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Hi, I'm Shannon Reed. I'm the Director of the Center for Excellence in Teaching

and Learning, and I'm the facilitator for this online orientation. I'd like to

introduce myself just a little bit. My background is in English. I was a

professor of English at a liberal arts college for 14 years before I came to

Regis University. Before that I taught as an adjunct instructor and a graduate

student at both public universities and community colleges, so kind of a wide

breadth of teaching experience that I bring to this position. One other thing I

can share is that, truthfully, I really hate making these kinds of videos. I

would rather do anything than watch myself on camera and listen to myself

being recorded. But we know from research that doing this kind of introductory

video--whether you're teaching an in-person class or an online class--

introducing yourself to students before the class begins is a good way of

helping them connect with you and making them feel comfortable so that they can

learn better. So I'm going to encourage all of you to do this, recognizing of

course that many of you may have the same antipathy to videotaping yourself

that I feel. I'm so glad that you're joining us here at Regis University. The

mission of Regis University keeps us focused on student learning and student

success, and that's one of the things that I

appreciate most about working here. I hope you enjoy the online orientation.

it's designed to give you a brief introduction to the mission and then

walk you through some ways of being effective in the classroom. If you want

to talk about that during orientation or at any time afterwards, I'm happy to work

with you. So enjoy the orientation and I look forward to seeing your video.

For more infomation >> Welcome to Regis University online orientation - Duration: 1:47.

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10 Ways We Can Make The University of Alabama More Accessible - Duration: 2:10.

[Music]

10 Ways We Can Make The University of Alabama More Accessible

Number 1:

Convey content in multiple ways;

don't just use images, color, video, or audio.

Number 2:

Foster awareness of accessibility and accommodations.

If you notice an opportunity to address accessibility, please bring it up!

Number 3:

Keep lines of communication with your users open and available.

Number 4:

Tell vendors, publishers or third-parties that accessibility is important

and ask how they are planning for accessibility.

Number 5:

Ask for or create a captioned or transcribed version of any media you use.

Captioning grants are available to caption and/or transcribe UA-owned audio and video

Number 6:

Avoid "click here", "read more," or other generic link or menu text.

Number 7:

Communicate clearly and concisely.

Number 8:

Build accessibility into your work practices for any content you create or share.

Acrobat, Word, PowerPoint, Excel, and Outlook on the web have built-in accessibility

checkers, as do many other authoring tools.

Number 9:

Check out the assistive tools on your Macs, PCs, and mobile

devices, and think about why someone would use them.

Number 10:

Learn more on the Technology Accessibility website, "accessibility.ua.edu"

Questions? Comments? Need accessibility help?

Contact "accessibility@ua.edu"

For more infomation >> 10 Ways We Can Make The University of Alabama More Accessible - Duration: 2:10.

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Why we play together | Christopher Power, Associate Professor, University of York (UK) - Duration: 33:59.

For more infomation >> Why we play together | Christopher Power, Associate Professor, University of York (UK) - Duration: 33:59.

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University of Pennsylvania School of Arts and Sciences | Wikipedia audio article - Duration: 2:58.

For more infomation >> University of Pennsylvania School of Arts and Sciences | Wikipedia audio article - Duration: 2:58.

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University Police conduct training - Duration: 0:22.

For more infomation >> University Police conduct training - Duration: 0:22.

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Quinnipiac University (People's United Center) hosting the Women's Frozen Four - Duration: 2:57.

For more infomation >> Quinnipiac University (People's United Center) hosting the Women's Frozen Four - Duration: 2:57.

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Indiana University: Things to Do: 2/18/19 - Duration: 2:39.

Hi welcome back to another Weekly Newscast!

This Friday from 9 to 4 at the IMU we are bringing back 20 plus alumni who have

majored in areas from chemistry to studio arts who have jobs that Kohl's,

Burt's Bees, Google and Ellen DeGeneres and much more who are interested in talking

to you about their careers. Hope to see you there.

Do you know where hip-hop originated from?

I don't but I guess you're going to have to come to Knowledge Bowl next week to figure it out.

You know what today is? Yeah so the Knowledge Bowl is next Thursday February 21st at 7 p.m. at the Neal

Marshall Black Culture Center Grand Hall.

What's up Snapchat its Boy in the Bubble Sketch Comedy. We have a show this Saturday

February 2013 9:30 p.m. in Fine Arts 015. That we do Brendon. That we do be

there! And this is a lemon.

Hi guys my name is Alex Rush and I'm the director of Canvas Creative Arts. Just

want to let you know we're having a poetry jam February 20th 5:30 to 7:00 in

the IMU Starbucks /I month.

Hey y'all this Friday we have Black History Month late-night at the

IMU. We're gonna show movies we're gonna have trivia and bunch

of other stuff so please show up.

Hi everyone we're hosting a jingle contest

to try to find an intro for our Newscast. If you're interested in creating music and

would like to be featured, send us an email!

Join us to the Write Your Story Conference hosted by Women in Business

on Saturday February 23rd from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in Franklin Hall. Our keynote

speaker is an executive for the Walt Disney Company

That's all for this week's Newscast. Join us next week for more exciting events.

For more infomation >> Indiana University: Things to Do: 2/18/19 - Duration: 2:39.

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St. Lawrence University Soccer 2000 v. Plymouth St. (NCAA) - Duration: 29:22.

For more infomation >> St. Lawrence University Soccer 2000 v. Plymouth St. (NCAA) - Duration: 29:22.

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VCU State of the University 2019 - Duration: 46:21.

>> GAIL HACKETT: Good morning.

Welcome to the 2019 State of the University Address.

My name is Gail Hackett and I have the privilege of serving as

provost and senior Vice President for academic affairs

here at Virginia Commonwealth University.

I am very pleased to welcome the many members of the community

who are here today in the James Branch Cabell Library as well as

the many others who are joining us via livestreaming through

our website.

I would also like to welcome the VCU Board of Visitors member who

is here with us today, Todd Haymore.

As you know, our former rector, Phoebe Hall,

passed away earlier this month.

Although we miss her deeply, her legacy will always be a part of

the fabric of this university.

So, before we move into today's program,

will you please join me in a moment of silence in honor of

Phoebe Hall?

Thank you.

The State of the University Address is an annual tradition

at VCU that provides the opportunity for each of us to

reflect on the many successes and to learn about our future

goals and aspirations.

Before we welcome President Rao to the stage,

let's take a few moments to meet some of the many people at VCU

who exemplify our university's

national prominence.

[video playing]

>> PATRICK WELCH: Hyperloop is a new idea

for transporting goods and eventually people at a very fast

pace with minimal impact to the environment.

>> TAMMY CHEN: So, this experience will lead me into my

future career as a product designer because it will give me

more hands-on experience making parts and being hands-on with

machines and tools.

>> GARRET WESTLAKE: Hyperloop is an example of what innovative

universities do, and VCU is definitely a leading university

for innovation.

>> PATRICK WELCH: We're doing something that's going to change

the world one day.

And being a part of that is amazing.

It's an honor.

>> CHRIS GOUGH: The mismanagement of land use

conversion away from forests will erode the capacity of

forests to sequester carbon dioxide from the atmosphere.

>> ELLEN STUART-HAENTJENS: Scientifically informed

management allows our forests to scrub more carbon dioxide from

the atmosphere and sequester it long-term in soils and

in biomass.

>> LISA TURNER: One of the most cost-effective ways to scrub

carbon dioxide from the atmosphere is just to let

forests regrow and not convert forest land to other land types.

>> CHRIS GOUGH: The State of the Carbon Cycle Report provides a

quantitative assessment of how much carbon our North American

forests sequester.

We're very interested in taking our science and influencing

policy, by communicating our science in accessible ways

to policymakers.

>> CHERRON GILMORE: My local hospital was ready to pull the

plug on me.

They were like there's nothing more we can do.

And I talked to Dr. Tang and I said they just said I was too

much of a risk, and he's like, no, no,

we don't believe that here.

>> DANIEL TANG: In our population, we've seen that

80-plus percent of our patients who do require an artificial

heart are able to successfully go on to get a transplant.

>> VIGNESHWAR KASIRAJAN: We are currently the largest and the

most active total artificial heart center in the country.

We have done over a hundred total artificial hearts and a

number of them have gone to successful transplantation.

>> CHERRON GILMORE: They put the heart in and it was like a

complete change and I haven't felt like this in a long time.

[applause]

>> MICHAEL RAO: It's a great video.

Gail, thank you so much for that wonderful introduction and thank

you for your continued, fantastic leadership overseeing

our academic programs, and more importantly,

the future of our academic programs along with your team,

but also our faculty colleagues, our faculty leadership that's

here, and I'm so pleased that you are here.

I want to thank all of you who put some time into appearing in

our video.

Thank you for letting us highlight you.

Please stand so that we have a chance to recognize you.

You were the stars of our screen today.

[applause]

Thank you.

You know, this is a really exciting time at Virginia

Commonwealth University because we're celebrating some very

significant milestones from our past and we're certainly

charting our strategic course as we look forward to the future.

So, when this institution began in 1838,

no one could have ever imagined the enormous impact that we

would make in 2019.

The university has evolved in just astonishing ways,

but that's really thanks to all of you, our faculty, our staff,

our students, our alumni, our patients, our partners,

and our friends who really personify the soul of

our mission.

It's you.

You have made us one of America's premier

research universities.

You've built an institution that's known for access to

excellence, fundamental to economic and social mobility in

this country.

And this year, we'll expand our impact even more through a new

strategic plan that we call Quest 2025.

This is a plan that focuses on our national prominence.

So, let's start this work by asking ourselves an important

question, and that is what does a nationally prominent VCU

really look like right now?

Well, what has it always looked like?

Let's go back to the very beginning.

So, what became MCV opened in 1838 and it very rapidly gained

national prominence.

In its first few years, observers noted,

and I want to read this specifically because it's so

well said, the advantages here afforded the student,

in contrasting with those of similar schools,

will not suffer by comparison.

A full course of lectures in this college will be received as

equivalent to the very best of medical schools anywhere.

Medical students around the nation took notice back then,

too, because in 1859 alone, 244 students actually left their

home institutions elsewhere so that they could enroll right

here and 70% of our class of 1860 were actually transfers.

So, now, let's fast-forward back to 2019,

 and national prominence and impact are still very much in

our DNA.

This past year alone, the final year of our transformative quest

for distinction, you set institutional records for the

graduation rate of our undergraduates,

for invention disclosures, and for fundraising.

We're serving more patients now than we have ever served.

Our faculty is larger and it's stronger and it's more diverse.

Since 2016, we've had the highest percent increase in

hiring minority faculty members in our history.

Among them, it includes Guggenheim fellows,

Fulbright recipients, and NIH career award winners.

And there are other ways that we could characterize them as well.

But this is thanks in part to our shared efforts in the

Institute for Inclusion, Inquiry, and Innovation.

And it's because of our enduring institutional commitment that we

will be more representative everywhere throughout

this institution.

Our first-year student class is also a majority minority for the

first time, and it's the largest class that we've ever had at VCU

with the same standards, by the way.

Given our recent history, these students will succeed in every

record‑setting way.

You've increased our six‑year graduation rate by 37% in just

a little more than ten years.

Now, that's a story we've all got to tell.

So, I want that to sink in for just a moment.

A 37% increase in our graduation rate in just

ten years. That's amazing.

You've achieved this in part by closing the gaps in graduation

rates for historically underrepresented students and

for students who receive Pell grants.

That's unheard of in almost any other research university in

America and it's a clear sign that VCU,

we're doing our part to help Virginia realize its statewide

goal of leading the nation in educational attainment by the

year 2030.

Our research enterprise has also grown by nearly a quarter in the

last decade.

You've set institutional records for research eight times in

those ten years, by the way.

And by the way, we learned just this week, once again,

that we are ranked in the top 25 among public research

universities in America.

You remember I used to talk about 50, top 50?

Now it's top 25 for several years in a row.

And the group that does this is actually called the Center for

Measuring University Performance.

So, congratulations.

[applause]

And the need and the demand for our clinical services

and expertise is more than it's ever been,

including in the Commonwealth's longest standing level 1 trauma

center and with our health plan that now serves about a quarter

million Virginians.

VCU earned a $21.5 million clinical and translational

science award from the NIH.

By the way, this is the largest NIH,

single NIH grant that we've ever had in our history,

but what it does is it promotes and expands research that helps

us draw from the rest of the University to find cures for

cardiac, pulmonary, and addiction diseases.

Addiction diseases, something we're all very concerned about.

Fewer than 1% of US universities actually have a

CTSA, and, by the way, we're the only one in Virginia,

so we've got a big responsibility on our shoulders,

but we're there because of our colleague, Gerry Moeller.

Gerry, stand wherever you are. Thank you

[applause]

We put a lot on Gerry's shoulders and he

came through because he had a great vision and he had the

ability to translate that vision into very meaningful

circumstances for those who were evaluating VCU.

And VCU is, by the way, only one of 20 universities in America

with both a CTSA and an NCI‑designated cancer center,

meaning that we're on the front lines of the war on cancer like

almost no place else.

By the way, Peter Buckley, our medical school Dean,

was the one who did that analysis and passed that on

to me.

You know, I want to tell you, speaking of the medical school,

that I'm really proud of Alex Krist.

He's now the sixth member of our faculty to be elected to the

National Academy of Medicine.

And Wanchun Tang -- yes, that's a big deal.

[applause]

Not easy. And Wanchun Tang, also in medicine,

became the third member of our faculty to be inducted into the

National Academy of Inventors.

[applause] Yes.

And for the second time in three years,

a company started by a VCU faculty member was actually

named the best university start‑up in the entire nation.

[applause] Yeah, you might as well recognize that, too.

And by the way, our students completed 1.3 million hours of

community service last year, 5% more than the year before,

and equivalent to about $30 million in value to our

communities. [applause] Yeah.

VCU backed 55 student‑led companies in the past five years

with two-thirds of those started by students from

minority backgrounds.

Again, a reflection of where America is going and that we're

a part of it.

But they're a part of the reason why our economic impact in the

Commonwealth of Virginia is more than $6 billion and now we have

19 academic programs that are ranked in the top 50 nationally,

including six top five programs.

Wow. What a year.

And I have to tell you, this is really only a snapshot of what

you, VCU, have achieved.

Congratulations, and of course, as your president,

I have to thank you for continuing to make VCU

synonymous with what I will call rampant excellence.

As I reflect on our national prominence as a public

university committed to the public good,

you've heard me say that many times,

I think about the ways in which we impact people,

the ways that we advance what I call the American Dream.

So, James Truslow Adams, a Pulitzer Prize‑winning

historian, writer, and he was also the grandson of a Virginia

merchant, he first gave phrase to this idea that in America

anyone can be successful.

So, it was about 1931 when he wrote this and I want to read

exactly what he wrote.

And he said, quote, there has been the American dream in which

each man and each woman shall attain to the fullest stature of

which they are innately capable and be recognized for what they

are, regardless of the fortuitous circumstances of

birth or position, end quote.

So, in other words, what he's really saying is that who you

are isn't going to determine what you can be.

You'll prosper in this country because you are tenacious,

not because of your heredity.

That was true for Adams.

And that was a while ago.

So the question I want to talk with you a little bit about

today is, is that really true today?

Well, some people are going to say, no,

the American Dream is obsolete.

It's harder to get ahead.

To them, the idea of bootstraps needs to be totally rebooted.

So, listen to this.

About a third of our people say that anyone can still achieve

the American Dream today and about half have abandoned the

whole idea altogether.

Last month, some of you may have caught the Washington Post

column where a columnist said that the American Dream is now

a myth.

Well, this is not just a cynical view.

The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Economic

Development found that in terms of occupational mobility,

the US actually is roughly average among its 34-member free

market nations and we are dead last for economic mobility.

Dead last.

By this study, Americans face more obstacles to economic

progress from one generation to the next than do citizens of

almost any other capitalist democracy in the world.

So, the idea of this being the land of opportunity could be

misplaced, or maybe it's really not,

because those who hold college degrees still prosper personally

and contribute to our nation's success dramatically.

Higher education catalyzes social participation,

democratic viability, and economic success.

A bachelor's degree increases lifetime earnings by nearly 70%,

and, in fact, it's exponentially more for people who have degrees

above the bachelor's level.

Low‑wealth students graduate into the same exact

opportunities, including lifetime earnings,

as their wealthier classmates.

And, by the way, this is an upward mobility that exists for

no other social demographic.

As a group, first generation college graduates surpass their

parents' median household income just six years after they

graduate with a bachelor's degree.

So, while some might want to bury the American Dream,

a recent report from the American Association of Colleges

and Universities said that most people still believe that higher

education strengthens society.

Three out of four people see higher education as an important

social good, and that's consistent, by the way,

across respondents' ages, their ethnicities,

and their political leanings.

Most people think that universities like VCU absolutely

prepare people to be successful and they contribute to a strong

American workforce.

People with a college degree are 24% more likely to be employed

and twice as likely, two times as likely,

to actually own a business.

Is that important today in our current economy?

Certainly is.

And people are, of course, voting with their feet.

Millennials are on track to be the very most educated

population –- generation I should say --

in American history.

And right behind them, the Generation Z that we call them,

90% of them believe that it's a lot easier to succeed when you

have a college degree.

So, no wonder that the culturalist Larry Samuels that

many of you have heard of said, and I want to the quote him

correctly, too, sending kids to college is still the heart and

soul of the American dream, end quote.

So, the evidence is clear.

Universities make our country stronger by helping our people

to succeed.

We've certainly seen this at VCU.

I'm going to give you some information about VCU.

Seventeen percent of our students move up two or more

income quartiles after they graduate.

By the way, this is among the very highest of any university

in the mid-Atlantic region where we've done our research.

Two percent actually jump from the very bottom quartile to the

very top and that's the most that you'll find anywhere

in Virginia.

And a student that's born into the bottom one-fifth of family

incomes actually has a 27% chance of reaching the top

one-fifth after they finish at VCU –- I should say graduate

from VCU so there is no confusion.

VCU is the place where American dreams do come true.

So to remain that way, let's take our commitments to

excellence and access to the next level.

More specifically, the impact that we make as a nationally

prominent university should be accelerated in three logical

ways, for our students, for our faculty and our staff, and for,

of course, our patients, along with others in our community.

Let's explore the three that I've really focused on for the

rest of our time together.

First, of course, I'm going to begin with our students and I

want to talk to you about a student named Megan Charity who

loves skateboards and she also loves video games.

In those ways, she's kind of like a lot of college

students, right?

But Megan also is a National Science Foundation Research

Education scholar and she's a VCU Wright scholar,

named after Ken and Dianne Wright,

and she's tackling a really, really big problem.

Even though she's still working on her bachelor's degree in

computer science, Megan is already a pioneer in the field

of virtual reality.

So, while she was moving through her new-age simulated worlds in

her video games, she noticed that she had this age-old

problem that some of you might be able to relate to.

It's called motion sickness.

And she's not alone.

One in three people actually struggle with this and it's a

pandemic for military and civilian pilots who are training

in these virtual reality aviation booths.

It's also true, by the way, for CAD-reliant shipbuilding, which,

as you know, is one of our keystone industries here in the

Commonwealth of Virginia, very important to our economy

in Virginia.

Technically, we call it cyber-sickness,

and Megan is going to find a cure for it.

By solving thousands of equations and writing thousands

of lines of code, Megan actually created a virtual reality low

acceleration vehicle, or, as she calls it,

something like a virtual skateboard.

Her digital deck allows VR users to navigate their

simulated worlds in a more smooth fashion with better

control and with better ability to engage their surroundings.

Early testing, by the way, shows a dramatic reduction in

cyber-sickness and that's piqued the interest, of course,

of entrepreneurs, but also our government,

particularly the US Department of Veteran Affairs,

and there are others looking at this, too,

because it has been amazing the results.

Megan, where are you?

Please stand so that we have a chance to recognize you.

[applause]

So, Megan, to help students like you succeed

whether here or doing designing virtual vehicles or creating

poignant art or preparing to transform the lives of children

who are in urban classrooms or in our clinics,

let's build on what we've already done to make VCU what

many of us view to be a student-centered university.

So, let's take a few examples.

We've launched our real initiative where Erin Webster

Garrett has provided some leadership.

Thank you, Erin.

And it's already beginning to transform the

undergraduate experience.

Our Provost and her team, like members of your team like Maggie

Tolan in academic advising, have widened the road to success for

first‑year students by designing clearer major maps and

curriculum pathways so that we can connect our students through

career counselors and make it easier for them to get a seat in

required classes.

It's one of the biggest headaches our first-year

students face is getting a schedule that works for them.

We're engaging our staff, our alumni mentors,

and our students' own parents and their family members so that

students have support beyond what we can provide as

a faculty.

And we have built physical spaces that enable and

inspire success.

This includes, as many of you know,

the five living- learning programs that we've

put together.

These are environments that really engage and challenge our

students whether they're in the classroom or in their

sleeping rooms.

We've more than tripled our institutional student aid

internally since 2008, helping more students stay in school

without amassing debt.

And I'm really, really grateful, it's really important that I say

this, I'm so grateful to our legislature and our state in

particular for ongoing and generous support to local aid.

By the way, you put it all together,

it's actually increased our local aid tenfold.

That's awesome.

And it has created so much more access and it's given us the

opportunity to take away a lot of the debt that our students

once had.

You know, we've also joined this national consortium of

urban‑serving universities that share best practices to help

improve student access and close the achievement gap.

And this is going to end up awarding hundreds of thousands

more degrees by the year 2025.

This is the APLU, the Association for Public and Land

Grant Universities that we're a big part of in Washington DC.

This is inspiring, but I have to tell you,

it's really only the beginning of what we've got to think about

what we're going to do together.

I envision that VCU will be a much more student‑centered

university everywhere.

And what I mean by everywhere, it's going to take every one of

us, regardless of our role.

We've all got to be committed to the mission.

I want every single student who engages with any one person at

VCU, every office, every group, every person to be taken

seriously, the center of the attention,

the center of our focus.

Their questions will be answered and we care deeply about them in

transformational ways, not in transactional ways,

and they can feel it.

People are very perceptive and intuitive and they know when

it's sincere and I know I can count on my community to deliver

on that.

You know, the Education Trust lists a few things that

student‑centered universities do really well and I want to tell

you about a few of those.

Not surprisingly, they make student success a campus-wide

priority throughout the universities that are

student-centered.

They use good data to make great decisions.

They remove obstacles that they find that are getting in the way

of students reaching graduation day.

And they require more from their students, too.

And here's how.

They do things like they eliminate optional participation

in the things that are shown to work and proven to work.

And then there's this one which particularly impels me.

Student-centered universities are much more innovative when it

comes to things like general education.

The idea of base courses worked well for most of us and goes

back 400 years in our own country and much,

much longer in Europe, of course.

But very little has changed since then.

In some ways, earning a degree in 2019 isn't that different

than it was in 1719.

But people certainly are different.

Our nation and our students are changing and we're going to

change, too, so that we can deliver an education for the

modern American Dream.

Time and again our students show us through their stunning

creativity and their great selfless efforts that they have

a relentless drive to find meaning in everything that

they do.

Why don't we find a way through a college education to

make that happen?

Let's help them do it.

By building on what we already do so well in areas like focused

inquiry that I think has been a tremendous success,

VCU will become the model for modern education by inviting our

students to solve the most important problems that our

society faces by giving their curriculum purpose and meaning.

Students today need to know why, a context in which what we're

asking them to learn really makes sense.

So, we need to imagine students focused on things like vexing

global health issues.

Let's take an example.

So, how could they, as undergraduate students,

consider why people in one zip code here in Richmond live so

many years longer than their neighbors in just another zip

code right next to it, something, by the way,

that we identified in VCU's Center on Society and Health.

So then we know that's the case, what could our students do

about it?

Or, think about how powerful and how motivated they could be if

they could take on things like climate change, or cancer,

something that we have been dedicated to as an institution

at our level for so many years, or social equity,

something that we know we really haven't been able to tackle in

our communities in Virginia, particularly our

immediate communities.

Today, I'm asking all of us as a faculty to reimagine the

educational experience of VCU.

Let's make it more meaningful for our students and make it

more purposeful and connect it more to our society.

We are a public institution and that's what people are looking

for, including our students, their parents,

and others who are supporting us.

I challenge us to consider what a degree stands for at VCU.

If someone earns a degree from VCU,

in what ways have we prepared them to be thoughtful catalysts

of the human experience?

In which ways will VCU students and the degrees that they earn

be shining examples of our national prominence?

Next, a nationally prominent VCU also has a faculty.

Us. All of us.

We are fearlessly committed to pursuing answers to save and

improve people's lives.

I want to point out one of my –- a couple of my colleagues,

Tom Eissenburg and Alison Breland.

A few months ago, they received a $20 million grant from the NIH

and the Food and Drug Administration, making it,

I think, a total of $40 million now since 2013.

This is to make sure that policies that regulate tobacco

use are actually based on sound science and are not going to

lead to unintended consequences that will make a bad problem

much worse.

So, Tom and Alison consider a host of issues,

including how products like electronic cigarettes are

engineered, the psychology of smokers,

and the clinical effect of tobacco use,

and that's going to help the FDA and the NIH better protect not

just smokers but also nonsmokers.

Tom and Allison are doing really important work at a time when

smoking is still killing about half of our Americans every year

-- I'm sorry, more than half a million of our Americans every

year. [laughter]

And e‑cigarette use is rising sharply,

particularly among teenagers.

Did I get all of that right, Tom and Alison?

Please rise so that we can recognize you.

[applause]

Tom and Alison, really, they're not alone in their commitment

to shaping the human experience.

I wish I could tell you about all of the stories that I have

of VCU which I often take to Washington DC to help us with

our funding and support.

Everywhere VCU has people who are so committed to improving

and saving people's lives, to solving serious social problems,

to teaching and mentoring diverse students who will go out

and shape society, but what we all recognize is that there is a

place here for absolutely everyone.

This is a faculty that cares more for students than any place

I've ever known.

In doing this, we model faculty-student engagement in

ways that we should for a modern research university.

And you know what?

This is sorely needed.

One of my highest priorities in the coming year will be to

eliminate the challenges that my faculty colleagues face in your

ability to pursue national prominence through our teaching

mission, our research mission, our service and

clinical missions.

First, despite the significant gains that we've

seen, we still need more faculty members.

Secondly, we need to continue to focus on diversity,

and more importantly, we've got to be certain that we are

committed to inclusion.

I thank my colleague, Aashir Nasim,

for all the great work that he's doing to guide me on that front.

We cannot build a VCU that's accessible to everyone if we

don't take our commitments to including everyone

more seriously.

And we can step it up.

Next, we need more options to keep on board the outstanding

members of our faculty who we already have here.

This is going to include better compensation which remains one

of my highest priorities working with the General Assembly again

this spring.

It has been for many years.

It's going to be another priority again this year,

top priority.

The Make It Real campaign which has created more than 50 new

endowed chairs and professorships and 80 endowed

faculty support and research funds has helped dramatically.

We need to do more.

We're making great progress.

Jay, thank you to you and your team for all your help.

We can also retain our very best faculty members through

promotion and tenure, a process that reflects our mission and

our commitments as a modern research university.

And we can also make it easier to move innovations from the

laboratory or clinic or other place to the marketplace.

I should include studio in that.

Steps to streamline this process have already been made through

VCU Venture Lab, a pre-accelerator that launched us

this fall and pairs our innovators and investors with

potential product users.

This is going to help our faculty researchers

commercialize their discoveries and it's going to help fill a

void for Virginia.

Across the state, the volume of research exceeds the capacity

that we have to commercialize it.

What that really means is that we're collectively more

productive as innovators than we are as entrepreneurs and we've

got to take entrepreneurship to the

next level.

That's part of the human experience.

Our market potential also outpaces our resources,

including access to proof of concept funding,

a problem Venture Lab is going to help to alleviate.

So, let's make all of the resources of our enterprise work

for all of us by collaborating more and competing less and

looking at our place in the overall world as opposed to

looking at our world as just VCU.

Let's erase the imaginary lines that we seem to have drawn

between ideas and ideologies.

We are one VCU.

As a faculty, we perform at extraordinary levels.

I want nothing to get in our way as we exemplify national

prominence for VCU and the profound impact that VCU has on

the human experience.

I say that word because that's what we're here for is shaping

the human experience.

Finally, a nationally prominent university like VCU, at VCU,

it means that our healthcare mission,

just like our educational mission,

is as accessible as it is excellent.

I want to tell you about someone named Cameron Drake.

Cameron is a biomedical technician at VCU and he repairs

our dialysis machines for kidney patients.

I want to tell you about a remarkable twist of fate that

Cameron himself, he actually learned that he needed a kidney

transplant to live.

His mom, Kimberly, she donated her left kidney to her son last

October at VCU Medical Center.

Just hours before their procedure,

Cameron wrote something on social media that I thought was

really cool.

A mother's love, he says, is unfathomable.

She gave me life once, and she's going to do it again today.

That was the day of his surgery.

Kimberly and Cameron are both doing really well.

The transplant was successful and it was historic, by the way.

Theirs was the 162nd kidney transplant at Hume-Lee

Transplant Center at VCU in 2018, which was a record.

And by the year's end, by the way, I wanted to tell you,

we actually had to perform 202, which is actually like an

average of something like four in a week at VCU.

Cameron can't be here today because he's actually doing so

well that he's at work, but Kimberly is here.

Kimberly, could you stand?

[applause]

It's great to see you, Kimberly.

And it's great to see you looking so well.

You know, there were so many other milestones at VCU Health

as well that I want to talk about and I'm going to take a

moment to thank Marsha for being my partner,

my right arm in healthcare.

Chandra Bhati in Medicine performed the first

robotic‑assisted kidney implantation anywhere in the

East Coast, which means an easier recovery for both the

recipient as well as the donor.

Massey Cancer Center became the first in Virginia to offer

FDA-approved CAR T‑cell therapies.

So, I think most of you know what this is,

but it's basically a revolutionary immunotherapy that

uses the patient's own immune cells,

takes them out and puts them back in so that the cells can

attack the cancer.

John McCarty who has been our leader in this area has just

been a tremendous pioneer.

I'm so proud of him.

I don't know if he's here today but I'm very grateful to him for

the great work that he's done there.

At Pauley Heart Center, you should know that we actually

implanted our 114th total artificial heart.

You saw a recipient of an implant on the screen.

I wanted to tell you something; 114 actually makes it so that

there are only three hospitals in the world, not the country,

in the world that have ever done more.

That's pretty cool. [applause]

And as most of you who drive by 10th, 11th,

and Leigh Street know, because something has dramatically

changed, we broke ground on our largest capital project in our

history at VCU.

It's our 16‑story adult outpatient facility that's going

to bring together the services of most of our outpatient

clinics, but it includes Massey Cancer Center and I'm really

happy about that.

It'll put them all in one location and it will have

wonderful parking that you will be thrilled with.

But, you know, it's a really significant step in what I've

been talking about for years, which is my passion to transform

this medical center.

This is a preeminent medical center.

By the way, we are, again, the number one ranked hospital

in Richmond.

I'm really proud of that.

But something else I'm really proud of,

and I did the calculation myself, I'm so excited about it,

inpatient satisfaction.

In just the last five years, our inpatient satisfaction has

increased 17%.

That's a hard story to tell in a place as large and complex

as ours.

But you know what that does?

That puts us in the top 20% of academic medical centers in

terms of inpatient satisfaction, so I'm really,

really pleased with that, and I cannot thank the entire

healthcare team.

I'm, of course, talking about healthcare providers,

our care partners, everyone who does so much to be so faithful

to this vision that we have put together.

So, how can our national prominence ensure that every one

of our patients, no matter what their background is,

regardless of the pathologies they're dealing

with, we want them all to have a chance at better and

longer lives?

That's the human experience and that's really what our conscious

tells us to do.

So, how can we do this?

For one, VCU will be ranked top 20 among children's hospitals

three years from now.

We're going to do it.

We're going to build on our successes since we've opened the

children's pavilion just three years ago.

By the way, in the Children's Pavilion,

our patient satisfaction in the Pavilion is now among the top in

the nation, very high patient satisfaction.

Next, we're going to make Massey Cancer Center the first

NCI‑designated comprehensive cancer center in

the Commonwealth.

That's really important.

We're on the cusp of it anyway, but we're doing some things to

make that happen.

What does that mean?

It means we're going to be able to take better care of more

people with complex issue, where they haven't had the hope.

We're going to give them the hope.

It's a larger commitment to clinical trials that's going to

put us on the leading edge of medical science.

We're also improving patients' abilities to access life-saving

services that we provide by removing obstacles.

So we're going to be focused on patient flow and we're going to

make it as easy as we can possibly making it to get into

VCU and to get out of VCU healthy.

This isn't a VCU problem, by the way, alone.

Large medical centers around the nation struggle with this.

Twenty-four million Americans end up in the emergency rooms as

opposed to getting the kind of care that they need to get,

so we need to make certain that they have access.

And one of the reasons, by the way,

that so many Americans end up in emergency rooms is because they

just can't get to see a primary care physician or the kind of

specialist that they might need based on what they might be

dealing with.

A lot of people have no place to turn and we're going to

fix that.

Finally, because we're a preeminent health system and an

incredible research university put together,

VCU is going to help the Richmond community become the

national hub for healthcare innovation,

and that's why I'm really excited to announce something to

you today.

It's an initiative called The Health Innovation Consortium.

This is a partnership of VCU Health, Activation Capital,

which you might have known as the Virginia Biotech Research

Partnership, and VCU, of course.

What it's going to do, it's going to merge our commitments

to research, to human health, and student success

all together.

This is a consortium that's going to allow students and

faculty who have an idea to innovate healthcare,

how they move it seamlessly from concept to commercial viability

to a mature start‑up.

That's what we need to do more of.

This is a consortium that will attract the very best and the

brightest health innovators in our region.

And it's going to show that the real benefit of national

prominence ‑‑ I want you to hear this because this is not just a

superficial thing -- why is national prominence important?

Because it allows us to attract the nationally prominent people

who can give us -- bring us the local benefit and local impact.

And we need that impact in Richmond.

We know it.

The Health Innovation Consortium can only happen at VCU because

we're the only comprehensive public research university with

a nationally prominent medical center.

And this is an institution‑wide commitment to human health,

a remarkably entrepreneurial student body, and, of course,

we have a history of innovation at every level.

We need to take it to the next level,

but we have had that wonderful history of our reputation

in innovation.

We also have the benefit of being in a capital city with a

strong collaborative and innovative ecosystem that grows

every day.

The spirit in Richmond is awesome. I love it.

The demand is there.

Last fall alone, VCU students pitched more than 60 healthcare

starts‑ups through the VCU daVinci Center, by the way.

The need is there and this new initiative is going to help more

people gain from the innovative spirit of VCU.

For the patients we serve, this means more access to our

nationally prominent healthcare.

It's been an amazing 180 years, wouldn't you say?

Not to mention what's happened in this last year.

I'm so proud of what VCU has become, which is to say that,

honestly, I'm really very proud of all of you.

There is no better place to chase your American Dream than

right here at a nationally prominent Virginia

Commonwealth University.

Thank you all so much for gathering together today for

our talk.

I really, I sincerely appreciate everything that you do to shape

VCU and the way that you have shaped it and all the ways that

you touch so many people's lives.

Have a wonderful rest of the day and thank you.

[applause]

For more infomation >> VCU State of the University 2019 - Duration: 46:21.

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University of Montana hosts second Black Solidarity Summit - Duration: 0:58.

in<font color="#E5E5E5"> 2017 the</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> University of</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> Montana</font>

reported that<font color="#CCCCCC"> 79 percent of its students</font>

<font color="#E5E5E5">were Caucasian and one group of students</font>

is hoping to<font color="#E5E5E5"> bring more diversity to</font>

campus this<font color="#CCCCCC"> weekend the black Students</font>

Union<font color="#E5E5E5"> is hosting its second annual black</font>

solidarity summit in the<font color="#E5E5E5"> University</font>

<font color="#CCCCCC">Center right</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> in the middle of Black</font>

<font color="#CCCCCC">History Month the summit runs until</font>

Monday<font color="#CCCCCC"> and aims to address issues</font>

<font color="#E5E5E5">surrounding racial discrimination and</font>

black academic enrollment students bring

<font color="#E5E5E5">speakers from across the</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> country</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> to</font>

engage in discourse and promote

collaboration<font color="#E5E5E5"> black solidarity summit</font>

head coordinator<font color="#CCCCCC"> Natasha</font>

<font color="#CCCCCC">laun day</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> says people are coming from</font>

Michigan Idaho Utah and Washington<font color="#E5E5E5"> to</font>

network<font color="#CCCCCC"> I think it's gonna be</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> fun</font>

because it keeps<font color="#E5E5E5"> a bunch of people</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> that</font>

look<font color="#CCCCCC"> like you and</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> also are going</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> to do</font>

the same things or happen to<font color="#E5E5E5"> think same</font>

things and<font color="#E5E5E5"> they</font><font color="#CCCCCC"> can I can learn</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> from</font>

<font color="#CCCCCC">that and so can others</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> this year's</font>

keynote speaker is<font color="#CCCCCC"> Erika Hart</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> at black</font>

<font color="#CCCCCC">activists and writer with the</font><font color="#E5E5E5"> Masters in</font>

human sexuality

For more infomation >> University of Montana hosts second Black Solidarity Summit - Duration: 0:58.

-------------------------------------------

St. Lawrence University Soccer 2000 Part 3 v. Plymouth St. (NCAA) - Duration: 29:22.

For more infomation >> St. Lawrence University Soccer 2000 Part 3 v. Plymouth St. (NCAA) - Duration: 29:22.

-------------------------------------------

St. Lawrence University Soccer 2000 Part 2 v. Plymouth St. (NCAA) - Duration: 29:21.

For more infomation >> St. Lawrence University Soccer 2000 Part 2 v. Plymouth St. (NCAA) - Duration: 29:21.

-------------------------------------------

St. Lawrence University Soccer 2000 v. Plymouth St. Part 4 (NCAA) - Duration: 21:22.

For more infomation >> St. Lawrence University Soccer 2000 v. Plymouth St. Part 4 (NCAA) - Duration: 21:22.

-------------------------------------------

University administrator creates events, conversation around diversity - Duration: 3:05.

For more infomation >> University administrator creates events, conversation around diversity - Duration: 3:05.

-------------------------------------------

Australian National University – Leveraging Microsoft Azure for genetic breakthroughs - Duration: 2:44.

[orchestral music]

I'm a research fellow in the Department of Genome Sciences

at the John Curtin School of Medical Research

at the Australian National University.

The University has ranked consistently in the top 20

of research-intensive universities in the world.

In my research, I am trying to address the question

of how structural changes in the genome

can affect the regulation of a process that, in cancer,

is associated with metastasis.

For me and other researchers in the field,

the computer is the lab.

Genome science is probably one of the area of life sciences

that is most dependent on information technology.

The human genome contains about 7 billion base pairs of DNA.

Finding statistical correlations

among these pairs and diseases

is a very demanding computational task.

As we are gathering more and more samples

to conduct our research,

we're facing the challenge of an exponential growth

in data and demands for storing this data.

[orchestral music]

Using cloud computing enables us to access

state-of-the-art hardware

without upfront investment and on demand.

Which is in contrast to on-premise,

where the hardware will become obsolete within several years.

We were able to access four times the computational power

for half the price, compared to the on-premise

hardware we'd been using previously.

With Azure, we can actually limit our expenses

by only paying for the time that we need.

By storing our data in the cloud,

we're taking advantage of the virtually unlimited

storage capacity, and we are able

to easily move our research data

between on-demand access to archival storage,

where it is safely and securely stored for us.

Microsoft Azure has really enabled us

to reduce the time that we had to wait

for the analysis of our data,

which eventually leads to the faster publication

of our results.

Azure saves me probably two days of work

of setting up and configuring the server.

So instead, we can focus on performing analyses

and studying our data

and asking the interesting questions.

Microsoft has really embraced open source in recent years,

which makes it relatively easy to use other researchers'

methodologies in the cloud.

My research adds a little piece to the mosaic

of research that has been done in this field.

With Azure, sharing our data with other researchers

really enables us to move research along

faster than ever before.

[soft piano music]

For more infomation >> Australian National University – Leveraging Microsoft Azure for genetic breakthroughs - Duration: 2:44.

-------------------------------------------

Australian National University – Leveraging Microsoft Azure for genetic breakthroughs (DA) - Duration: 2:45.

[orchestral music]

I'm a research fellow in the Department of Genome Sciences

at the John Curtin School of Medical Research

at the Australian National University.

The University has ranked consistently in the top 20

of research-intensive universities in the world.

In my research, I am trying to address the question

of how structural changes in the genome

can affect the regulation of a process that, in cancer,

is associated with metastasis.

For me and other researchers in the field,

the computer is the lab.

Genome science is probably one of the area of life sciences

that is most dependent on information technology.

The human genome contains about 7 billion base pairs of DNA.

Finding statistical correlations

among these pairs and diseases

is a very demanding computational task.

As we are gathering more and more samples

to conduct our research,

we're facing the challenge of an exponential growth

in data and demands for storing this data.

[orchestral music]

Using cloud computing enables us to access

state-of-the-art hardware

without upfront investment and on demand.

Which is in contrast to on-premise,

where the hardware will become obsolete within several years.

We were able to access four times the computational power

for half the price, compared to the on-premise

hardware we'd been using previously.

With Azure, we can actually limit our expenses

by only paying for the time that we need.

By storing our data in the cloud,

we're taking advantage of the virtually unlimited

storage capacity, and we are able

to easily move our research data

between on-demand access to archival storage,

where it is safely and securely stored for us.

Microsoft Azure has really enabled us

to reduce the time that we had to wait

for the analysis of our data,

which eventually leads to the faster publication

of our results.

Azure saves me probably two days of work

of setting up and configuring the server.

So instead, we can focus on performing analyses

and studying our data

and asking the interesting questions.

Microsoft has really embraced open source in recent years,

which makes it relatively easy to use other researchers'

methodologies in the cloud.

My research adds a little piece to the mosaic

of research that has been done in this field.

With Azure, sharing our data with other researchers

really enables us to move research along

faster than ever before.

[soft piano music]

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