College of Education, Health and Human Services
Kent State's College of Education, Health and Human Service Hosts Second Class of Summer Institute for Diverse Graduate Students
Kent State University鈥檚 College of Education, Health and Human Services welcomes its second class of the Summer Experience for Emerging Diverse Scholars (SEEDS) program on June 17. The SEEDS program promotes graduate education within the college to prospective graduate students of diverse background鈥
Kent Campus
Kent State Hosts Swedish Psychiatrist Harald Blomberg at Rhythmic Movement Training Symposium
Swedish psychiatrist Harald Blomberg, M.D., will share his work, Rhythmic Movement Training (RMT), at a symposium hosted by Kent State University鈥檚 College of Education, Health and Human Services from July 21-28. RMT has been successful since the 1980s in improving emotional functioning, reading and鈥
Kent Campus
Video Conferencing Connects Kent State to Students in Rural School Districts
In an office nestled inside Kent State University鈥檚 Nixson Hall, you can hear the voice of a third grade student coming from a computer screen. 鈥淏each ball,鈥 says the voice from Greenfield Exempted Village Schools in Greenfield, Ohio. Soon after, in the screen directly below, Kent State gradua鈥
Kent Campus
Mark Kretovics to Serve as Interim Dean of Kent State鈥檚 College of Education, Health and Human Services
Mark Kretovics, Ph.D., associate professor of higher education administration and student personnel at Kent State University and a resident of Kent, Ohio, has been named interim dean of the College of Education, Health and Human Services, effective July 1, 2015. Todd Diacon, Kent State鈥檚 se鈥
College of Education, Health and Human Services
Mark Kretovics to Serve as Interim Dean of Kent State鈥檚 College of Education, Health and Human Services
Mark Kretovics, Ph.D., associate professor of higher education administration and student personnel at Kent State University and a resident of Kent, Ohio, has been named interim dean of the College of Education, Health and Human Services, effective July 1, 2015. Todd Diacon, Kent State鈥檚 se鈥
Mark Kretovics to Serve as Interim Dean of Kent State鈥檚 College of Education, Health and Human Services
The First Group of Students With Intellectual Disabilities Gets Ready to Graduate From Kent State鈥檚 Career and Community Studies Program
Maddie Morsefield is like any other high-achieving college senior at Kent State University. She is a straight-A student. Her r茅sum茅 is filled with work experience and awards, and she is going through mock interviews to help her land that first job. But what makes Morsefield extra special is that sh鈥
Kent Campus
Kent State to Help Akron Students Earn College Credit Without Leaving High School
Reading, writing and arithmetic are getting a college-styled makeover in two Akron, Ohio, high schools. Through a $480,000 grant from the Great Lakes Higher Education Guaranty Corporation, the partnership called College Today will send Kent State University instructors into Ellet High Schoo鈥
Kent Campus
Kent State High-Tech Classroom Fosters Research
At first glance, it looks like a typical classroom. But if you look closer, you will see a state-of-the-art, one-of-a-kind teaching facility not found on any other college campus. It is called the AT&T Classroom, located on the bottom floor of Kent State University鈥檚 Moulton Hall. The classro鈥
Research Center for Educational Technology (RCET)
Kent State Presents 鈥淟iving With Autism鈥 Events for Autism Awareness Month
As part of Autism Awareness Month in April, Kent State University presents 鈥淟iving With Autism,鈥 which kicks off with a presentation that will be followed by a fundraiser for student scholarships to benefit Kent State students studying autism spectrum disorder (ASD). The events begin on April 9 at 7鈥
Kent Campus
Kent State鈥檚 Speech-language Therapy Services Provided to 100 Rural Students Via Video Conferencing
Rural and underserved Ohio students are able to receive speech-language therapy services through Kent State University via an innovative online videoconferencing system. More than 100 children enrolled in preschool through high school with identified communication impairments from Montpelier Exempte鈥
Kent Campus