Education Professor Gets Award From Haitian Studies Association

Abraham S. Fischler College of Education and School of Criminal Justice Professor Charlene Desir, Ed.D., has been selected to receive the 2022 Award for Service by the Haitian Studies Association (HSA).

Charlene Desir, Ed.D.

Desir was presented with the HSA Service Award at the Association’s 34th Annual Conference in Washington D.C.

The award honors a person or organization in recognition of years of dedication and service to the Haitian Studies Association, the field of Haitian Studies, or to the people of Haiti.

“The steadfast commitment you have shown to the academic, psycho-social and spiritual development of Haitian immigrants and other disenfranchised populations in both the U.S. and Haiti have earned you this special recognition,” the organization said.

Desir has been a part of the organization since she was a first year-student in college at Tufts University. She went on to serve as the HSA’s youngest president in 2012.

She said she first encountered them while walking on campus after a rather dejecting experience in class.

“And I saw a sign that said, ‘Haitian Studies Association, an Academic Conference on the Study of Haiti’ and I walked in. I just walked in; I wasn’t registering– nothing. I walked in and sat down. And that’s how it began. And I stayed there until this day.”

Desir said the association has been there for pivotal moments of her academic career, through the earning of her degrees and she even published her first paper in their journal.

The organization also witnessed the start of Desir’s Emerging Scholars program.

“It’s a mentoring program for undergrad and graduate students in the U.S. and Haiti that want to be an academic and study Haitian issues as part of their work,” she said.

The program is now in its 10th year, and some of the scholars even came out to watch Desir receive her honor.

Overall, Desir said the honor was incredibly special to her.

“As an academic, to be recognized for service was really important for me, because we’re expected to publish, we’re expected to research, we’re expected to teach and to give back and to be recognized as one of the people that gave back to the institution — this academic institution, and it was recognized that I created an academic legacy plan for the organization, I think was profound.”

Congratulations Charlene Desir and thank you for all your hard work!

Posted 10/23/22

Book Drive Benefits Neonatal Intensive Care Unit Awareness

From left, Amanda Perry, student in the Master of Science in speech-language pathology, Raquel Garcia, assistant professor of the Department of Speech Language Pathology, and Vanessa Lewinsky, student in the Master of Science in speech-language pathology.

September was Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) awareness month. The NICU is a critical care unit that services premature infants, as young as 21 weeks gestational age, and term infants with a variety of medical conditions. Reading to babies in the NICU has been shown to support baby’s brain growth, motoric development, and sensory experiences. Additionally, it promotes parent bonding, reduces infants/parental stress, and creates positive sensory experiences for the developing infant.

Raquel Garcia, SLP.D., CCC-SLP, CLC, CNT, BCS-S, an assistant professor in the Dr. Pallavi Patel College of Health Care Sciences Department of Speech-Language Pathology, is a trained speech-language pathologist, and certified neonatal therapist. She completed a social media drive for board books to donate to community hospitals in honor of NICU awareness month.

Garcia’s goal was to collect 30 board books in 30 days. By October 1, 2022, Garcia collected more than 250 board books in English, Spanish, and Haitian-Creole. Garcia has already donated 50 board books to hospitals impacted by Hurricane Ian, Tampa General Hospital, and University Hospital on NSU’s Campus.

Interested in learning more about reading in the NICU and/or donating board books to Dr. Garcia, please email her at rw602@nova.edu.

Posted 10/23/22

NSU Honored for Its Bee-Sustaining Efforts

NSU was recently named a Bee Campus USA affiliate.

“This award is a direct result of the combined efforts of the entire team working to increase our sustainability efforts across the campus, with special thanks to our Student Sustainability Coordinator, Tatum Hedrick, who worked diligently to ensure NSU received this award,” said Seth Mangasarian, Physical Plant Director for NSU’s Office of Facilities Management.

Bee City USA and Bee Campus USA are initiatives of the Xerces Society for Invertebrate Conservation, a nonprofit organization based in Portland, Oregon, with offices across the country. Bee City USA’s mission is to galvanize communities and campuses to sustain pollinators by providing them with healthy habitat, rich in a variety of native plants, and free of pesticides. Pollinators such as bumble bees, sweat bees, mason bees, honey bees, butterflies, moths, beetles, flies, hummingbirds, and many others are responsible for the reproduction of almost 90 percent of the world’s flowering plant species and one in every three bites of food we consume.

“The program aspires to make people more PC—pollinator conscious, that is,” said Scott Hoffman Black, Xerces’ executive director. “If lots of individuals and communities begin planting native, pesticide-free flowering trees, shrubs and perennials, it will help to sustain many, many species of pollinators.”

According to Bee Campus USA coordinator Laura Rost, “How each city or campus completes the steps to conserve pollinators is up to them. Affiliates play to their own strengths, designing pesticide reduction plans, improving habitat, and holding events ranging from garden tours to native plant giveaways to bee trivia nights.”

For more information about Bee Campus USA, visit https://www.beecityusa.org/

Posted 10/23/22

NSU Researchers Helping Save Coral Reefs

Amanda Zummo (NSU graduate research assistant) treats diseased corals in the Dry Tortugas as a grouper looks on. Photo: Karen Neely

Corals in Florida have been heavily impacted by a disease that has moved through the reef tract since originating near Miami in 2014. The disease, termed Stony Coral Tissue Loss Disease (SCTLD) causes lesions that move quickly across affected coral colonies, often killing them within weeks. The disease reached Dry Tortugas National Park in summer of 2021, and response teams at the Park continue efforts to mitigate the impacts. They got assistance this fall from two research cruises focused specifically on helping diseased corals.

Scientific divers mix a medicinal paste used to treat diseased corals. Photo: Karen Neely

Led by Keys-based scientists with Nova Southeastern University (NSU), the missions included 17 scientific divers from NSU, Florida Atlantic University’s Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute, and the University of the Virgin Islands. Much of the funding was provided by a Coral Emergency Response Fund established by NOAA and the National Fish and Wildlife Federation; additional funds came from the National Park Service and donated staff time by the collaborating institutions.

Divers spent nearly 250 hours underwater carefully surveying an area larger than 20 football fields. Corals with SCTLD lesions were treated with a medical paste that is applied by hand onto the diseased tissue. The paste has been used on nearly 20,000 diseased corals in Florida and is also used on corals elsewhere in the Caribbean. Treated corals monitored for over three years in Florida show high survivorship after treatments.

The divers on the Dry Tortugas missions treated more than 6,000 corals. Most were located at a high-priority reef near Loggerhead Key, known for its high coral cover and diversity. But divers also focused efforts on areas around Fort Jefferson, which are popular with snorkelers and those walking the moat wall within the National Park. All of these efforts are expected to help preserve these corals, along with the fisheries habitat, aesthetic value, and reproductive capacity they provide for the future of Florida’s reefs.

Posted 10/23/22

USchool Student Receives Top Review Recognition

Haleigh Mish

We are proud to announce that junior Haleigh Mish, who is on our NSU University School Cappies team and serves as a theatre critic for shows at schools in Broward and Palm Beach counties, was selected as the TOP review for J.P. Taravella High School’s Radium Girls play.

Haleigh received top recognition out of 47 student reviews and is featured on the Florida Theatre On Stage website: http://www.floridatheateronstage.com/cappies/

Learn more about NSU University School’s college preparatory program for students in Preschool – Grade 12 at www.uschool.nova.edu.

Posted 10/23/22

College of Osteopathic Medicine Gets Ranked in 6 Categories

The Dr. Kiran C. Patel College of Osteopathic Medicine was recently listed in six categories of US News and World Report top rankings for 2023.

The college rankings are as follows:

  • #95-124 for Best Medical Schools: Research
  • #94-124 for Best Medical Schools: Primary Care
  • #58 for Most Diverse Medical Schools (tie)
  • #37 for Most Graduates Practicing in Medically Underserved Areas
  • #32 for Most Graduates Practicing in Primary Care Fields
  • #83 for Most Graduates Practicing in Rural Areas (tie)

Posted 10/13/22

Halmos Faculty’s Co-Authored Article Appears in Astrobites

Stefan Kautsch, Ph.D., associate professor and President’s Distinguished Professor in Community Engagement in the Department of Chemistry and Physics in the Halmos College of Arts and Sciences and the Guy Harvey Oceanographic Research Center (HCAS), had a recent pedagogical research article picked up by the astrobites series. The article entitled,  “All in all, it’s just another brick in the mass function,” may be accessed at   https://astrobites.org/2022/08/26/all-in-all-its-just-another-brick-in-the-mass-function/.

Stefan Kautsch, Ph.D.,

Astrobites is a very popular reader’s digest for astronomy and astrophysics The article was co-authored with Kyle Hansotia, B.S., who recently graduated with a biology major from NSU. Hansotia was Kautsch’s research assistant. The other co-author was Dimitri Veras, Ph.D., an associate professor and Rutherford Fellow at Centre for Exoplanets and Habitability and Physics Department of University of Warwick (UK).

The article explains how almost all matter is distributed in the Cosmos and uses Lego bricks of a shark model to explain this concept. In general, massive objects are much less common than objects of low masses in the same object class, no matter if the objects are animals, plants, rocks, mountains, planetary bodies, stars, galaxies, etc. But the same law also connects all object classes with one another. The authors visualize the physics law behind this concept using Lego toy bricks and promote the teaching of this rarely known, but universal law. This article provides an experiential and active-learning approach to teaching complex concepts, while also discussing a potential explanation of the origin of the observations. The published version of the article appears in the European Journal of Physics, 42, 035605.

Posted 10/09/22

College Provides Evaluation for Florida Panthers Hockey Club

Faculty, alumni, and students, working with the Florida Panthers Hockey Club.

Faculty, students, and alumni from the Department of Health and Human Performance (HHP) in the Dr. Pallavi Patel College of Health Care Sciences, recently provided the NHL’s Florida Panthers Hockey Club with preseason physical assessments.

Corey Peacock overseeing students as they test for isometric strength.

Students of the Sports Science (M.S.) and Exercise and Sport Science (B.S) programs assisted Corey Peacock, Ph.D., associate professor, and Tobin Silver, Ph.D., professor, in supporting the Florida Panthers’ Sports Performance Team with physical metric testing. The students had an opportunity to complete hands-on physical assessments of strength, power, body composition and aerobic capacity while being provided direction by Mike Joyce, Florida Panthers head strength and conditioning coach, and Tim Wittenauer, Florida Panthers director of sports performance & rehabilitation. Silver and Peacock have provided this opportunity to students for nearly a decade.

Angie Dusak, M.S.S.S. graduate student, said, that she was “very appreciative for this great experience provided by the faculty at Nova Southeastern University, as this provided valuable networking and interactive learning in this field of sports science.” Additionally, the students and staff were able to review the data and understand the application of performance testing. Silver said, “the students learn so much about how an interdisciplinary sports medicine staff operates. They already have a great foundation of knowledge established from the Exercise Science curriculum. This provides an amazing hands-on opportunity to test that foundation of knowledge in professional sports.”

Posted 10/09/22

Clinical Professor of Family Medicine Serves as FHP Chief Surgeon

After retiring from a nearly 30-year career in graduate medical education, Dr. Bradley Feuer, DO, JD, clinical professor of family medicine at the Dr. Kiran C. Patel College of Osteopathic Medicine, now serves full-time as chief surgeon for the Florida Highway Patrol (FHP).  Dr. Feuer was appointed as Regional Director of the college’s Palm Beach Academic Center in 1996, was the first to serve as vice-president of the college’s Consortium for Excellence in Medical Education in 1999, and eventually was appointed as clinical assistant dean, in 2013. He remains active in medical education by providing lectures to his former programs.

While he remains on the college’s faculty, Dr. Feuer is now responsible for promoting the health and safety of Florida’s state troopers. With a team of two other volunteer physicians (one responsible for the state’s Northern region, the other for the Southern region), Dr. Feuer oversees a program that enhances the quality of routine, specialty and hospital care available to troopers, provides medical support to Special Response Teams, educates members on matters pertaining to health and medicine, coordinates care of sick and injured troopers by working with providers and families, provides consultation and advice to command, and offers medical direction to a state-wide peer support team. He has been a member of an Active Shooter Working Group for the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and participated as a subject matter expert for a workshop on critical infrastructure Healthcare and Public Health (HPH) Sector risk assessment for Health Human Services (HHS)/Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response (ASPR).

Sworn as an auxiliary state trooper since 2003, Dr. Feuer has been a leader in the law enforcement peer support community, and has worked with the International Association of Chiefs of Police to promote the use of evidence-based concepts into the provision of peer support.  While Clinical Assistant Dean and Designated Institutional Official/Regional Director of Medical Education for the Palm Beach Consortium for Graduate Medical Education (PBCGME), Dr. Feuer brought these concepts, honed in law enforcement, to GME operations.  Each of PBCGME’s residency programs had residents who served as volunteer peer support team members and worked with the resources of the Consortiums Psychiatry Residency and direction of a Psychiatry attending, to provide psychological first aid in response to the needs of all residents and students, consortium wide.

“The Florida Highway Patrol is one of the nation’s premier law enforcement agencies,” he said. “To be able to serve the citizens of the State of Florida by supporting the men and women of the Patrol is a true honor.”

Posted 10/09/22

Physical Therapy Student Gets ASAHP Scholarship of Excellence

Haley Sweeney

Haley Sweeney, fourth-year physical therapy student in the Hybrid Doctor of Physical Therapy program at NSU’s Tampa campus recently received a Scholarship of Excellence Award from the Association of Schools Advancing Health Professions (ASAHP).

Sweeney is originally from Wentzville, Mo., and obtained her Bachelor of Science degree in Athletic Training in 2014.

She says she had a passion for continuing her education in order to best serve her athletes and went on to pursue her Master of Science in Exercise Physiology at the University of Central Florida. After working as a collegiate athletic trainer for a few years, she found that her favorite part of her job was taking the athletes through the rehabilitation process.

Through her experiences, she was drawn to continuing her education and obtaining her doctorate degree in physical therapy in order to make a larger impact. Her goal upon graduation is to work in sports medicine, helping athletes of all ages and stages of life recover from injury in order to live an active and fulfilling life.

Posted 10/09/22

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