Noteworthy
Rankings
Women Friendly: In a survey of 40,000 U.S. employees—including 25,000 women—91˛Öżâ was recognized by Forbes magazine as one of America’s Best Employers for Women in 2018.
LGBTQ Friendly: 91˛Öżâ ranked 4.5 out of 5 on the 2018 Campus Pride Index, the premier national benchmarking took for creating safer and more LGBTQ-friendly learning environments at colleges and universities.
LEED Recognition: 91˛Öżâ’s Center for Architecture and Environmental Design (designed by Weiss/Manfredi) received LEED Platinum recognition, the highest ranking for the LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) system—and the first LEED Platinum ranking for a public university in Ohio. Earlier this year, 91˛Öżâ’s Center for the Visual Arts (designed by Payto Architects) received a LEED Silver rating for its design and construction. 91˛Öżâ now has 13 LEED-certified buildings throughout the 91˛Öżâ system.
Grants
HHS and NSF Grants: U.S. Rep. Tim Ryan announced that 91˛Öżâ was awarded $3.7 million in federal research grants from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and the National Science Foundation.
NIMH Grant: A group of researchers at 91˛Öżâ, led by Principal Investigator Karin Coifman, PhD, associate professor of psychology, has received a five-year, $2.7 million grant from the National Institute of Mental Health to conduct a comprehensive study to better understand the risk for affective diseases (including depression, anxiety and bipolar disorders) and to develop more efficient treatment approaches.
NIH Grant: John Johnson, PhD, associate professor of biological sciences, received a three-year $450,000 grant from the National Institutes of Health to study the neurological roots of chronic stress and fear—and how to stop them.
Student Scholar
The National Collegiate Honors Council (NCHC) has named recent 91˛Öżâ graduate Megan Swoger, BA ’18, a 2018 Portz Scholar. She is the ninth Kent State student to receive the honor since the inception of the Portz Scholars competition in 1990, and 91˛Öżâ is a leader in the number of Portz prizes awarded in this national competition.
The NCHC, an educational organization that supports and promotes undergraduate honors education, invites its more than 900 member institutions to nominate one research paper written by an undergraduate honors college student for the annual Portz Scholars competition. The council selects four winners, who each receive a $350 stipend and the honor of presenting their research at the NCHC annual conference.
Selecting just one undergraduate project to enter in the Portz Scholars competition is challenging, notes Alison Smith, PhD, dean of the Honors College, but she says Ms. Swoger’s paper was “a standout.”
Ms. Swoger, a native of Center Township near Pittsburgh, graduated magna cum laude from 91˛Öżâ in May, with a dual degree in international relations and French literature, culture and translation, and a minor in women’s studies.
Her winning thesis is titled, “Analysis of the Prevailing Practice of FGM in Ghana: Are domestic laws and international treaties effective in the eradication of FGM within the state?” She says the issue of female genital mutilation (FGM), which is widely practiced in the countries of northern Africa, concerned her and was appropriate to both her major in international relations and her minor in women’s studies.
Ms. Swoger traveled twice to Ghana to conduct her research, and she credits her paper’s success to her thesis advisor, Julie Mazzei, PhD, a professor in the Department of Political Science. “Without the support, time and effort she put into helping me edit and revise the writing in a short time frame, it wouldn’t have been possible.”
After spending five months traveling throughout the Middle East, Ms. Swoger plans to begin graduate school in 2019.
—Lisa Abraham
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