Even Before Pandemic - UNLV NewsCenter Even Before Pandemic - UNLV NewsCenter Posted: 05 Oct 2020 12:00 AM PDT Even before the coronavirus pandemic propelled UNLV into remote learning in the spring, online courses at UNLV were prevalent. "There's been a steady decrease in the number of students that have never taken an online course," said Elizabeth Barrie, the director of the Office of Online Education . She recently presented during The State of Online Education webinar event. It highlighted some of the initiatives and cross-campus partnerships that contribute to student achievement and shared how faculty prepared for online learning through the summer. She noted that 95% of students who graduated in spring 2020 with an undergraduate degree had taken at least one online course. And, compared to past years, there has been an increase in the number of students who have taken more than 30 credits, or two semesters, online.
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Year in Review: UAMS in 2020 Helps Lead COVID-19 Response, Keeps Focus on Missions - UAMS News
| Almost nothing about 2020 has been typical. UAMS nevertheless adapted to the COVID-19 global pandemic, stayed true to its core missions and helped lead state efforts to combat the disease.
UAMS responded quickly and robustly to the pandemic's public health threat in keeping with its 140-year history of patient care, medical education and research.
Classes and meetings moved for several months to live online video streams, outpatient and elective surgeries were suspended for several weeks in the spring and anyone entering the campus was screened for symptoms. Employees who could work from home did so.
The university organized and made available some of the first testing for the disease done in the state and played a key role in public education by disseminating the most up-to-date knowledge about COVID-19.
On Dec. 15, Deborah Hutts, left, was among the first health care professionals at UAMS to receive the COVID-19 vaccine.Image by Bryan Clifton
While UAMS did everything it could that was recommended to stop the spread of the virus that causes COVID-19, what may be equally remarkable are the positive things that continued UAMS' tradition of excellence. Diversity and inclusion was one of those areas.
Johnathan H. Goree, M.D., an anesthesiologist who specializes in chronic pain and director of the Chronic Pain Division at UAMS, was named Arkansas Physician of the Year on April 2 at the Arkansas Business Healthcare Heroes celebration, which was held virtually online.
Longtime professor Paul Phillips, M.D., started work as the new director of the Harvey & Bernice Jones Eye Institute.
Work on the $150 million Energy Project, including construction of the new power plant on the east side of campus, stayed on schedule despite the pandemic. The first of the new generators to be installed in the plant was recently delivered to the campus.
In January through UAMS HealthNow, UAMS began providing 24-hour, digital health access to convenient, real-time care for Arkansas patients using the internet through mobile devices or computers.
PATIENT CARE
UAMS HealthNow was well-positioned online to screen patients for COVID-19 while also reducing demand on outpatient clinics and helping prevent further spread of the virus. From mid-March to mid-April, HealthNow took more than 2,000 calls and thousands more used its online screening tools to see if they needed further testing for the virus.
In the spring, COVID-19 testing capacity and access to it was limited statewide. The UAMS Mobile Triage team offered COVID-19 drive-up screening in cities and towns in Arkansas and testing for screened patients who showed symptoms of the disease. As testing capacity and access improved, the team began offering testing for anyone at their drive-up clinics. On campus drive-up screening and testing has been offered by UAMS since the start of the pandemic. Through the mobile and on-campus efforts, tens of thousands of Arkansans were tested in 2020.
A new center for patients undergoing chemotherapy was unveiled in November at the UAMS Winthrop P. Rockefeller Cancer Institute. Located on the institute's sixth floor, Infusion Center B will primarily serve patients with blood cancers, such as multiple myeloma, leukemia and lymphoma, as well as those participating in clinical trials.
Also in November, the university received a $500,000 gift from an anonymous donor to support the creation of a new regional campus in El Dorado. The gift will have a far-reaching impact, not only for El Dorado, but for patients in South Arkansas and across the state.
A space for parents with babies in the UAMS neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) was transformed in January into the first Ronald McDonald Family Room in central Arkansas.
The UAMS Health Women's Center opened in August, bringing the best of women's health services from the university to one convenient Midtown location away from but not far from the main campus.
Arkansas INBRE, which promotes biomedical research with programs for undergraduate students and faculty statewide, in May had its federal funding renewed for $18.4 million over the next five years. While the UAMS is the lead institution, INBRE grants and programs have impacted nearly all colleges and universities in the state during the 20-year history of the IDeA Networks of Biomedical Research Excellence program.
Also in May, degrees and certificates were conferred to 914 UAMS graduates of the university's five colleges and graduate school. Because of the COVID-19 pandemic, no commencement ceremony was held. Several end-of-the-academic-year events as well as white coat ceremonies in the fall also took place virtually.
Faculty and researchers in the College of Public Health also began and have continued doing modeling and projections for the spread of COVID-19 to help with planning for patient care and the public health response.
Despite all the challenges of the global pandemic, 2020 was a boom year in funding UAMS and its affiliate research institutions saw research funding grow by 43% this past year, with $158.1 million in grants by the end of the fiscal year, June 30
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Excelsior College Named Graduating and Transfer University for Study.com - Yahoo Finance Excelsior College Named Graduating and Transfer University for Study.com - Yahoo Finance Posted: 30 Mar 2020 05:00 AM PDT Learning Platform Partners with Pioneer in Online Learning to Provide Full Degrees in Business ALBANY , N.Y. and MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. , March 30, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- Study.com , a leading online education platform, announced an in-depth partnership with Excelsior College to provide affordable options to students looking to complete their degree. Students can use Study.com to complete courses and then transfer as many as 113 credits to Excelsior College , making it one of the most generous transfer programs in the country. (PRNewsfoto/Study.com) More Students can choose between two designated pathways to earn a degree with Excelsior (BS in Liberal Arts or BS in Business) or enroll in any Excelsior degree pro
Two "Bright Outlook Occupations" Training Programs | Seekonk, MA Patch - Patch.com Two "Bright Outlook Occupations" Training Programs | Seekonk, MA Patch - Patch.com Posted: 11 May 2020 12:00 AM PDT MTTI's 9 short-term, hands-on career training programs are reviewed twice each year by employers and industry specialists. Their feedback helps us continuously update curricula to ensure that the programs are producing graduates with marketable skills. While we continue enrolling only for those programs that have positive employment outcomes, certain industries are projected to grow much faster than average. Computer User Support Specialists and Medical Assistants are two Bright Outlook Occupations. Bright Outlook occupations are expected to grow rapidly in the next several years, or will have large numbers of job openings.1 During this unprecedented COVID-19 pandemic, many competent, talented workers have been furloughed
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