less concerned with students’ “cognitive impatience,” however, than by what may underlie it: the potential inability of large numbers of students to read with a level of critical analysis sufficient to comprehend the complexity of thought and argument found in more demanding texts, whether in literat...
“In the Senate, you need two-thirds of the Senate to convict a president and that has never happened before,” said University of Virginia legal analyst Saikrishna Prakash. “Two presidents have been impeached, Andrew Johnson and Bill Clinton. No president has actually been removed (from office).”