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Two day residency program with Broadway Director Moritz von Stuelpnagel. Photo by Khun Minn Ohn '19.
Clemson University senior Mia Bowman, one of the first Clemson students to seek a Master’s degree through Clemson College of Education’s innovative Teacher Residency program, and teacher Kim Pauls share a laugh during an interview in their classroom at Riverside High School, Jan. 16, 2019. Teacher residencies are a research-based method to increase teacher retention and preparedness as well as student achievement. At the heart of Clemson’s residency program is the college’s combined degree option for undergraduate education students. This degree option replaces student teaching in a student’s final undergraduate semester with graduate education classes, and the following year is comprised of a year-round teacher residency. The residency program will see its graduates emerge after five years with both a bachelor’s and master’s degree in education as well as an extended, year-long student teaching experience. (Photo by Ken Scar)
OB/GYN Residency Program Graduation 2021. Courtesy photos of the JABSOM/UHP Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology & Women's Health.
OB/GYN Residency Program Graduation 2021. Courtesy photos of the JABSOM/UHP Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology & Women's Health.
OB/GYN Residency Program Graduation 2021. Courtesy photos of the JABSOM/UHP Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology & Women's Health.
Clemson University senior Mia Bowman, one of the first Clemson students to seek a Master’s degree through Clemson College of Education’s innovative Teacher Residency program, works with a student during her honors chemistry class at Riverside High School, Jan. 16, 2019. Teacher residencies are a research-based method to increase teacher retention and preparedness as well as student achievement. At the heart of Clemson’s residency program is the college’s combined degree option for undergraduate education students. This degree option replaces student teaching in a student’s final undergraduate semester with graduate education classes, and the following year is comprised of a year-round teacher residency. The residency program will see its graduates emerge after five years with both a bachelor’s and master’s degree in education as well as an extended, year-long student teaching experience. (Photo by Ken Scar)
Barry leads workshop participants into the writing experience by reciting a poem by Rumi.
On Saturday, March 3, 2012, Lynda Barry taught her “Writing the Unthinkable” workshop at Madison Museum of Contemporary Art as part of her artist residency at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
"A delightful method of writing that is accessible to anyone with a wish to write or remember."
Photo by Angela Richardson for UW Arts Institute
UW Arts Institute Interdisciplinary Arts Residency Program Spring 2011 artist-in-residence, Tad Gloeckler, participated in the Nelson Institute's fifth annual Earth Day conference at the New Union South on the University of Wisconsin-Madison campus, April 20th, 2011.
As part of a panel on "Innovation in Sustainable Design through the Arts," he deployed his installation SchoodicPeninsulaBlackDiabaseDikeTeaTable-withPopoverJamandButterDipPools. The work conceptually unites spectacular geology of black diabase dikes at Schoodic Peninsula with historical traditions of serving tea and popovers at nearby Mount Desert Island.
The product (a tea table) was informed by the landscape of Acadia National Park, and explores the often exploitative relationship that humans have to nature.
Photo by Angela Richardson, UW Arts Institute
Thirteen outstanding physicians graduated from OHSU Family Medicine Residency Program on Saturday, June 29, 2013. They are: Filza Akhtar, DO; Katie Chung, MD; Jamie Dailey, MD; Chris Faison, MD; Sarah Gilman-Short, MD; Greg Guffanit, MD; B.J. Lynch, MD; Bridget Lynch, MD; Sharlene Murphy, DO; Chris Nelson, MD; Sean Robinson, MD; Jordan Roth, MD; and Eric Shayde, MD. Congratulations!
Thirteen outstanding physicians graduated from OHSU Family Medicine Residency Program on Saturday, June 29, 2013. They are: Filza Akhtar, DO; Katie Chung, MD; Jamie Dailey, MD; Chris Faison, MD; Sarah Gilman-Short, MD; Greg Guffanit, MD; B.J. Lynch, MD; Bridget Lynch, MD; Sharlene Murphy, DO; Chris Nelson, MD; Sean Robinson, MD; Jordan Roth, MD; and Eric Shayde, MD. Congratulations!
Secretary Landgraf told the graduating class of the Delaware Psychiatry Residency Program on June 12 at Buena Vista that “I am gratified that you have spent your four years with us preparing to become psychiatrists with a focus on community psychiatry and public service.”
The program, which is coordinated through DHSS’ Delaware Psychiatric Center, has been existence since 1950. It is the only psychiatry program in Delaware that trains physicians to become psychiatrists. Last year, the residency program received more than 800 applicants for five slots.
Family members, friends, and colleagues celebrated the graduates of the Class of 2015:
Dr. Mustafa Mufti, who is joining the University of Pennsylvania’s Forensic Fellowship Program, and will continue to do work at DPC.
Dr. Adeel Nasir, who has accepted a Geriatric Psychiatry Fellowship at the University of Rochester.
Dr. Faria Khan, who will be working as an inpatient psychiatrist at Hampton Behavioral Health Center in Cherry Hill, N.J.
Dr. Fatima Siddiqui, who will join the Child Fellowship Program at Long Island Jewish Medical Center.
Dr. Iman Parhami, who will join the Child Fellowship Program at Johns Hopkins University.
In addition to their work at DPC, participants in the residency program also do work across the state in office-based settings, street-based outreach, home visits, an emergency psychiatry setting, and mental health clinic.
The residency program, which is directed by Dr. Imran Trimzi, has 14 slots. Two additional spots are expected to be funded soon. Many of the recent graduates have returned to practice in Delaware at some point in their professional careers, Dr. Trimzi said.
“My hope is that all of you will – at some point – come back to Delaware to practice,” Secretary Landgraf urged the graduates in her keynote address. “We need you here.”
We just announced the new 2015 Artists in residence! Visit our site and click on "Workshops + Residencies" for details.
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Two day residency program with Broadway Director Moritz von Stuelpnagel. Photo by Khun Minn Ohn '19.
Since 1960, thousands of artists, writers, scholars, and policymakers have held individual residencies at The Rockefeller Foundation’s Bellagio Center at Serbelloni. The Center has provided a creative and reflective space for Pulitzer Prize winners and Nobel Laureates. Tens of thousands of others have attended group conferences, addressing global challenges of every sort, from questions of international trade and finance to global public health, agriculture and food security, and population growth.
Secretary Landgraf told the graduating class of the Delaware Psychiatry Residency Program on June 12 at Buena Vista that “I am gratified that you have spent your four years with us preparing to become psychiatrists with a focus on community psychiatry and public service.”
The program, which is coordinated through DHSS’ Delaware Psychiatric Center, has been existence since 1950. It is the only psychiatry program in Delaware that trains physicians to become psychiatrists. Last year, the residency program received more than 800 applicants for five slots.
Family members, friends, and colleagues celebrated the graduates of the Class of 2015:
Dr. Mustafa Mufti, who is joining the University of Pennsylvania’s Forensic Fellowship Program, and will continue to do work at DPC.
Dr. Adeel Nasir, who has accepted a Geriatric Psychiatry Fellowship at the University of Rochester.
Dr. Faria Khan, who will be working as an inpatient psychiatrist at Hampton Behavioral Health Center in Cherry Hill, N.J.
Dr. Fatima Siddiqui, who will join the Child Fellowship Program at Long Island Jewish Medical Center.
Dr. Iman Parhami, who will join the Child Fellowship Program at Johns Hopkins University.
In addition to their work at DPC, participants in the residency program also do work across the state in office-based settings, street-based outreach, home visits, an emergency psychiatry setting, and mental health clinic.
The residency program, which is directed by Dr. Imran Trimzi, has 14 slots. Two additional spots are expected to be funded soon. Many of the recent graduates have returned to practice in Delaware at some point in their professional careers, Dr. Trimzi said.
“My hope is that all of you will – at some point – come back to Delaware to practice,” Secretary Landgraf urged the graduates in her keynote address. “We need you here.”
Two day residency program with Broadway Director Moritz von Stuelpnagel. Photo by Khun Minn Ohn '19.
Thirteen outstanding physicians graduated from OHSU Family Medicine Residency Program on Saturday, June 29, 2013. They are: Filza Akhtar, DO; Katie Chung, MD; Jamie Dailey, MD; Chris Faison, MD; Sarah Gilman-Short, MD; Greg Guffanit, MD; B.J. Lynch, MD; Bridget Lynch, MD; Sharlene Murphy, DO; Chris Nelson, MD; Sean Robinson, MD; Jordan Roth, MD; and Eric Shayde, MD. Congratulations!
Thirteen outstanding physicians graduated from OHSU Family Medicine Residency Program on Saturday, June 29, 2013. They are: Filza Akhtar, DO; Katie Chung, MD; Jamie Dailey, MD; Chris Faison, MD; Sarah Gilman-Short, MD; Greg Guffanit, MD; B.J. Lynch, MD; Bridget Lynch, MD; Sharlene Murphy, DO; Chris Nelson, MD; Sean Robinson, MD; Jordan Roth, MD; and Eric Shayde, MD. Congratulations!
Two day residency program with Broadway Director Moritz von Stuelpnagel. Photo by Khun Minn Ohn '19.
The guest artist of the CHB Residency artist residency program in 2018 is Ádám Albert. The Budapest-based artist was invited to Collegium Hungaricum Berlin in April-May 2018 to create a site-specific installation. The artwork, located on three different floors of the building, is a total installation titled ’The Gardener’s Truth’. The topic was inspired by 19th-Century physician Ignác Semmelweis, ’the saviour of mothers’.
Ádám Albert’s Berlin residency was supported by the Semmelweis Memorial Year Committee.
Photos: Barbara Antal
Secretary Landgraf told the graduating class of the Delaware Psychiatry Residency Program on June 12 at Buena Vista that “I am gratified that you have spent your four years with us preparing to become psychiatrists with a focus on community psychiatry and public service.”
The program, which is coordinated through DHSS’ Delaware Psychiatric Center, has been existence since 1950. It is the only psychiatry program in Delaware that trains physicians to become psychiatrists. Last year, the residency program received more than 800 applicants for five slots.
Family members, friends, and colleagues celebrated the graduates of the Class of 2015:
Dr. Mustafa Mufti, who is joining the University of Pennsylvania’s Forensic Fellowship Program, and will continue to do work at DPC.
Dr. Adeel Nasir, who has accepted a Geriatric Psychiatry Fellowship at the University of Rochester.
Dr. Faria Khan, who will be working as an inpatient psychiatrist at Hampton Behavioral Health Center in Cherry Hill, N.J.
Dr. Fatima Siddiqui, who will join the Child Fellowship Program at Long Island Jewish Medical Center.
Dr. Iman Parhami, who will join the Child Fellowship Program at Johns Hopkins University.
In addition to their work at DPC, participants in the residency program also do work across the state in office-based settings, street-based outreach, home visits, an emergency psychiatry setting, and mental health clinic.
The residency program, which is directed by Dr. Imran Trimzi, has 14 slots. Two additional spots are expected to be funded soon. Many of the recent graduates have returned to practice in Delaware at some point in their professional careers, Dr. Trimzi said.
“My hope is that all of you will – at some point – come back to Delaware to practice,” Secretary Landgraf urged the graduates in her keynote address. “We need you here.”
Two day residency program with Broadway Director Moritz von Stuelpnagel. Photo by Khun Minn Ohn '19.
Kate & Marian came to WSW in the fall of 2012 as part of our Ora Schneider regional artists Residency Program. They worked together in our papermaking studio creating sculptural paper pieces for an upcoming exhibition.
Two day residency program with Broadway Director Moritz von Stuelpnagel. Photo by Khun Minn Ohn '19.
Two day residency program with Broadway Director Moritz von Stuelpnagel. Photo by Khun Minn Ohn '19.
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Ferris Plock and Suzanne Husky have been busy in the San Francisco dump working hard on a body of work for the Recology Artist residency program.
While at the dump, painter and character illustrator Ferris Plock has continued to build on a recent body of work that incorporates elements of Japanese ukiyo-e prints and iconography from world religions with other motifs that hold personal...
Read the rest of the story here: www.warholian.com/?p=1726
All photos by Michael Cuffe for Warholian.com
The University of Louisville Internal Medicine Residency Program welcomed its new residents for the 2018-2019 academic year in a superhero themed orientation program at the Clinical & Translational Research Building on June 25, 2018.
Inside Story Festival & Symposium: Performance, Biography & Biology
December 4–12, 2010, Madison, Wisconsin, USA
A week of performances, films, workshops, presentations and seminars exploring the connections between biography and biology — the bodies we inhabit and the stories we tell about ourselves.
Featuring work from Helen Paris and Leslie Hill’s London-based theatre company, Curious, and students from their Autobiology course, as well as an international range of guest artists, speakers, and scholars including Lois Weaver, Suzanne Anker and Gretchen Schiller.
A program of the Arts Institute Interdisciplinary Arts Residency Program at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Print materials designed by Distillery
OB/GYN Residency Program Graduation 2021. Courtesy photos of the JABSOM/UHP Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology & Women's Health.
OB/GYN Residency Program Graduation 2021. Courtesy photos of the JABSOM/UHP Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology & Women's Health.
OB/GYN Residency Program Graduation 2021. Courtesy photos of the JABSOM/UHP Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology & Women's Health.
On May 21, Naval Medical Center Camp Lejeune's Clinical Investigations Department and Family Medicine Residency Program hosted the 11th Annual Research Symposium.
The annual symposium, which took place this year at Marston Pavilion aboard Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune, seeks to honor and showcase scholarly activity and exploration through the region. This year, there were a total of 33 poster and podium presentations from medical staff and residents from Marine Forces Special Operations Command, NMCCL, Womack Army Medical Center at Fort Bragg, and Naval Health Clinic Cherry Point.
The day began with guest speaker, Dr. Nita Lewis Shattuck, professor at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California.