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Topic: Faculty and Staff

Displaying 91 - 108 of 1499
  • 3 Ways to Relieve Back to School ‘Overwhelm’ [faculty featured]
    3 Ways to Relieve Back to School ‘Overwhelm’ [faculty featured]
    MiddleWeb
    Aug. 4, 2024

    Dr. Julie Hasson shares several tips and tools for teachers to use to reduce stress at the start of the school year. Her strategies aim to help teachers manage workload, enhance organization and promote well-being. Hasson has been an educator for over 30 years. She is currently an assistant professor and program director of school administration in App State’s Department of Media, Career Studies and Leadership Development.

  • Find Your Sustain Ability: Britt Wray on the age of climate anxiety
    Find Your Sustain Ability: Britt Wray on the age of climate anxiety
    Aug. 2, 2024

    Host Laura England, associate director of App State’s Quality Enhancement Plan and practitioner-in-residence in the Department of Sustainable Development, talks with Dr. Britt Wray, a researcher and storyteller focused on the mental health impacts of climate change. Wray, director of the CIRCLE initiative at Stanford Psychiatry, explores the intersection of climate science, psychology and communication, and shares her journey in navigating interdisciplinary fields — including conservation biology, science communication and the ethics of synthetic biology. She highlights the importance of storytelling in climate communication.

    Find more App State podcasts at podcasts.appstate.edu and subscribe on your favorite platform.

  • NC School of Banking moves headquarters to App State to foster ‘excellence in banking education’
    NC School of Banking moves headquarters to App State to foster ‘excellence in banking education’

    More than 200 financial professionals took part in the school’s 2024 program at App State

    Aug. 1, 2024

    The NC School of Banking has relocated its headquarters to App State, forming a strategic partnership to enrich academic and professional development opportunities for future banking leaders. More than 200 financial professionals took part in the school’s 2024 program at App State.

  • App State partners with 27 NC community colleges to expand Aspire Appalachian program
    App State partners with 27 NC community colleges to expand Aspire Appalachian program

    Aspire is a seamless pathway for transfer students to complete their degrees at App State

    July 30, 2024

    In support of transfer student success, App State has expanded its Aspire Appalachian program, securing new and renewed partnerships with 27 NC community colleges. Aspire provides a streamlined path for students at partner community colleges to complete their bachelor's degrees at App State.

  • App State partners with Project Kitty Hawk to offer 5 streamlined App State Online programs in 2024–25
    App State partners with Project Kitty Hawk to offer 5 streamlined App State Online programs in 2024–25

    The degree programs in health care management, supply chain management, accounting, criminal justice, and organizational leadership and learning are designed for working adults

    July 26, 2024

    App State has partnered with Project Kitty Hawk, an ed tech nonprofit, to expand higher education access to millions of adult learners across NC. The university will launch five App State Online degree programs supported by the project in the 2024–25 academic year — all designed for working adults.

  • Rare astronomical event expected to occur soon [faculty featured]
    Rare astronomical event expected to occur soon [faculty featured]
    WFAE
    July 26, 2024

    Astronomers predict that a star about 3,000 lightyears away from earth in the constellation Corona Borealis is about to go nova. The star, which cannot normally be seen with the naked eye, will temporarily be as bright as Polaris — also known as the North Star. Dr. Daniel Caton, a professor in App State’s Department of Physics and Astronomy, speaks about the rare astronomical event in this interview with WFAE. Interviewing Caton is WFAE Morning Edition host Marshall Terry, who graduated from App State in 2007 with a degree in communications.

  • Due South spaces out on mysteries of the universe with NC astronomer [faculty featured]
    Due South spaces out on mysteries of the universe with NC astronomer [faculty featured]
    WUNC
    July 24, 2024

    Dr. Rachel Smith, a professor in App State’s Department of Physics and Astronomy, was recently the featured guest on WUNC’s Due South. Smith talks about her work as an astrophysicist at the North Carolina Museum of Natural Science, where she studies star and planet formations. She also addresses questions about some of the biggest mysteries of the universe.

  • App State among 13 state agencies recognized for significant energy reductions
    App State among 13 state agencies recognized for significant energy reductions

    App State-hosted Energy Summit highlights nearly $2 billion in statewide avoided energy costs

    July 23, 2024

    App State has been recognized by the NC Department of Environmental Quality for a 48% energy reduction, surpassing the state's goal. This figure, as well as the nearly $2 billion in state energy costs avoided since 2002, was shared at the 2024 Appalachian Energy Summit.

  • App State awarded nearly $2.2 million to support growth of its nursing programs
    App State awarded nearly $2.2 million to support growth of its nursing programs

    UNC System awards $29 million in grants to expand nursing education

    July 22, 2024

    App State will receive nearly $2.2 million over two years to expand its nursing degree programs, part of a groundbreaking statewide effort to address the nursing workforce shortage in North Carolina. The funding is part of $29 million in grants awarded by the UNC System.

  • App State professor John Whitehead honored with prestigious economics award
    App State professor John Whitehead honored with prestigious economics award
    July 9, 2024

    Dr. John Whitehead, an economics professor at Appalachian State University, has received the AERE Fellows Award, the highest honor in environmental and resource economics. Recognized for his pioneering work in valuation methods, Whitehead joins an elite group of scholars advancing the field.

  • App State professor explains recent spike in western N.C. earthquakes [faculty featured]
    App State professor explains recent spike in western N.C. earthquakes [faculty featured]
    Spectrum News 1
    July 2, 2024

    Western North Carolina had three small earthquakes in a 24-hour span this June. The earthquakes were near the area of the 5.1 magnitude earthquake in Sparta in 2020. Dr. Scott Marshall, a professor in App State’s Department of Geological and Environmental Sciences, said that a recently discovered fault line could be the cause of these smaller earthquakes, and that they are likely aftershocks from the 2020 event.

  • Find Your Sustain Ability: Katrin Klingenberg on high-performance passive building
    Find Your Sustain Ability: Katrin Klingenberg on high-performance passive building
    July 2, 2024

    Host Laura England, associate director of App State’s Quality Enhancement Plan and practitioner-in-residence in the Department of Sustainable Development, is joined in studio by 2024 Appalachian Energy Summit keynote speaker Katrin Klingenberg, co-founder and executive director of the Phius (Passive House Institute U.S.). Klingenberg shares her passion for passive building, which uses core building principles to create net-zero structures that utilize renewable energy sources to generate as much or more energy than they consume annually.

    Find more App State podcasts at podcasts.appstate.edu and subscribe on your favorite platform.

  • Appalachian State University Chancellor Search Advisory Committee announced
    Appalachian State University Chancellor Search Advisory Committee announced

    Committee will begin work to identify candidates to lead App State

    June 28, 2024

    UNC System President Peter Hans announced the formation of a 13-member committee that will search for the next chancellor of Appalachian State University. The committee will be led by Deanna Ballard, a former state senator who represented Watauga County from 2016 to 2023.

  • Eco-Friendly Guide to Finances and Saving [faculty featured]
    Eco-Friendly Guide to Finances and Saving [faculty featured]
    MoneyGeek
    June 25, 2024

    This article in MoneyGeek shares advice and insight, valuable tools and resources designed to help people develop a “green” approach to their finances. Dr. Susan Weidmann, an assistant professor in App State’s Department of Recreation Management and Physical Education, offers her expert voice about eco-friendly approaches to finances and savings.

  • Scuba-diving scientists capture rare underwater footage of prehistoric-looking hellbenders in North Carolina [faculty featured]
    Scuba-diving scientists capture rare underwater footage of prehistoric-looking hellbenders in North Carolina [faculty featured]
    BBC Wildlife Magazine
    June 25, 2024

    Work is set to begin to remove Shull’s Mill Dam on the Watauga River in July in order to restore a healthy river ecosystem. The project will involve the relocation of eastern hellbenders, a species of special concern in North Carolina, who live in the river near the dam. Dr. Mike Gangloff, professor in App State’s Department of Biology, speaks to the importance of hellbenders, including how they can increase water and habitat quality in rivers. Gangloff is the aquatic lead researcher for the Shull’s Mill Dam removal.

  • Rural America Lags Cities in Helping People Beat the Heat [faculty featured]
    Rural America Lags Cities in Helping People Beat the Heat [faculty featured]
    The New York Times
    June 20, 2024

    Heat waves this June impacted Maine and other areas that are not accustomed to extreme high temperatures. This article in The New York Times notes that rural areas don't have the same access to cooling infrastructure as cities, which typically have shady parks, public pools and hydration stations. Dr. Maggie Sugg, an associate professor in App State’s Department of Geography and Planning, explains that many rural areas in the U.S. have homes with poor insulation, and that people with access to air-conditioning may not be able to afford to run it in high temperatures. All of these factors increase the chances of heat-related illness. Sugg has conducted extensive research on heat vulnerabilities in North and South Carolina.

  • Dr. Cynthia Liutkus-Pierce featured in documentary about ancient footprints in Tanzania
    Dr. Cynthia Liutkus-Pierce featured in documentary about ancient footprints in Tanzania
    June 14, 2024

    Research led by App State professor and National Geographic Explorer Dr. Cynthia Liutkus-Pierce is the focus of a new documentary titled “Footsteps: A Journey to the Engare Sero Footprints.” The film follows a pilgrimage to the site of early human footprints in northern Tanzania.

  • Kaaren Hayes’s leadership leaves behind lasting impact on hundreds of families
    Kaaren Hayes’s leadership leaves behind lasting impact on hundreds of families
    Watauga Democrat
    June 6, 2024

    This feature in the Watauga Democrat highlights the career of Kaaren Hayes, who recently retired after 36 years with App State’s Parent to Parent Family Support Network. Parent to Parent provides free support to families who have a premature baby or a child with a disability, or to families who are grieving the death of a child. Hayes was with Parent to Parent since its inception in 1988, and she became program director in 1998. Hayes graduated from App State in 1996 with a bachelor’s degree in child development.

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