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HarvardX reaches almost everywhere (save for Antarctica)
The HarvardX research team launched a “beta” interactive visualization of worldwide enrollment data for HarvardX courses offered via edX, the not-for-profit online learning enterprise founded by Harvard and MIT. While the data is still being refined, the map gives viewers a sense of the kinds of insights researchers hope to glean with “massive” amounts of…
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Google to expand edX’s open source platform
EdX, the not-for-profit online learning initiative founded by Harvard and MIT, today announced its partnership with Google to jointly develop the edX open source learning platform, Open edX, and expand the availability of the platform and its learning tools to individuals and institutions around the world. In collaboration with Google, edX will build out and…
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Harvard School of Public Health to award Centennial Medals, Next Generation Award Oct. 24
Harvard School of Public Health announced today the recipients of its Centennial Medals and inaugural Next Generation Award, all of whom will be honored during events celebrating the School’s 100th anniversary on October 24. Recipients of Centennial Medals are: President Bill Clinton, founder of the Clinton Foundation and 42nd president of the United States Jim Yong…
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Popular food truck turns to compostables
Harvard students may come and go, but since 1960 one hidden gem has remained constant: a family-owned food truck on Divinity Avenue outside the Bio Labs building has been feeding home-cooked meals to generations of students and researchers. Velozo’s Food Service is now operated by Dean Velozo, who joined his father in the business in…
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Has Obamacare found its Bull Connor?
Health care reform in the United States—“Obamacare”—continues to face a bumpy road, according to health policy expert John McDonough of Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH). Writing in his Boston Globe blog “Health Stew” on September 1, 2013, McDonough, professor of the practice of public health and director of the Center for Public Health Leadership, explored how one Southern official…
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Future looks bright for recent Music Dept. alums
According to a recent Strategic National Arts Alumni Project survey of more than 33,000 arts alumni, skills developed as arts majors are “applicable for any vocation and often provides opportunities for arts majors to be major contributors in any environment.” A large percentage of undergraduates with a music degree are successfully employed both in and…
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Guns in home linked to higher risk of suicide
People who live in homes with a gun are two to five times more likely to die by suicide than those who live in homes without guns, said Matthew Miller of Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) in an August 30 interview on NPR’s Science Friday that featured Miller and two other experts. “What differentiates people who live in…
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When engineering met public health
People often ask Victoria Fan, S.M. ’08, S.D. ’11, how she ended up in public health after completing undergraduate studies in engineering at MIT. As she sees it, the trajectory is a natural one, rooted in history. In a piece published on August 20, 2013 in the Huffington Post, the Harvard School of Public Health alumna…
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First HarvardX course from Kennedy School lets students advise on Syria, Iran, NSA/Wikileaks
Graham Allison and David Sanger of the Harvard Kennedy School will teach a HarvardX course, “American National Security, Strategy and the Press,” this fall. Participants in the free online course will play the role of adviser to President Obama on some of the hardest national security challenges facing the U.S. Made available via edX, the online learning enterprise founded…
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Sendhil Mullainathan joins MacArthur Board
Sendhil Mullainathan, a professor of economics at Harvard University, has been elected to serve on the MacArthur Foundation Board of Directors. Mullainathan was, until recently, Assistant Director of Research for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. He is also founder of ideas42, a non-profit that applies insights about people from behavioral economics to create novel policies, interventions, and…
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Center for the History of Medicine’s virtual exhibits explore eugenics, birth control, smallpox
The Center for the History of Medicine (CHM) at Countway Library recently debuted 17 online exhibits on their new platform that weave together fascinating stories illustrated by materials from the collections. Most of exhibits are linked to specific events—such as the center’s largest undertaking, Battle-Scarred: Caring for the Sick and Wounded of the Civil War,…
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Crowds flock to Harvard Film Archive’s ‘Noir All Night’ movie marathon
Armed with coffee and energy bars, Lily Tran and Generoso Fierro were still energized after the first two movies in the Harvard Film Archive’s “Noir All Night” movie marathon on August 31-Sept. 1. “I love film noir, and I’m trying to learn more about it,” Tran said. “I am definitely in it for the long…
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New study identifies clear gender gap in physicians’ earnings
A discernible gender gap exists in earnings by physicians working across a range of occupations in the United States. That is the finding in a new study, “Trends in the Earnings of Male and Female Health Care Professionals in the United States, 1987 to 2010,” co-authored by Amitabh Chandra, professor of public policy at Harvard Kennedy…
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Harvard School of Public Health celebrates 100 years of global health leadership
In fall 2013, Harvard School of Public Health will celebrate 100 years of discoveries and interventions by its faculty, alumni, and students that together have helped to increase life expectancy by a quarter-century and improved the health of millions worldwide since the School’s founding in 1913. Established 100 years ago as the Harvard-MIT School for Health Officers,…
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Daphne Minner appointed director of public programs at the Arboretum
As a research and education arm of Harvard University and through its partnership with the Boston Park System, the Arnold Arboretum is strongly committed to offering lifetime learning opportunities to the public. To provide leadership in this arena, the Arboretum is pleased to announce that Daphne Minner has joined the staff as director of public…
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Popular South African street drug may contain HIV medication
A new study led by researchers at Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) calls attention to a new street drug being used in South Africa. Known as whoonga, the drug cocktail may combine HIV antiretroviral (ARV) medication with illicit drugs. Believed to be extremely addictive, whoonga appears to have a devastating impact on those who use…
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Libraries as cyber-classrooms: HarvardX expands access to library collections
“It gives one chills to see [Dickinson’s] original manuscripts—to be able to picture where her eccentric and significant dashes were originally placed,” said Elisa New, Powell M. Cabot Professor of American Literature. New’s HarvardX fall course, “Poetry in America,” will include several lectures filmed in Harvard libraries and feature items from libraries’ collections. HarvardX—launched in…
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‘Breeches, Bibles and Beauty Parlors’ — exhibition showcases Harvard student life through the ages
In 1915, when he was a senior, Harvard College student Richard Edward Connell wrote a libelous article in the Crimson about a piece in Boston American, a Hearst publication, resulting in a lawsuit. Yet the debacle brought the young writer to the attention of William Randolph Hearst, and eventually helped Connell get a job with…
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Genetic variant may increase heart disease risk among people with type 2 diabetes
A newly discovered genetic variant may increase the risk of heart disease in people with type 2 diabetes by more than a third, according to a study led by researchers at Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) and Joslin Diabetes Center. It is the first genome-wide association study (GWAS) to identify a novel genetic variant…
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Jane Mayer wins Nieman Foundation’s I.F. Stone Medal for Journalistic Independence
Investigative journalist, author and New Yorker staff writer Jane Mayer has been selected as winner of the 2013 I.F. Stone Medal for Journalistic Independence. The Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard will present the award on Sept. 28, 2013, during the foundation’s 75th anniversary weekend. Former Nieman Foundation curator Bill Kovach, chair of the advisory…
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SEAS dean appointed to DOE advisory board
Cherry A. Murray, dean of the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, has been appointed a member of the U.S. Secretary of Energy Advisory Board (SEAB). As one of the nineteen scientists, business executives, academics and former government officials on the independent advisory committee, Murray will provide advice and recommendations to Energy Secretary Ernest…
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(VIDEO) Harvard Humanitarian Initiative: Transforming humanitarian relief efforts
Humanitarian crises include conflicts and natural disasters that threaten civilian populations. Meeting the essential needs of these populations requires understanding crisis, and the best methods and tools for preparing and responding to crisis. Director Michael VanRooyen describes HHI’s mission: to relieve human suffering in war and disaster by advancing the science and practice of humanitarian…
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HSPH alumna named HIV/AIDS envoy to UN secretary-general
United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has named Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) alumna Speciosa Wandira-Kasibwe as his special envoy for HIV/AIDS in Africa. A surgeon who has played a key role in both public health and politics in Africa, Wandira-Kasibwe, SD ’09, is currently senior adviser to the president of Uganda on population and…
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Buckee named an ‘Innovator Under 35’
Caroline Buckee, assistant professor of epidemiology and associate director of the Center for Communicable Disease Dynamics at Harvard School of Public Health, has been named by MIT Technology Review as one of this year’s Innovators Under 35. The honor was announced August 21, 2013. Buckee’s work focuses on mining cell phone data to track how people’s movements correlate with…
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Calling all digital problem solvers
The Digital Problem-Solving Initiative (DPSI) at Harvard University is an innovative and collaborative project to be piloted in fall 2013, bringing together interested students, faculty, fellows, and staff. It will enable participants to work in teams on practicable and concrete digital use cases – problems and opportunities – across the University. The pilot offers students…
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Prostate cancer: To screen or not to screen?
For the past 25 years, a prostate cancer screening test called Prostate-Specific Antigen (PSA) has offered the hope of reducing deaths from prostate cancer by catching the disease early when cure is possible. But recent findings have raised concerns over whether the test’s potential to save some men’s lives is worth the side effects from…
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Suber and Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center collaborate to provide open access to Tibetan literature
Peter Suber, director of the Harvard Open Access Project (HOAP) and recently appointed director of the Harvard Library’s Office for Scholarly Communication (OSC), in conjunction with the Tibetan Buddhist Resource Center (TBRC)—headquartered in Harvard Square—has been working to provide global access to more than 17,000 volumes of Tibetan literature. Founded in 1999, the TBRC specializes…
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Jonathan Fisher Watercolors from Harvard Archives on display in Farnsworth Art Museum
Two watercolors from the Harvard University Archives by Jonathan Fisher, Harvard Class of 1795, are now on display at the Farnsworth Art Museum in Rockland, Maine. The exhibit, “A Wondrous Journey—Jonathan Fisher and the Making of Scripture Animals,” highlights Fisher’s curious mind and his multifaceted interests and talents as a minister, mathematician, linguist, teacher and…
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Science & Cooking lecture series returns to Harvard Sept. 9
Harvard’s famed Science & Cooking lecture series will return Sept. 9, bringing awe-inspiring gelées, mousses, emulsions—and perhaps even the perfect paella—to a hungry public. The weekly talks will feature world-class chefs and eminent food experts, including Wylie Dufresne, José Andrés, Ferran Adrià, Harold McGee, and many others. The kickoff event on Monday, Sept. 9, features…
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HarvardX course enrollments break the 500k mark
Based upon data gathered August 5-11, 2013, total enrollments for HarvardX courses (including past, current, and future offerings) exceeded 500,000. 509,294 to be exact. CS50x, “Introduction to Computer Programming,” remains the top enrolled course at nearly 160,000. ER22x, “Justice,” follows at nearly 70,000. The first two offerings from the Harvard School of Public Health—PH207x, “Health…