06/14/2021
Five Miami students named Gilman Scholars
Five Miami University students received Benjamin A. Gilman International Scholarships to help fund their study abroad experiences this summer and during the coming academic year. The combined total awarded to these students is $20,000.
06/14/2021
One year later: 2020 Miami University Regionals' grads land on their feet
Thanks to a global pandemic, the unemployment rate in April 2020 stood at 14.7 percent with 33.5 million Americans filing for unemployment aid. A year later, that rate stands at 6.1 percent, with companies finding new ways to do business and hiring back workers on furlough because of COVID-19 more quickly than expected.
Using Local Initiatives to Fund In-Home Services: Ohio Leads the Nation
As a result of limitations in federal and state funding for nonmedical supportive services, some communities across 15 states are utilizing local funding sources to support aging services for older adults and/or their family or friend caregivers. Local funding sources include property tax levies, payroll, and sales taxes. This research brief explores how communities across Ohio utilize local funding and analyzes the differences in various approaches such as amount of revenue generated, service eligibility criterion, type of services covered, and management infrastructure.
06/11/2021
Miami's Summer Robotics Program
Miami is welcoming highschool students this summer to a robotics program through the CEC.
06/10/2021
Thousands to enjoy a “Miami experience” this summer
More than 5,000 youths and adults are expected to participate on Miami University’s Oxford campus this summer in a variety of educational programs, athletic camps, conferences, and other events.
06/10/2021
Business executive Dinesh Paliwal named newest Miami national board trustee
Miami University's board of trustees has named business executive Dinesh Paliwal the newest national board trustee.
06/10/2021
The Kissing Bug gets 'Fresh Air'
Miamians heard a familiar voice on national airways June 8 when the music receded and famed NPR journalist Terry Gross introduced “Fresh Air” and the topic du jour: the kissing bug. Formally known as triatomine bugs, these blood sucking insects can carry the T. cruzi parasite that causes Chagas disease — a disease that killed the aunt of Daisy Hernández, associate professor of English, and inspired her to write The Kissing Bug: The True Story of a Family, an Insect, and a Nation's Neglect of a Deadly Disease. It’s that book — seven years in the making — that found Hernández interviewed by Gross this week, living out a personal dream while telling her family’s story.
06/09/2021
Tech Fee call for proposals coming in August
This year we are returning to our normal, competitive process for distributing a portion of the Student Technology Fees to innovative or significant technology projects that benefit students.
06/09/2021
Construction to begin this fall on the Richard M. McVey Data Science Building
Construction of the three-story building is expected to be completed for use in January 2024.
06/09/2021
Weekly Three 06/09/21
The Weekly Three posting from the Office of Institutional Diversity on June 9, 2021: DEI Implementation, Community Updates, and Celebrations and Recognition