After a decade of rapid growth, international enrollment has declined over the past few years. This has university administrators worried, as tuition revenues fall, leading some to make budget cuts. Public research universities may be particularly concerned since many have become more reliant on international students since the mid-2000s. Recent research I conducted with John Bound (University of Michigan), Breno Braga (Urban Institute) and Sarah Turner (University of Virginia) shows fee-paying students from abroad have allowed public universities to weather state budget cuts, and that has kep...
Driving on the right was not always the norm. Throughout the Middle Ages, traffic tended to stick to the left (though this was more a general rule-of-thumb than enforced regulation). Even before that, Roman soldiers marched on the lefthand side. Historians are not entirely sure why. Many think this was because it suited swordsmen, the majority of whom were right-handed. Being on the left, the thinking goes, meant that when they drew their weapons, their sword-wielding arm would be in the middle of the road and could therefore best strike oncoming foes. Peter Norton from the University of Virgi...
Salon reached out to Kyle Kondik of Sabato's Crystal Ball and UVA's Center for Politics to ask whether the disparity between poll numbers and election results in 2016 could indicate tampering – and whether Americans should be concerned that the 2018 midterms could be compromised. Kondik says he thinks the 2016 result was on the level, statistically speaking.
UVA’s Hamilton Lombard says blacks and Hispanics have lower educational attainment rates, which is causing the sluggish recovery. “The construction industry, which is one of the best jobs for people without a college degree is just barely starting to recover now. So I think – and this is what we’ve seen in the past, and we’re definitely seeing it in this recovery – people with lower educational attainment rates are the last to really feel the recovery.”
There's a compelling opinion piece in The Chronicle of Higher Education Review this week titled "The University Run Amok!" Adam Daniel and Chad Wellmon, both employed at the University of Virginia, warn convincingly that modern-day American universities have stretched themselves too thin trying to provide services that, the authors argue, were once provided elsewhere. The authors' purpose is not to explain the disintegration of public institutions. But it's worth asking why so many have collapsed.
The Federal Communications Commission has unanimously approved a $100 million program designed to support telehealth and telemedicine programs for underserved populations, including remote patient monitoring programs that have shown past success in treating rural patients with diabetes and veterans. Prior to the FCC vote, the agency had issued a press release trumpeting support for the program. Among those backing the proposal included Dr. Karen Rheuban, a pediatrics professor at the University of Virginia, medical director of the UVA Office of Telemedicine and a former American Telemedicine A...
Autistic adults could remain more happy if they use Facebook in moderation, a new study has found. According to researchers at Fielding Graduate University and University of Virginia while use of Facebook in moderation helped boost happiness in adults with autism spectrum disorder the same results were not seen for microblogging platform Twitter.
Researchers at the University of Virginia Medical Center have learned that the risk of autism may be determined by the bacteria in a mother's gut. It's a discovery that may lead to new ways to prevent the neurodevelopmental disorder.
Researchers have made a breakthrough in treating Alzheimer’s disease — but treatment needs to happen before symptoms begin. Early intervention is key here, according to the lead researcher. “It is my opinion that we will never be able to cure Alzheimer’s disease by treating patients once they become symptomatic,” says George Bloom, a University of Virginia professor and chair of the school’s Department of Biology.
As the one-year anniversary of the deadly white nationalist rally in Charlottesville approaches, community members, students and groups advocating for racial justice are planning several events to fight back against racism. The events — which include a poster giveaway, a UVA student rally and a church service — begin this weekend and last through Aug. 12.
UVA, which endured the horrifying spectacle of torch-carrying neo-Nazis marching through Grounds last year on Aug. 11, announced plans to restrict access over the weekend to the Lawn (except for residents and attendees of a ticketed event Aug. 11) and to the plaza on the north side of the Rotunda, where a small group of counterprotesters were surrounded by white supremacists at the statue of founder Thomas Jefferson. UVA Students United plan a rally at the Rotunda’s north plaza from 7 to 9 p.m. Aug. 11.
A UVA student is one of 10 finalists nationwide for a prestigious international science innovation award. Madison Smither, a rising second-year student, started Students to Scientists in her hometown, where she mentored young girls interested in the STEM field.
Julian Bond, the civil rights icon who taught at UVA for two decades, died in 2015. Now the University has mounted an effort to make his collection of papers, speeches, and other documents available to the world through a crowdsourced transcription effort.
The group also includes three of the state’s largest public universities: the University of Virginia, Virginia Commonwealth University and James Madison University.
A.D. Carson, an assistant professor of hip-hop for the University of Virginia’s music department, knows this tightrope. A native of downstate Decatur who performs under the name AyDee The Great, Carson rejects the notion of the N-word as cool slang, though he has used it and doesn’t dissuade his own students from using it in his rap songwriting course. “I don’t know if the word is losing its negative connotation. My instinct says no, but I know there are all kinds of layers being continually added, peeled back, folded into others, and hopefully forcing us to think critically,” Carson said.
Impacted cerumen is one of the most common reasons people end up visiting a doctor for ear problems, according to a UVA Health System paper. In fact, an excessive build-up of earwax affects one in 10 children and one in 20 adults in the United States.
Research on SHUTi was done at the University of Virginia and published in the journal JAMA Psychiatry. In this study, half the participants received general education on insomnia and the other half were provided online therapy with SHUTi. The researchers found that those who received the internet therapy improved compared to those who did not.
The ninth president of the University of Virginia is officially on the job as Jim Ryan replaced Teresa Sullivan on Wednesday, who served her last day as president on Tuesday.
In his first day on the job, the University of Virginia’s new president said Wednesday he supports the controversial appointment of a former Trump administration official to a one-year fellowship at a campus center that studies the U.S. presidency and public policy.
The new president of the University of Virginia said Wednesday that he backs the hiring of a former Trump aide at one of the university’s centers, despite backlash sparked by the decision.