当!当!当! 做游戏 88伪币奖励 (转载)# Biology - 生物学
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Who is next? NCSU?
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Boston University has joined the Association of American Universities (AAU),
an elite organization of 61 leading research universities in the United
States and Canada. BU, one of only 4 universities invited to join the group
since 2000, becomes the 62nd member. In the Boston area, only Harvard, MIT,
and Brandeis are also members.
Hunter R. Rawlings III, president of the AAU, announced Monday morning that
President Robert A. Brown had accepted the association’s invitation.
Rawlings says the decision to extend the invitation was based on an in-depth
review of the University’s research and academic programs.
“Boston University is an outstanding institution,” says Rawlings. “It
belongs in the AAU by virtue of the strength of its research and academic
programs. AAU universities play an essential role in America’s research
enterprise and in educating the nation’s young scientists, engineers, and
scholars. Boston University is a welcome addition to the ranks of these
leading research universities.”
Brown says he is very pleased to have the University join the AAU. “It’s
gratifying for Boston University to receive this recognition for the quality
of our education and research programs,” he says. “We look forward to
participating with the AAU membership in helping guide the future of
research universities in the United States as a critical resource for
American leadership in higher education, knowledge creation, and innovation.”
Membership in the organization is by invitation only, and is based on
several criteria: the quality of programs of academic research and
scholarship; undergraduate, graduate, and professional education in a number
of fields; and general recognition that a university is outstanding by
reason of the excellence of its research and education programs. A
membership committee of AAU presidents and chancellors periodically reviews
universities for AAU membership; institutions recommended for membership
must be approved by a three-fourths vote of the membership.
“Boston University’s admission to the AAU is first and foremost an
acknowledgment of the quality and productivity of our outstanding faculty,”
says Jean Morrison, University provost and chief academic officer. “They
are making fundamentally important contributions in disciplines ranging from
the humanities and social sciences to the natural sciences, engineering,
and medicine. But in addition to the strength of our faculty, this
recognition is a testament to the exceptional leadership of our president,
Bob Brown. The results of his transformative leadership are coming to
fruition, and the University’s admission into the AAU is one of the very
significant tangible results.”
Since his arrival at BU in 2005, Brown has made research a priority,
recruiting and developing faculty in the sciences, engineering, social
sciences, and humanities. In the past year alone, the University hired 53
new faculty members on the Charles River Campus, including 15 for newly
created positions, and 48 new faculty on the Medical Campus. In fiscal 2012,
BU received $348.4 million in research awards, one of several criteria
considered in the AAU admissions process.
Recent research awards include $10 million from the National Institutes of
Health to establish an Autism Center of Excellence under the leadership of
Helen Tager-Flusberg, a College of Arts & Sciences professor of psychology,
and $2 million from the same agency to help graduate students and
postdoctoral fellows develop diagnostic and therapeutic tools for various
types of cancer.
The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation has also recognized the promise of BU
research. In 2009, it awarded $8.5 million to the Center for Global Health &
Development, operating under the umbrella of the School of Public Health
and the leadership of Jonathon Simon, Robert A. Knox Professor and chair of
international health, to explore inexpensive ways to decrease neonatal
mortality in Zambia. The foundation also funded an effort by James Collins,
a William Fairfield Warren Distinguished Professor and College of
Engineering professor of biomedical engineering, to explore a novel approach
to cholera prevention, and research by Muhammad Zaman, an ENG associate
professor of biomedical engineering, to find better ways to detect
counterfeit drugs in Africa and Asia.
The depth and breadth of research at BU has also enhanced the undergraduate
experience, enabling students to participate in cutting-edge projects. In
April, Morrison doubled the annual funding, to more than $1 million, for the
Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program, which has supported the work
of more than 1,500 students since 1997.
“Joining the AAU is a recognition of the national prominence of our faculty
and our research,” says Brown. “A major impact is that this allows us to
participate in all kinds of endeavors with like-minded institutions. It
gives us a seat at the table, and that will help this institution enormously
.”
--------------------
Boston University has joined the Association of American Universities (AAU),
an elite organization of 61 leading research universities in the United
States and Canada. BU, one of only 4 universities invited to join the group
since 2000, becomes the 62nd member. In the Boston area, only Harvard, MIT,
and Brandeis are also members.
Hunter R. Rawlings III, president of the AAU, announced Monday morning that
President Robert A. Brown had accepted the association’s invitation.
Rawlings says the decision to extend the invitation was based on an in-depth
review of the University’s research and academic programs.
“Boston University is an outstanding institution,” says Rawlings. “It
belongs in the AAU by virtue of the strength of its research and academic
programs. AAU universities play an essential role in America’s research
enterprise and in educating the nation’s young scientists, engineers, and
scholars. Boston University is a welcome addition to the ranks of these
leading research universities.”
Brown says he is very pleased to have the University join the AAU. “It’s
gratifying for Boston University to receive this recognition for the quality
of our education and research programs,” he says. “We look forward to
participating with the AAU membership in helping guide the future of
research universities in the United States as a critical resource for
American leadership in higher education, knowledge creation, and innovation.”
Membership in the organization is by invitation only, and is based on
several criteria: the quality of programs of academic research and
scholarship; undergraduate, graduate, and professional education in a number
of fields; and general recognition that a university is outstanding by
reason of the excellence of its research and education programs. A
membership committee of AAU presidents and chancellors periodically reviews
universities for AAU membership; institutions recommended for membership
must be approved by a three-fourths vote of the membership.
“Boston University’s admission to the AAU is first and foremost an
acknowledgment of the quality and productivity of our outstanding faculty,”
says Jean Morrison, University provost and chief academic officer. “They
are making fundamentally important contributions in disciplines ranging from
the humanities and social sciences to the natural sciences, engineering,
and medicine. But in addition to the strength of our faculty, this
recognition is a testament to the exceptional leadership of our president,
Bob Brown. The results of his transformative leadership are coming to
fruition, and the University’s admission into the AAU is one of the very
significant tangible results.”
Since his arrival at BU in 2005, Brown has made research a priority,
recruiting and developing faculty in the sciences, engineering, social
sciences, and humanities. In the past year alone, the University hired 53
new faculty members on the Charles River Campus, including 15 for newly
created positions, and 48 new faculty on the Medical Campus. In fiscal 2012,
BU received $348.4 million in research awards, one of several criteria
considered in the AAU admissions process.
Recent research awards include $10 million from the National Institutes of
Health to establish an Autism Center of Excellence under the leadership of
Helen Tager-Flusberg, a College of Arts & Sciences professor of psychology,
and $2 million from the same agency to help graduate students and
postdoctoral fellows develop diagnostic and therapeutic tools for various
types of cancer.
The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation has also recognized the promise of BU
research. In 2009, it awarded $8.5 million to the Center for Global Health &
Development, operating under the umbrella of the School of Public Health
and the leadership of Jonathon Simon, Robert A. Knox Professor and chair of
international health, to explore inexpensive ways to decrease neonatal
mortality in Zambia. The foundation also funded an effort by James Collins,
a William Fairfield Warren Distinguished Professor and College of
Engineering professor of biomedical engineering, to explore a novel approach
to cholera prevention, and research by Muhammad Zaman, an ENG associate
professor of biomedical engineering, to find better ways to detect
counterfeit drugs in Africa and Asia.
The depth and breadth of research at BU has also enhanced the undergraduate
experience, enabling students to participate in cutting-edge projects. In
April, Morrison doubled the annual funding, to more than $1 million, for the
Undergraduate Research Opportunities Program, which has supported the work
of more than 1,500 students since 1997.
“Joining the AAU is a recognition of the national prominence of our faculty
and our research,” says Brown. “A major impact is that this allows us to
participate in all kinds of endeavors with like-minded institutions. It
gives us a seat at the table, and that will help this institution enormously
.”