Media Coverage

Dec 13, 2017

In the New York Times article, “Tending Haiti’s Dead: Everybody Needs Someone to Bury Them,” NYIT College of Osteopathic Medicine (NYITCOM) alum, Rev. Richard Frechette (D.O. ’98), is featured among the inspiring volunteers providing medical relief and dignified burials to victims.

The article details Frechette's accounts of caring for victims during times of violent political upheaval, as well as his decision to pursue a medical degree at the age of 40. His choice to become a physician came while establishing a Christian orphanage in the early 1990s, during which time Frechette noted a remarkable lack of available medical supplies and healthcare providers for sick and injured children. “I couldn’t find anyone to treat them. We couldn’t find gauze. I swore I wouldn’t be in that situation again,” he states.

 

Beheshti Quoted in Gizmodo on History and Impacts of Wireless Tech

Dec 12, 2017

Gizmodo recently quoted Babak Beheshti, Ph.D., associate dean of the School of Engineering and Computing Sciences, in an article regarding the history and advancement of wireless technology. In the article, Beheshti who helped to develop 3G technology, comments on the social consequences of 4G wireless technology:

“With 3G, for the first time you had a larger bandwidth and reasonable data rates to support meaningful experiences for the user, the idea that internet access would become possible arrived with 3G. With 4G, we’re looking at data rates up to 100 mbps, already a 30-fold increase over 3G, and a much more integrated web. In terms of impact to consumers and to society, we have become much more tethered to our work and the outside world by having constant internet connectivity.”

 

Hampton Op-ed Publishes in Washington Post Blog

Dec 12, 2017

College administrators could use existing data to identify at-risk students to intervene and help them stay in school, according to Mark C. Hampton, vice president for planning, analytics, and decision support, in an op-ed published by Grade Point, an education blog of The Washington Post. Imagine the insights colleges could glean from a broad array of data that could help identify struggling students before they drop out, he writes.  

Some might worry about colleges collecting and analyzing these kinds of data about students, but they already give information about their social activities and locations to companies like Facebook and Google -- which sell that data for a profit. Colleges and universities could promise to only collect data that has a tangible connection to students' academic and social success, he suggests.

Formalizing standards in a code of ethics would make students comfortable with increased data collection and make colleges accountable for the appropriate use of these data. “Private companies and non-profit organizations already employ Big Data to drive sales and predict consumer behavior. It's about time colleges apply these same technologies to help students stay in school and reach their full potential,” Hampton concludes.

 

Dec 06, 2017

The new NYIT cybersecurity lab in Harry J. Schure Hall received media attention in The Island Now, an online news source affiliated with several Long Island newspapers, including The Roslyn Times and The Manhasset Press. In the article, Nada Anid, Ph.D., dean, School of Engineering and Computing Sciences, discusses the ways in which this new facility will prepare future cybersecurity professionals to combat threats. Anid emphasizes the need for a strong supply of workers within this field, as threats are invisible and can affect a wide range of users, stating:

“It’s ubiquitous. It can affect private individual users and it can affect entire institutions. We heard about breaches to the Pentagon and Sony and Yahoo and Uber. Every month we hear about a new breach. These are all very costly attacks to our institutions, whether they’re government or a corporation. It’s a threat that is hidden and we can’t see.”

 

Raven Op-ed Publishes in Forbes.com

Dec 05, 2017

In an op-ed published in Forbes.com, Jeffrey Raven, associate professor, NYIT School of Architecture and Design and director of NYIT’s M.S. in Architecture, Urban and Regional Design, stresses the importance of urban design in helping people adapt to a warming climate. In the article, To Curb Climate Change, Cities Need the Right Design, he explains that the only way to ensure that cities remain livable is for mayors and urban leaders—together with urban designers—to simultaneously cut emissions and help residents adapt to a warming planet.

“Cities that embrace ‘adaptive mitigation’—those that reduce CO2 emissions while also helping their residents adapt to a changing climate—are better positioned to remain livable in the years ahead,” Raven writes.

Two-thirds of the world’s population is expected to live in cities by 2050. Most of the urban spaces they’ll inhabit have yet to be designed. So the urban design decisions made today will have extraordinary consequences on our climate for generations.

“But they’ll also affect the culture and way of life for the planet’s growing urban population. As mayors and urban leaders plan for a warming planet, they shouldn’t forget that, above all, cities are for living,” Raven concludes.

 

Newsday Quotes Hampton on International Enrollment

Nov 14, 2017

In response to the 2017 Open Doors report issued by the Institute of International Education, Mark Hampton, Ph.D., interim vice president, Enrollment Management, discusses international enrollment trends in Newsday (subscription required). Hampton emphasizes NYIT's position as an educational hub for international students, stating:

“We are a significant enroller of international students. This is a big part of our business. It’s something we have embraced but are managing very cautiously.”

 

Nov 10, 2017

Cancer research by NYITCOM's Dong Zhang, Ph.D., has been featured in Managed Health Care Executive, a publication which reaches an audience of senior key decision-makers in clinical and non-clinical managed care organizations and health systems. In the article, titled, “Four Oncology Treatment Advances to Watch,” Zhang explains his recent findings on ALT cancers, including breast and ovarian cancers, and why precision oncology will be the future of cancer treatment.

 

Misak Explains the Storytelling Benefits of Video Games on The Academic Minute

Nov 03, 2017

In the November 3 segment of The Academic Minute, assistant professor of English and director of Technical Communication, John Misak, examines how video games can improve student storytelling and writing skills, noting that many of today’s video games parallel the greatest literature in history, with an added immersive experience.

As Misak states, “Having students play video games or even watch YouTube videos of games can provide visual learners with a critical eye toward other works of narrative, including literature and film. Students learn differently, and for visual learners it’s often a matter of ‘don’t tell me, show me’. Science now backs this up; new research has also shown that video games directly engage the hippocampus, the part of the brain thought to be the center of emotion and memory, and impart environmental enrichment to players.”

 

Marketing Professor Talks Credit Cards and College Students

Nov 03, 2017

School of Management Associate Professor Veneta Sotiropoulos is featured discussing credit cards for college students in a recent WalletHub post. Answering questions about introducing students to credit cards, Sotiropoulos says, “Credit literacy should be a requirement for college students, or anybody else, to get their first credit card. Credit literacy should focus on generating awareness of the components that make up a person's credit score, as well as what constitutes risky credit card behavior that leads to credit card mismanagement.”

 

CAS Adjunct Professor Cited on Executive Communications

Nov 02, 2017

NYIT adjunct professor of communication arts William Scheckel is cited in The Economist’s Executive Education Navigator in a story about wielding influence in an environment of digital distractions. Scheckel advises executives to “keep it brief, and make it sound like you, not your attorney.” Scheckel also recommends caution while trying to communicate humor. “No matter how funny you are in person, don’t assume everyone will get the joke, so explain it, use an emoji, or when in doubt, just don’t do it,” he warns.