ReportWire

Tag: DePaul University

  • DePaul University Fires Biology Professor For Israel-Hamas Class Assignment

    DePaul University Fires Biology Professor For Israel-Hamas Class Assignment

    [ad_1]

    CHICAGO (AP) — DePaul University said it dismissed a part-time biology instructor after she gave an optional assignment related to the Israel-Hamas war.

    Anne d’Aquino told students in May that they could write about the impact of “genocide in Gaza on human health and biology.” The theme of the spring class at the Chicago school was how microorganisms cause disease.

    DePaul said some students “expressed significant concern” about politics in a science class.

    “We investigated the matter, spoke with the faculty member, and found it had negatively affected the learning environment by introducing extraneous political material that was outside the scope of the academic subject as outlined in the curriculum,” DePaul said Friday in a statement.

    The school noted an email with the assignment expressed support for people “resisting the normalization of ethnic cleansing.”

    “The class was provided a new instructor, and the faculty member has been released from their appointment as a part-time faculty member,” DePaul said.

    D’Aquino is appealing her dismissal.

    “My termination was a breach of my academic freedom and another example of this administration’s efforts to twist any discussions of Palestine and Palestinian liberation language into false claims of antisemitism,” d’Aquino said at the demonstration.

    She said the assignment was relevant, noting that scientists have warned about the spread of disease in Gaza due to malnutrition and a lack of water and adequate sanitation.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • DePaul Driehaus College of Business and Discovery Senior Living Launch New National Leadership Development Program

    DePaul Driehaus College of Business and Discovery Senior Living Launch New National Leadership Development Program

    [ad_1]

    DePaul University’s Driehaus College of Business and Discovery Senior Living launch a new leadership development program for 200 company leaders across the country.

    Discovery Senior Living (“Discovery”) is excited to announce they have launched a new leadership development program in partnership with the Executive Education Program at DePaul University’s Driehaus College of Business to accelerate leadership capabilities.

    The leadership development program is customized to the needs of Discovery Senior Living, the fifth largest senior living operator, and one of the fastest growing with locations across the United States. As an investment in nearly 200 of Discovery’s leaders from across the company, this yearlong, virtual and online certificate program equips participants to become informed, impactful leaders. Four dynamic, synchronous workshops cover the fundamentals of leadership.

    “In our first workshop, we focus on cultivating self-awareness and action planning,” said Bob Rubin, Associate Dean of Graduate and Executive Education at Driehaus. “That workshop is led by Professor of Management and Entrepreneurship Erich Dierdorff, an award-winning teacher and leading human resources and organizational behavior researcher. It will help participants identify key leadership capabilities to strengthen and establish accountability mechanisms,” said Rubin. “This session sets the groundwork for their leadership growth journey.”

    The remaining three sessions focus on how to recruit and retain a diverse workforce; how to foster excellence; and how to drive organizational change from the mid-level. Asynchronous, experiential exercises complement the workshops, allowing participants to thoroughly integrate their newly honed leadership skills into their work. Participants who engage in all four sessions will receive a certificate from DePaul University.

    “Our executive education programs are designed to propel professionals’ development through targeted learning opportunities,” said Rubin. “We prioritize customization, tailoring our programs to align with each organization’s specific learning and development objectives.”

    “We recognize that strong, capable, and engaged leaders are at the heart of attracting and retaining the very best talent in the industry,” said Bill Sciortino, Chief Operating Officer at Discovery Senior Living. “Our investment in our leaders and partnership with DePaul is just one of many strategies towards our continued focus on building a world-class learning organization.”

                                                                                        ###

    About Discovery Senior Living

    Discovery Senior Living is a family of companies that includes Discovery Management Group, Integral Senior Living, Provincial Senior Living, Morada Senior Living, TerraBella Senior Living, LakeHouse Senior Living, Arvum Senior Living, Discovery Development Group, Discovery Design Concepts, STAT Marketing, and Discovery At Home. With three decades of experience, the award-winning management team has been developing, building, marketing, and managing diverse senior-living communities across the United States. By leveraging its innovative “Experiential Living” philosophy across a growing portfolio in excess of 300 communities and over 30,000 homes in nearly 40 states, Discovery Senior Living is a recognized industry leader for performance, innovation and lifestyle customization and, today, ranks among the 5 largest U.S. senior living operators.

    About DePaul University

    DePaul University’s Driehaus College of Business, founded in 1912, was among the first 10 business colleges in the United States. Among a select group of business schools worldwide to be accredited by the AACSB, Driehaus has a proud history of nurturing socially responsible leaders and equipping students to make an immediate and tangible impact in the workplace. DePaul Executive Education builds on this tradition by crafting transformative educational programs that are customized to the needs and goals of each of its clients. The program’s expert faculty bring both research acumen and real-world experience to the table, along with expertise in delivering impactful education across a wide range of modalities. The program’s partners include McDonald’s, Wintrust, Walgreens, and Byline Bank. Learn more about DePaul Executive Education here: https://business.depaul.edu/executive-education

    Source: Discovery Senior Living

    Related Media

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • What to know about the state of voting rights ahead of 2024

    What to know about the state of voting rights ahead of 2024

    [ad_1]

    CHICAGO –– In a pair of decisions this summer that surprised some voting rights advocates, the U.S. Supreme Court went against the trend of recent decisions weakening the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

    As the anniversary of the landmark civil-rights legislation approaches on August 6, Manoj Mate, an associate professor with DePaul University College of Law, discusses the details and implications of these recent court rulings for the 2024 elections and the broader challenges facing voters. Mate is the faculty director of the Racial Justice Initiative, and his interdisciplinary research focuses on public law, constitutional law, election law and voting rights, and comparative constitutional law. 

    How did the Supreme Court rule this summer?

    First in Allen v. Milligan, the court ruled that Alabama’s 2022 congressional redistricting plan violated Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act by packing a large bloc of Black voters into one majority-minority district. This divided up and diluted the voting power of the remainder of Black voters among surrounding districts. As a result of the decision, Alabama must now draw a second majority-minority district.

    In the second ruling for Moore v. Harper, the Supreme Court rejected the extreme version of the independent-state-legislature theory, a fringe legal theory that would have limited state courts’ powers to review electoral work of state legislatures.

    The power to draw legislative maps has become central to the elections process. Why is the Moore v. Harper case so important for voting rights and democracy?

    Moore is important because it preserves a pathway for challenging partisan gerrymanders through state courts. In Rucho v. Common Cause (2019), the Supreme Court held partisan gerrymandering claims are political questions that cannot be adjudicated by federal courts, but they held that state courts could still review partisan gerrymandering claims under state constitutional law. While affirming the power of state courts to review partisan gerrymanders under state constitutions, the Supreme Court in Moore v. Harper held that state court decisions would still be subject to review by federal courts.

    What is the likely impact of the case going forward?

    The impact of the Supreme Court’s decision is still uncertain given the lack of clarity surrounding the new standard for reviewing state court decisions. However, under the new standard, federal courts will have the power to review state supreme court decisions on redistricting, as well as state regulations of voting and elections involving federal elections.

    These federal court decisions could have significant impacts on voting rights and federal elections as early as 2024. In applying the Moore standard, federal courts could potentially overturn state supreme court decisions invalidating partisan gerrymanders based on scrutiny of state courts’ interpretation of state constitutional provisions codifying voting rights, equality, and democratic principles. These decisions could have a significant influence on state Congressional maps, potentially affecting which party wins a majority in the U.S. House of Representatives.

    What is happening at the state level?

    States continue to impose restrictions on voting rights through voter suppression policies. These include passing voter identification and felony disenfranchisement laws, restricting early voting and vote by mail, and reducing the number of polling places in major cities and population centers.

    In addition, election denial strategies are targeting election administration, including attacks on election workers, efforts to challenge certification of elections, and the creation of ‘election fraud’ policing units. All of these present significant threats to voting rights and elections.

    As faculty director of the Racial Justice Initiative, you bring together students, lawyers, researchers, policymakers and activists to collaborate on community-driven solutions to advance racial justice. Why is voting rights a priority for your work?

    Policies that seek to curtail or restrict voting rights have disproportionate impacts on minority communities and their power and influence in our democracy. Protecting voting rights and preserving and expanding access to the vote is essential to advancing legislation and policy reforms in the area of racial and social justice through the political process.

    [ad_2]

    DePaul University

    Source link

  • AI and health care: DePaul and Rosalind Franklin award interdisciplinary research grants

    AI and health care: DePaul and Rosalind Franklin award interdisciplinary research grants

    [ad_1]

    ​​​Newswise — CHICAGO — DePaul University and Rosalind Franklin University of Science and Medicine are funding three faculty research projects that bring together artificial intelligence, biomedical discovery and health care. The competitive grants kickstart research among interdisciplinary teams, which include biologists, computer scientists, a geographer and a physicist.

    The first project will combine wearable, robotic sensors with GPS mapping to predict and prevent falls and injury among patients and members of the military. Another will analyze neurons in the brainstem to discover boundaries that control speech and swallowing. The third project uses machine learning and video tracking to develop early detection for illnesses like Parkinson’s disease.

    “We are thrilled with the scope and vision of these collaborative research projects from DePaul and Rosalind Franklin faculty members,” said Salma Ghanem, provost of DePaul University. “Together, we have the potential to see artificial intelligence fuel major advances for human health in our lifetime.”

    “This AI initiative and the outstanding funded first-round pilot projects represent the next step in the ongoing research collaboration between our two universities, which to date has yielded substantive outcomes,” said Ronald Kaplan, executive vice president for research at Rosalind Franklin University. “We believe this cutting-edge work has significant potential to improve health within our society.”

    Wearable sensors, GPS combine to prevent injury
    “We can tell a lot about a person’s health from how they walk,” said Sungsoon (Julie) Hwang, professor of geography at DePaul. She is teaming up with robotics expert Muhammad Umer Huzaifa and data scientist Ilyas Ustun. Their research will combine wearable technology and GPS to track a person’s gait.

    In his robotics and AI lab, Huzaifa deploys Inertial Measurement Units (IMU) to track whether a person is walking, sitting or even falling. These sensors, which measure a body’s movement by detecting the direction of gravity and rotational speeds, may be worn as part of an exoskeleton. “Predicting harmful walking patterns and preventing falls has implications for people in a health care setting and members of the military deployed in the field,” Huzaifa explained.

    DePaul faculty will work with Chris Connaboy, director of the Center for Lower Extremity Ambulatory Research at Rosalind Franklin, to use data from his lab. Ustun will use machine learning to integrate the GPS and IMU data, potentially predicting where injuries and falls could occur.

    “Our movements create patterns, and we want to identify distinct patterns using machine learning to help assess an individual’s current health, especially those who are at risk,” Ustun said.

    Machine learning discovery in the brainstem
    The brainstem is responsible for breathing and swallowing, which can have implications for speech disorders, apnea and Sudden Infant Death Syndrome. “Within the brainstem, neurons are not clearly differentiated,” said Jacob Furst, professor of computing at DePaul. “Our project will look for genetic signatures that may differentiate the cells when there is no obvious physical difference.”

    “There is so much data being generated in the life sciences that it can be difficult to look for patterns to discover key biological insights,” said Thiru Ramaraj, an assistant professor of bioinformatics at DePaul. Drawing from an atlas of existing high resolution genome wide expression data from the adult mouse brain, Ramaraj and team will employ advance machine learning to identify clusters and borders within brainstem neurons.

    Working with questions that are important to brainstem researcher Kaiwen Kam at Rosalind Franklin, the team hopes to develop a neuroanatomical screening, which may also have applications for other types of tissue.

    “It’s both challenging and exciting to apply computational techniques to problems that have a real impact on health,” Ramaraj said.

    Diagnosing neurological disorders through AI movement patterns
    Eric Landahl is a DePaul physicist who has spent much of his career making movies of molecules, including work at Argonne National Laboratory. “Hollywood movies are usually filmed at 24 frames a second, but atoms move at a speed closer to a billion frames a second,” Landahl said. His research uses x-rays and lasers and creates massive amounts of data.

    He is joining EunJung Hwang at Rosalind Franklin to use a similar approach to tracking the movements of mice with Parkinson’s. Using cloud computing and machine learning, they aim to develop a model that can predict neurological disorders before they’re visible to a trained medical professional.

    “This is the chance to be at the forefront of modern approaches to data analysis,” Landahl said. “This research grant gives us the chance to briefly step away from our daily work to work on something exciting that could become something bigger in the future.”

    ###

    [ad_2]

    DePaul University

    Source link