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Robin Evans-Agnew and Denise Drevdahl of the School of Nursing & Healthcare Leadership warn of regional and national nursing shortages that are being exacerbated by the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.
Eric Barone, '11, created 'Stardew Valley' all by himself over a four-year period after graduating from UW Tacoma. Now the game has sold over 10 million copies.
Faculty and staff have access to Zoom for meetings and instruction, but faculty are encouraged to focus on asynchronous activities. UW Tacoma director of digital learning Darcy Janzen is quoted.
Robin Evans-Agnew and co-authors argue that the crisis in U.S. public health long pre-dates COVID-19, and that our already-marginalized communities will bear the brunt of the pandemic.
Professor Turan Kayaoglu calls for better understanding of the sources of anti-Muslim hate, and proposes that the solution is "not Muslims getting better at liberal Islam, but at liberal democracy."
Siyasa: A Forum on Islamic and Middle Eastern Politics
To help small businesses cope with the COVID-19 pandemic, UW Tacoma is providing rent relief to retail tenants along its Pacific Avenue campus frontage.
Jim Gawel is researching the surprisingly fast recovery of Spirit Lake since the eruption of Mount St. Helens. He and his students are examining floating log mats to see what role they play.
Ali Modarres notes that, just when we need more labor migration to ensure an adequate work-force, the global pandemic is revealing weaknesses in our social and healthcare infrastructure.
A local biotech incubator is gearing up to perform 100 COVID-19 tests per day. RAIN Incubator founder David Hirschberg is a principal investigator at the UW Tacoma Center for Urban Waters.
Host Tom Layson interviews School of Urban Studies Dean Ali Modarres on the challenges of Tacoma growth in general and in the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic.
UW announced a transition to remote instruction for the remainder of winter quarter on March 6, 2020. UW Tacoma students and instructors are interviewed for their reactions to the change.
Ben Mauk, associate director of campus planning and retail operations, talks with metro news columnist Matt Driscoll about the viability of a grocery store in downtown Tacoma.
Fifteen UW Tacoma students worked as paid interns during the 2020 Washington Legislative Session at the Olympia state capitol, more than any other school in the state.
Andy James and Zhenyu Tian of the Center for Urban Waters have identified 64 chemicals never before detected in the waters of Puget Sound, some at levels that could be hazardous to marine life.
Tacoma is experiencing a renaissance, led in part by the growth of UW Tacoma, but experts including Prof. Ali Modarres caution that thoughtful planning is crucial to ensuring equity and resilience.
A Tacoma non-profit, Shared Housing Services, has partnered with UW Tacoma on a program called Husky2Husky, matching students with faculty or alumni homeowners who have spare rooms.
UW Tacoma's partnership with Tacoma Housing Authority and a local private micro-apartment developer to provide subsidized housing to eligible students is mentioned is mentioned.
The author, Mark Horozowski, a lecturer in the Milgard School of Business, describes what motivates purpose-driven employees and how companies can keep them engaged.
Katie Baird, professor of economics, and her co-author decry Washington's "racially imbalanced tax system" and its heavy reliance on sales and estate taxes.
A UW Tacoma-hosted talk by UPS professor Dan Burgard is an example of the "leading-edge science Tacoma seldom gets noticed for," which includes the work of the Center for Urban Waters.
Rania Elbasiony, a 2019 Law & Policy graduate, argues for extending educational benefits to people who are incarcerated for life without parole, citing resulting reductions in prison violence.
Andy James of the Center for Urban Waters will work with the Northwest Fisheries Science Center and WSU to examine the effect of wastewater treatment plant effluent on orcas and their prey species.
Marking the centenary of the founding of the Bauhaus, urbanists including Ali Modarres of Urban Studies debate whether cities of today live up to the visions from 100 years ago.
Assistant professor of community psychology Chris Beasley's work to build the Tacoma Post-Prison Higher Education Coalition is featured in one of the world's leading scientific journals.
Eric Madfis, associate professor of criminal justice, provides insights into the wide disparity between the number of mass shootings involving male vs. female suspects.
Associate Professor Christine Stevens is a co-author of a study examining art-based mindfulness activities that could serve to reduce one of the markers of stress in teenage girls.
The News Tribune editorial board calls on public higher education institutions, including UW Tacoma, to provide safe storage of student guns, a practice just ended by WSU.
Opinion columnist Clarence Page cites and quotes the work of Social Work & Criminal Justice's Eric Madfis in the wake of two mass shootings in El Paso, Tex., and Dayton, Ohio.
Lecturer Sarah Chavez took part in Poets and Artists for Migrant Justice at Seattle's Victor Hugo House, and spoke about the event with its organizer, Paul Hlava Ceballos.
Associate Professor Chris DeMaske cautions that government's current hands-off policy regarding internet regulation, leaving it primarily to the commercial sector, is incompatible with democracy.
Professor Ankur Teredesai was co-chair of the Association for Computing Machinery's 2019 computer science and artificial intelligence conference, held in Anchorage, Alaska.
The start-up phase of the new effort, directed by Milgard's Stan Emert and supported with a $1M gift from the Rainiers, will see the launch of a new course in sports enterprise management this fall.
Funding from the National Science Foundation will support 14 undergraduate and graduate students in return for their commitment to cybersecurity employment in the governmental sector.
In a minute-and-a-half video, Lecturer Vaughn Bell explains the concept behind a new, permanent public art installation along UW Tacoma's Prairie Line Trail, called "All the Rivers in the World."
Associate Professor Anne Taufen is quoted on Renton's success establishing a climate of trust and civic participation, and how other cities may fail in the same attempt.
Drug policy experts, including Associate Professor Ingrid Walker, say the White House opioid addiction awareness campaign "needs more diverse viewpoints to have a bigger impact."
Alumna Janet Runbeck notes that "the most vulnerable" are "most at risk" from exposure to pollution such as wildfire smoke. She said that "not enough is being done to ensure their safety."
A UFPB post-doc worked with Professor Orlando Baiocchi on a system of tree-based monitoring devices. This 'internet of natural things' may be used to detect and track the spread of wildfires.
Professor Emerita Marcy Stein notes that most teachers are not trained to write lesson plans. There is a thriving market for 'teacherpreneurs' to offer such assistance via such sites as Pinterest.
Haley Professor of Humanities Michael Honey. a noted scholar of Martin Luther King Jr., comments on recent "incendiary claims" made by historian David Garrow on the private life of King.