Year: 2012

  • Study Reveals Effects of Different Teaching Styles on Learning New Words

    Study Reveals Effects of Different Teaching Styles on Learning New Words

    Researchers at Peabody College are studying how people learn new words in hopes of determining optimal interventions for children who struggle with reading. A new educational neuroscience study offers clues on reading and plasticity in the brain that could lay the foundation for more targeted investigations of what types of… Read More

    Nov 16, 2012

  • Vanderbilt University

    New faculty: Cathy Ivory is committed to nursing science and research

    Cathy Ivory is conducting foundational research work in perinatal nursing informatics and introducing master’s students to the world of nursing informatics. Read More

    Nov 16, 2012

  • Former Teachers’ Return to Classroom Feeds Workforce; Gender Differences Prevalent

    Former Teachers’ Return to Classroom Feeds Workforce; Gender Differences Prevalent

    Former teachers may be an important source for the teacher labor supply, with as many as 30 percent of this population re-entering the field at some point, but who is most likely to return to the classroom after a hiatus? New research from Peabody College examines what factors affect teachers’… Read More

    Nov 16, 2012

  • Vanderbilt University

    New faculty: Jaco Hamman connects theology and practice

    The Rev. Jaco Hamman’s decision to avoid the draft for the South African military, which was responsible for enforcing apartheid, propelled his 1993 move from his native country to the United States, where work as a hospital chaplain shaped his career. Read More

    Nov 16, 2012

  • Sustaining, ‘Scaling Up’ Effective Practices of Urban High Schools Focus of Research

    Sustaining, ‘Scaling Up’ Effective Practices of Urban High Schools Focus of Research

    Tom Smith The National Center on Scaling Up Effective Schools at Peabody College announced in September the next phase of their partnership with Broward County Public Schools to study and “scale up” effective practices of these Florida high schools. As part of an ongoing, five-year study funded by the U.S. Read More

    Nov 16, 2012

  • Peabody Again Ranked Top Graduate Education School

    Peabody Again Ranked Top Graduate Education School

    Vanderbilt’s Peabody College of education and human development maintained its No. 1 national ranking for the fourth consecutive year in the U.S. News & World Report annual ranking of graduate schools of education. Peabody has topped the rankings, selected through statistical indicators and expert opinions, since 2009. Its administration/supervision and… Read More

    Nov 16, 2012

  • Faculty Notes and Honors

    Faculty Notes and Honors

    Ellen Goldring Kimberly Bess, assistant professor of human and organizational development, won the 2012 Harold Love Outstanding Community Involvement Award from the Tennessee Higher Education Commission. Laurie Cutting, Patricia and Rodes Hart Associate Professor of Special Education, was appointed to the Language and Communication Study Section of the Center for… Read More

    Nov 16, 2012

  • Emmy statuette

    TV News Archive to receive Regional Emmy Governor’s Award

    Vanderbilt University was nominated for four regional Emmys Nov. 15, and the MidSouth Chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences announced that Vanderbilt's TV News Archive will receive the Governor’s Award for Lifetime Achievement. Read More

    Nov 16, 2012

  • Three Peabody Faculty Members Named AERA Fellows

    Three Peabody Faculty Members Named AERA Fellows

    Richard Lehrer The American Educational Research Association in March selected three Peabody College faculty members to be AERA Fellows. Lynn Fuchs, Richard Lehrer and Joseph Murphy are among 36 scholars nationwide named to the 2012 class in recognition of their exceptional scientific or scholarly contributions to education research or significant… Read More

    Nov 16, 2012

  • Murphy Wins Lifetime Achievement Award for Scholarship In Educational Administration

    Murphy Wins Lifetime Achievement Award for Scholarship In Educational Administration

    Joseph Murphy Vanderbilt University professor Joseph Murphy won The 2011 Roald F. Campbell Lifetime Achievement Award from the University Council for Educational Administration (UCEA). The Campbell Award recognizes senior professors in the field of educational administration whose professional lives have been characterized by extraordinary commitment, excellence, leadership, productivity, generosity and… Read More

    Nov 16, 2012

  • Vanderbilt University

    Green tea for failing hearts?

    The main antioxidant compound in green tea increases contractile force in isolated heart cells, suggesting it may be useful in heart failure. Read More

    Nov 16, 2012

  • (iStockphoto)

    Campus Dining and libraries modify hours over Thanksgiving

    (iStockphoto) Most Vanderbilt schools are observing a break from classes Nov. 17-25 for the Thanksgiving holiday. Residence halls close at 9 a.m. Saturday, Nov. 17, and reopen at 9 a.m. Sunday, Nov. 25. Classes resume Monday, Nov. 26. Campus Dining locations and all Vanderbilt libraries will modify their hours… Read More

    Nov 15, 2012

  • Vanderbilt University

    Sharfstein awarded 2012 Cromwell book prize

    Daniel J. Sharfstein has received the 2012 Cromwell Book Prize for The Invisible Line: Three American Families and the Secret Journey from Black to White, published in 2011 by Penguin Press. Read More

    Nov 15, 2012

  • About Ideas in Action

    About Ideas in Action

    Dean Camilla P. Benbow camilla.benbow@vanderbilt.edu Editor Kurt Brobeck, Director of Communications
 kurt.brobeck@vanderbilt.edu Contributors Camilla P. Benbow, Kara Furlong, Greer Kelly, Melanie Moran, Jim Patterson, Bill Snyder, Jennifer Wetzel Photography Daniel Dubois, Steve Green, Wolf Hoffmann, Jenny Mandeville, Anne Rayner, John Russell, Ting… Read More

    Nov 15, 2012

  • Vanderbilt University

    Harrod Lecture: “Unions, Politics and Inequality: Putting Christian Ethics to Work”

    Watch video of Melissa Snarr, a Vanderbilt University Divinity School professor who studies the intersection of religion, social change and political ethics, delivering the 2012 Howard L. Harrod Lecture. Snarr, associate dean for academic affairs and associate professor of ethics and society, addressed “Unions, Politics and Inequality: Putting Christian Ethics to… Read More

    Nov 15, 2012

  • kids in class

    AL.com: Birmingham Education Foundation summit outlines challenges and opportunities for city schools

    The first school system"report card" the Birmingham Education Foundation released Thursday is the product of the two-year-old organization's efforts to qualify and quantify the challenges and opportunities of the Birmingham City Schools system. In the last year, two graduate students from Vanderbilt University's Peabody College of Education have distilled more than 14,000 complaints and suggestions that more than 2,000 residents and parents gave at 125 community meetings and focus groups. Read More

    Nov 15, 2012

  • coupons

    Holiday sale backlash: Do consumers think cheap prices mean cheap products?

    Vanderbilt research looks at how consumers value products based on price and popularity. Read More

    Nov 15, 2012

  • Peabody Welcomes New Faculty for 2012-13

    Peabody Welcomes New Faculty for 2012-13

    Melissa Gresalfi Department of Leadership, Policy and Organizations Gary Henry, professor of public policy and education, coming from UNC-Chapel Hill Rachel Robinson, lecturer, coming from Innova8tive Consulting and Hospital Corporation of America Kay Stafford, lecturer, coming from Metropolitan Nashville Public Schools Department of Psychology and Human Development Joe Rodgers,… Read More

    Nov 15, 2012

  • Chancellor Nicholas S. Zeppos (left) moderated a discussion with Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health, at the Global South Summit Nov. 14. (Steve Green/Vanderbilt)

    American innovation is at ‘inflection point,’ Zeppos says at Global South Summit

    Science is on the verge of any number of breakthroughs just as it faces massive cutbacks in federal money because of the federal budget deficit, Chancellor Nicholas S. Zeppos told attendees of the Global South Summit. Read More

    Nov 15, 2012

  • Dan Roden, Jeff Balser and Raymond Dubois at the Global South Summit Nov. 14. (Steve Green/Vanderbilt)

    Balser, Roden discuss personalized medicine at Global South Summit

    L-r: Raymond DuBois, Jeff Balser and Dan Roden. (Steve Green/Vanderbilt) “Personalized medicine—the effort to tailor health care to understand individual patients’ needs, genetic profiles and circumstances—is a big emphasis at the Vanderbilt University Medical Center,” said Jeff Balser, vice chancellor for health affairs and dean of… Read More

    Nov 15, 2012