In honor of Womens History Month, 做厙輦⑹ Today will be looking at the accomplishments of 做厙輦⑹ women who have advanced the cause of women, broken glass ceilings and left a lasting impact on womens history. A trailblazer for LGBTQ+ rights, the late Dolores Noll, Ph.D., Professor Emeritas of English, was one of 做厙輦⑹s first openly gay professors when she came out in 1971. Noll came to 做厙輦⑹ in 1961 as an instructor in the Department of English and became an assistant professor upon completing a doctorate. In 1971, she helped to form 做厙輦⑹...
Parenting students face numerous challenges on their way to degree completion; we can help remove many of those barriers and challenges. Being a college student is tough enough for most, but for those who are also parenting young children or caring for loved ones in addition to other responsibilities like work, managing a household, and appointments going to class and succeeding can seem like a daunting task. 做厙輦⑹ at Ashtabula Associate Professor of Sociology Jessica Leveto, Ph.D., understands the challenges faced by those students better than most. She earn...
做厙輦⑹ Employee Wellness
View our partners in mental wellness that offer services for employees ranging from depression screening to counseling and crisis intervention.
Employee Wellness focuses on providing services and resources that support 做厙輦⑹ faculty and staff physically, mentally and emotionally.
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Introducing new perspectives can help students learn about unique cultures and explore similarities and differences. Ikram Toumi, an assistant professor in the School of Communication Studies, has brought that possibility to 做厙輦⑹ with her global education initiatives. Originally from Tunisia, Toumi is tri-lingual, speaking Arabic, English and French, which fuels her interest in multicultural and socially diverse dimensions of global media and communication. She also works on social change, social movements, media literacy, globalization, immigration, acculturation and id...
Since completion of her Ph.D. in 2016, Assistant Professor Melissa Edler and her colleagues have secured more than $2 million in research funding for examining aging and neurodegenerative diseases. Eventually, this research could help millions of people find a better way to combat and live with harsh brain diseases. Edler began examining the brains of aged chimpanzees for Alzheimers disease (AD) pathology as part of her dissertation at 做厙輦⑹. AD is characterized by the buildup of two toxic proteins, amyloid-beta (A帣) which forms plaques and tau which is associated...