
In the News: August Media Mentions
Roundup of University of La Verne media mentions showcasing the university’s accolades, research, major happenings, and expertise.
Roundup of University of La Verne media mentions showcasing the university’s accolades, research, major happenings, and expertise.
This month’s newsworthy University of La Verne accolades showcase our university’s latest updates and happenings for the month of July.
Take a look at the exciting newsworthy accolades, updates, and happenings from the University of La Verne for the month of May.
The University of La Verne hosted the Council of Independent Colleges’ Network for Vocation in Undergraduate Education (NetVUE) Regional Gathering last week at the Abraham Campus Center.
The University of La Verne has been awarded a six-year educational grant from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s (HHMI) Inclusive Excellence 3 (IE3) initiative.
University of La Verne faculty and students will show their Leopard pride at the 2022 Los Angeles County Fair, which opens on May 5 and runs through Memorial Day weekend. The fair’s theme this year is “Back to our Roots,” which celebrates the 100th anniversary of the fair’s founding in 1922. Several university departments will have exhibits on display aligned with that theme.
The University of La Verne has received a donation of 14 historical folk-art sculptures from the Malgert Halpern and Irving Cohen family that depict Jewish life and culture in pre-World War II Ukraine and the United States.
The University of La Verne is one of six minority serving institutions (MSIs) across the United States selected to participate in Branch Alliance for Educator Diversity’s (BranchED) National Teacher Preparation Transformation Center. This partnership aims to produce highly effective and diverse teachers through immersion programming.
The University of La Verne’s Randall Lewis Center for Well-Being and Research has awarded its inaugural Randall Lewis Center for Well-Being and Research Faculty Research Fellowship to seven recipients.
Two University of La Verne professors have received a $389,000 grant to support their research into the effects of stress factors on osteoporosis, a disease that thins and weakens human bones.