Asst. Prof. of is leading a team of researchers and community partners that has won a four-year, $3.9 million grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to improve care and treatment coordination for Black women with HIV.
When joined the (RHSA) three years ago, the first-generation college student from East Boston was just looking for some extra help in navigating her transition to college. That鈥檚 what the RHSA offered.
Backed by a $100,000 grant from the 麻豆视频 Department of Energy Resources, UMass Lowell is conducting a campus-wide renewable energy study to take stock of its current infrastructure and map its path to achieving carbon neutrality by 2050.
Research interest in understanding the wetting and spreading phenomena of a droplet landing on a complex shape surface through numerical simulations has risen dramatically since the start of the era of scientific computing and high-speed/definition video camera.
UMass Dartmouth announces that the National Security Agency and the Department of Homeland Security have designated the university as a National Center of Academic Excellence in Cybersecurity - Cyber Research (CAE-R) through academic year 2025.
UMass Dartmouth received this prestigious classification through the demonstrated success and commitment to prepare students to address national challenges related to cybersecurity as well as advanced faculty research in the field.
Whether it鈥檚 through film, drawing, music, theater, or dance, Maria Servell贸n 鈥12 has always been creating art in one form or another. But it wasn鈥檛 until her sophomore year at UMass Boston that she considered turning her talents into a career.
The UMass Boston campus was closed, but that didn鈥檛 stop dozens of students, faculty, and staff from standing together鈥攖o grieve, express their anger, and to be heard.
In the days following the death of George Floyd, a Black man killed while in police custody, the UMass Boston community rallied, arriving with face masks and signs and marching through campus to the chant of 鈥淏lack Lives Matter.鈥
Four hundred years after the first Thanksgiving鈥攁 three-day harvest feast celebrated in 1621 by a band of desperately struggling English settlers and a group of neighboring native Wampanoag鈥 it remains shrouded in many mysteries. Where exactly did the feast take place? What were relations between the colonists and native inhabitants like? Now, as the 400th anniversary of the first Thanksgiving draws near, UMass Boston researchers are starting to provide answers.
On a typical day, family nurse practitioner Valery Joseph 鈥10, G鈥18 sees between 15 and 18 patients at the Whittier Street Health Center in Boston鈥檚 Roxbury neighborhood. Most of her patients range in age from 50 to 90. About 90 percent speak Spanish, one of four languages spoken by Haiti-born Joseph. But since Whittier became a COVID-19 testing site in April, things have been anything but typical. Fortunately, she felt well prepared to handle the situation.
Marcelo Su谩rez-Orozco remembers Boston from the decade he taught at Harvard and raised his family in Cambridge, in the late 鈥90s and early aughts, as a city in the throes of physical upheaval鈥攖he Big Dig gouging a new transportation network through the heart of the city. As he returns to this city to become chancellor of the 麻豆视频 Boston, he is transfixed by the changes he鈥檚 seen. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a beautiful city; it鈥檚 so pristine,鈥 he said in a recent interview, relishing the opportunity to return to Boston. 鈥淚t鈥檚 completely transformed.鈥