Eberly News
Articles for the month of April 2018
WVU Eberly College announces 2018 Outstanding Staff Award recipients
The West Virginia University Eberly College of Arts and Sciences has named four recipients of its 2018 Outstanding Staff Award: Andrea Bebell, Allen Burns, Selena Engebretson and Christopher Ramezan.
Student focused on prison education reform named WVU’s 23rd Truman Scholar
Emma Harrison, a
West Virginia University student who found her purpose through a college
internship, has been awarded the Truman Scholarship, the country’s top award for
students who aspire to careers in public service.
The passion of politics
WVU alumni donate to Robert DiClerico Scholarship in Democratic Institutions and Public Leadership
Author, communication professor to give job talk April 18
Erika Kirby to speak on how communication in relationships helps or hurts work-life balance in second annual Seehra Lecture
Microwave chemistry research heats up at WVU
Similar to how microwave ovens heat soup but not the bowl, researchers at West Virginia University are exploring the possibility of heating one solution component selectively over others in chemical reactions.
Researchers call for more science in forensic science
As a critical component to the administration of justice, researchers are calling for more science in forensic science.
WVU creating pathways to flexible humanities degrees, careers
As West Virginia seeks to re-imagine its future both economically and culturally, new skills beyond technical training will be necessary to generate innovative paths forward.
WVU Department of History receives American Historical Association grant to support career diversity initiative
West Virginia University is one of 20 institutions in the U.S. to receive a 2018 Career Diversity Implementation Grant from the American Historical Association (AHA) to support a career diversity initiative for graduate students in the Department of History.
WVU geographer helps prepare for internal climate migration through new World Bank report
Internal climate migrants are rapidly becoming the human face of climate change, according to a new report from World Bank.
WVU students win 2018 Schuman Challenge in Washington, D.C.
Student representatives from West Virginia University have won the European External Action Service’s 2018 Schuman Challenge, the second edition of a foreign policy contest for undergraduate students held in Washington, D.C.