UVA Speaks – Détails, épisodes et analyse

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UVA Speaks

UVA Speaks

UVA Lifetime Learning

Éducation
Société & Culture

Fréquence : 1 épisode/15j. Total Éps: 226

Pinecast
The University of Virginia Lifetime Learning program enriches the intellectual life of UVA’s alumni, parents, friends, and families through faculty lectures and online resources.
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  • 🇺🇸 États-Unis - courses

    27/04/2025
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    13/12/2024
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Incorporating Mental Health Awareness into Schools and Public Policy

Saison 1

mercredi 2 octobre 2024Durée 26:53

This UVA Speaks podcast features Kristen Roorbach, a psychotherapist, educational psychologist, and Lecturer at the Frank Batten School of Leadership and Public Policy at the University of Virginia. She teaches a course entitled “Trauma and the U.S. Public School System” where she brings her clinical and research expertise to explore early childhood behavior and the impact of stress of trauma on learning. In her UVA classroom, Roorbach seeks to create an inclusive space for discussing public policy and addressing the complex interplay between mental health and education.

Transcripts of the audio broadcast can be found here.

Kristen Roorbach is a psychotherapist, educational psychologist, and Lecturer at the Frank Batten School of Leadership and Public Policy at the University of Virginia. As a clinician, Roorbach works with children ages 3 – 18, families, and individuals using brain-based and solution-focused methods to support them through issues related to anxiety, stress, trauma, depression, and challenging behavior.

Global Health: Treating Patients Across the Globe & Addressing Health Inequity

Saison 1

jeudi 15 août 2024Durée 34:53

This UVA Speaks podcast features Scott Heysell, the Thomas H. Hunter, Associate Professor of International Medicine and Director of the Center for Global Health Equity at the University of Virginia. Dr. Heysell is an active clinician and researcher who supports partners worldwide in reducing tuberculosis-related deaths. He describes the work of UVA’s Center for Global Health Equity, which offers interdisciplinary research and clinical training opportunities across various global locations like Rwanda, South Africa, India, Nicaragua, and Southwest Virginia. In collaboration with their international partners, Heysell and the Center’s clinicians and researchers seek to dismantle structures of inequity and marginalization, respond to community needs, and build more equitable and effective global healthcare systems.

Transcripts of the audio broadcast can be found here.

Scott Heysell, MD, MPH, is the Thomas H. Hunter Associate Professor of International Medicine and Director of the Center for Global Health Equity at UVA Health at the University of Virginia. Dr. Heysell is an active researcher and supports partners worldwide to reduce tuberculosis-related deaths and correct factors that contribute to tuberculosis, including poverty, health system management, and chronic medical conditions such as HIV and diabetes. His research group also studies maximizing drug efficacy to improve treatment outcomes.

History of American Women in Sports: The Olympics and Beyond

Saison 1

mardi 12 mars 2024Durée 24:31

On this UVA Speaks podcast, Bonnie Hagerman, Associate Professor in Women, Gender, & Sexuality and Director of Undergraduate Programs at the College and Graduate School of Arts & Sciences at the University of Virginia, describes the history of participation of American women in the Olympics and sports. She discusses athletes like Margaret Abbott, the first American woman to win an Olympic medal, and Althea Gibson, who broke the color barrier in women’s tennis and golf. Hagerman also highlights the importance of athletes like Venus Williams, who advocated for pay equity for women in her sport, and gymnast Simone Biles, whose withdrawal from the 2020 Olympics led her to become a mental health advocate.

Transcripts of the audio broadcast can be found here.

Bonnie Hagerman is an Associate Professor in the Department of Women, Gender, & Sexuality and Director of Undergraduate Programs at the College and Graduate School of Arts & Sciences at the University of Virginia. Her research focuses on women, gender, sport, and 20th Century American social history. She is the author of the book “Skimpy Coverage: Sports Illustrated and the Shaping of the Female Athlete.” This Spring, Professor Hagerman is teaching a course entitled “Gender & the Olympic Games.”

Appomattox: Legacies and Legends

jeudi 8 juin 2017Durée 01:16:42

Speaker: Elizabeth Varon, Langbourne M. Williams Professor, College and Graduate School of Arts & Sciences, American History; Associate Director, John L. Nau III Center for Civil War History Elizabeth Varon will dispel the myth that the Appomattox surrender was a “gentleman’s agreement” between Gen. Robert E. Lee and Gen. Ulysses S. Grant that reunited the South and North. She argues that the surrender terms were controversial from the start and became the touchstone for political conflicts during Reconstruction. Her talk will address meanings of the surrender in central Virginia and Albemarle County, especially for the former slaves and black Union soldiers who regarded April 9, 1865 as a key turning point in the long process of emancipation. http://alumni.virginia.edu/learn/program/appomattox-legacies-legends/

First In The World: Revolutions in Healthcare at UVA

jeudi 8 juin 2017Durée 01:06:00

Speakers: Peggy Shupnik, Gerald D. Aurbach Professor of Endocrinology, Senior Associate Dean of Research Dr. Jeffrey Elias, Professor, School of Medicine, Neurological Surgery and Neurology Jonathan Kipnis, Harrison Distinguished Teaching Professor and Chair, School of Medicine, Neuroscience; Director, Center for Brain Immunology and Glia (BIG) UVA School of Medicine researchers are unlocking the secrets of the brain to transform how we deliver lifesaving care to patients. Jonathan Kipnis’s breakthrough discovery of the immune system’s relationship with the brain will impact the treatment of neurological diseases such as autism, Alzheimer’s, and multiple sclerosis. Jeff Elias’s innovative use of focused ultrasound recently received FDA approval for treating essential tremors and has the potential to dramatically improve the lives of patients with Parkinson’s and cancer. This panel discussion will provide an insider’s look into these nationally publicized, groundbreaking discoveries. http://alumni.virginia.edu/learn/program/first-in-the-world-revolutions-in-healthcare-at-uva/

The Academical Village: Building on the Past, Planning for the Future

jeudi 8 juin 2017Durée 01:12:12

Speakers: Brian Hogg, Senior Preservation Planner, Office of the Architect for the University Jody Lahendro, Historic Preservation Architect, Facilities Planning and Construction The talk will review the recently completed Rotunda renovation and will look at current and upcoming projects in the Academical Village that will help set the stage for the University’s next hundred years. http://alumni.virginia.edu/learn/program/the-academical-village-building-on-the-past-planning-for-the-future/

King’s Vibrato: Speech, Power and the Sounds of Blackness

mercredi 18 janvier 2017Durée 01:31:29

The Community MLK Celebration presents Maurice Wallace, Associate Professor, English Department and Associate Director, African-American & African Studies, Carter G. Woodson Institute, University of Virginia will explore the sonic force and densities of Martin Luther King, Jr’s speech-making. He will discuss the power of amplified speech and ambient sound in the making of King’s memory. In a sense, this talk is part of a historical recovery project aimed at resituating King’s voice (as distinct from his words) in time and space. Knowing the rhetorical content of King’s speeches is not at all the same as knowing a great deal about King’s unique sound or the dynamics of technology and state terror inspiring it. For while sound amplification technology may have augmented the tonality in King’s voice as he spoke in Washington and preached in Memphis, for example, it is also certain that this same technology helped mute the state threat to King and his auditors, fearfully heard in the constant clicking of cameras, recorders, timers, and triggers. http://alumni.virginia.edu/learn/program/kings-vibrato/

The University of Virginia and Thomas Jefferson’s Battle for Religious Freedom

lundi 14 novembre 2016Durée 54:23

Thomas Jefferson is well-known as one of the founders of American religious freedom and the separation of church and state; yet, while he strongly opposed government involvement in religion, he always expected Americans to be privately religious. In designing the University of Virginia, he worked diligently, against considerable political opposition, to ensure that the University did not actively promote religion but left religious matters to the students. Almost two hundred years later, in Rosenberger v. UVA (1995), the Supreme Court adopted a “neutrality principle” — government must neither promote nor discriminate against religion – a decision with which Jefferson would undoubtedly have been pleased. John Ragosta, Fellow, Virginia Foundation for the Humanities, History Faculty, Randolph College, and UVA’s Summer Jefferson Symposium Faculty Leader, will address Jefferson’s role in defining American religious freedom, his plans for UVA, and the modern religious freedom issues with which we continue to grapple. http://alumni.virginia.edu/learn/program/religious-freedom/

Supreme Court Appointment Battles: What Can History Teach Us?

mardi 1 novembre 2016Durée 01:02:57

Justice Scalia’s passing, and the filling of his seat, placed the Supreme Court squarely in the contentious 2016 presidential election. Battles among the president, Court, and Senate are not new. But are the stakes now higher? Barbara Perry, White Burkett Miller Professor of Ethics and Institutions; Director, Presidential Studies; Co-Chair, Presidential Oral History Program, Miller Center will explore the past to make sense of today’s controversies in judicial politics. http://alumni.virginia.edu/learn/program/supreme-court-appointment-battles-what-can-history-teach-us/

Modern Day Scarlet Letters: The Social and Economic Costs of Our Corrections System

mardi 1 novembre 2016Durée 01:04:55

The United States has the largest corrections system in the world. Corrections systems must balance concerns of public safety with ways to enable post-release productivity. In this talk, Gregory Fairchild, Associate Professor, Darden School of Business, will enumerate the challenges and share how UVA students and alumni are fostering innovative solutions in our communities. http://alumni.virginia.edu/learn/program/modern-day-scarlet-letters-the-social-and-economic-costs-of-our-corrections-system/

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