Education

Coverage of schools from kindergarten through higher education, including trade and online training, and childcare.

U-M researcher selected as one of Popular Science’s “Brilliant 10”

It's impressive enough that Hashim Al-Hashimi is an accomplished chemist and biophysicist. Even more so that he's invented "nano-movies," a way of recording RNA and DNA activity. Now he's been listed as one of 2011's "Brilliant 10." His mother must be so proud. Excerpt: "Al-Hashimi himself has always been in motion. He was born in Lebanon just before its civil war, and his family escaped to Greece soon thereafter. They then lived in Italy, Jordan, Wales and England. Soon after he started his Ph.D. at Yale, a labmate visualized a protein called myoglobin and couldn’t fit it to any single 3-D configuration. To Al-Hashimi, it seemed obvious that the protein was moving—everything in biology moves—but at the time, most biologists did not realize the extent to which biological macromolecules were moving. He realized then that revealing molecular motion would be his focus." Read the rest of the story here. Maybe you're on the list. too. (You can dream, right?)

Latest in Education
HookLogic to leverage $9.5M VC investment into 35 jobs

HookLogic, a New York City-based software start-up, recently received a $9.5 million capital infusion from Bain Capital Ventures of Massachusetts, money that will go a long ways toward growing HookLogic's Ann Arbor office. HookLogic creates web-based software for a variety of industries. It deals mostly with delivery, management and measurement of customer incentives and promotional messaging for companies. It has hired 15 people over the last year, with half of its 60-person workforce in Ann Arbor. The software start-up plans to hire another 35 people, mostly in Ann Arbor, over the next several months thanks to Bain Capital Ventures' investment. "Ann Arbor is where we have most of our software developers and our production team and our automotive team," says Jonathan Opdyke, CEO of HookLogic. Despite having its headquarters in New York City, the firm has a long history with Ann Arbor. Opdyke received both his bachelors and masters degrees from the University of Michigan. Opdyke and his other two co-founders met while working at another start-up in Ann Arbor. "There is lots of Ann Arbor history in the mix," Opdyke says. Source: Jonathan Opdyke, CEO of HookLogic Writer: Jon Zemke Read more about Metro Detroit's growing entrepreneurial ecosystem at SEMichiganStartup.com.

EMU’s Pray-Harrold building rehab done and greener than ever

With school back in season, stat-happy football fans would do well to take note of the recycling numbers posted by Eastern Michigan University's Pray-Harrold building renovation project. The university is seeking Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) certification for the $42 million redo of the building used by 10,000 students a day, says Sean Braden, planning and design manager at EMU. This project was the biggest shake-up in the 1969-era building's structural history. Of the 1,200 tons of debris generated, 950 were diverted from the landfill, for a recycling rate in excess of 75%, according to Braden. Off to the recycling plant are 200 tons of masonry block; 30 tons of ceiling tiles; 15 tons of metal; and 3,163 lighting ballasts and 4,317 lamps. In shooting for LEED certification, Braden says, "A lot of our focus on this was in the recycling of debris created and just trying to use low-maintenance materials or those with recycled content." The new design includes recycled ceiling tiles, carpeting with recycled content, bamboo doors, low-flow plumbing fixtures, floor tiles made of a lower-hassle polymer composite as opposed to industry-standard vinyl composite, and a bamboo ceiling in the new glass-enclosed student commons area. The project design also called for using the vast majority of the existing walls and pre-existing layouts of the seven-story, 235,000-square-foot building whenever possible, he explains. "We didn't move every wall in the building; we kept what we could when we could." And vines will slowly be twining up the second through the fifth stories of its south wall. The intent of the green wall is to temper heating and cooling levels. "[The green wall] will absorb the rays of the sun rather than the building doing it and then from a storm water standpoint it will use some of the water that might otherwise have just been run-off." A determination on LEED status could take up to a year to receive from the U.S. Green Building Council, says Braden. Meanwhile, students who used to have to sit in hallways between classes are enjoying the new commons area. All 60 classrooms were redone, and two of the four auditoriums were converted from movie theater-style seating to seminar-style designs. "It's hard to pick one [standout] thing," Braden says. A Pray-Harrold building open house is set for September 20 at 10 a.m. in the new student commons area. Source: Sean Braden, planning and design manager at EMU Writer: Tanya Muzumdar

To become Chief Doctor, go to med school and get an MBA

Dual MBA / masters degree programs are very of the moment these days. (U-M's joint degree from the Ross School of Business and School of Natural Resources is a popular one.) Now the latest tagline you want after your name is an M.D. / M.B.A., according to the New York Times. They're still quite rare, but Dr. James Kuo, chief executive of Ann Arbor's Adeona Pharmaceuticals, has one. Get the full story here.

U-M researchers develop high-tech laser for acne treatment, body fat removal

Say there was a device that could magically melt fat and make acne disappear. Too good to be true? Not if you're a researcher at the University of Michigan. The university's School of Medicine has developed a laser that has the potential to melt fat without harming surrounding tissue and could be used to treat acne. The laser has a 1,708-nanometer, infrared beam that takes advantage of a unique wavelength that fat can absorb more efficiently than water. This allows it to penetrate skin with minimal harm on its way to reach and destroy deeper pockets of fat. It can also treat acne by targeting the oil-producing sebaceous glands, which are known to be involved in the development of the skin disease. "We basically tune our laser to optical wavelength so it resonates with certain tissues like fat, not with 85 percent of the other parts like water," says Mohammed Islam, professor of electrical engineering and internal medicine at U-M. Islam says the laser is still in development and is at least 18-24 months away from receiving FDA approval. To get to that point, the laser needs to raise commercialization funds to push forward further research and testing. Source: Mohammed Islam, professor of electrical engineering and internal medicine at the University of Michigan Writer: Jon Zemke Read more about Metro Detroit's growing entrepreneurial ecosystem at SEMichiganStartup.com.

U-M develops eerily human robotic legs

Let Concentrate be the first to welcome our soon-to-be robot masters. We always thought MABEL was so much more smarter and cuter than Skynet. Excerpt: "This is MABEL, a bipedal robot who currently resides in a lab at the University of Michigan. Although MABEL has no head and needs a guiding bar to navigate its tiny gymnasium, this jogging robot can maintain an eerily human 6.8-mile-per-hour strut." Read the rest of the story here. And be sure to watch the video here.

Ross School weighs in on News Corp scandal

In a fascinating Q&A with professor Lynn Perry Wooten, the Ross School's web site posts a discussion about corporate leadership and crisis management.Excerpt: "Yes. We all agree that breaking into voicemail and email is unethical. But as managers what matters is what we do about unethical behavior. You have to think about how you're going to correct the behavior, who will take the action steps, and how to make sure that behavior doesn't become institutionalized in the organization. What is going to be the change mechanism? When you think of the tabloid culture, they build a business model around getting the juicy story first. A lot of crises come from the competitive pressure of business models. When Toyota talks about their crisis, they talk about trying to compete to become the largest auto manufacturer in the world and then neglecting quality. "Read the rest here  

U-M students start Fetchnotes to ease digital workflow

Conventional wisdom says success is in the details. For Fetchnotes, its success lies in its notes. Digital notes. The brand spanking new start-up led by a couple of University of Michigan students is developing software that allows people to take and keep notes on a variety of computer platforms, such as laptops or smart phones. The idea is to take these random thoughts and integrate them into people's normal digital workflow. "I saw that myself and other people had this problem of capturing thoughts and ideas," says Alex Schiff, CEO and co-founder of Fetchnotes. "Other people had problems keeping track of tasks." The new software also allows users to organize and search for their random musings without copying and pasting or trying to otherwise manually jump computer platforms. The bottom line is Schiff and his partner, Chase Lee, plan to get these valuable thoughts out of the users' brains and into their everyday workflow with minimal work. Fetchnotes plans to roll out its software to early adopters this fall and begin beta testing shortly after that. It already has 1,000 people signed up and expects to have 500,000 users trying it for free within its first year and a small but significant percentage of those buying the premium version. "In the next year, we'd like to have 10,000 paying users," Lee says. Source: Alex Schiff and Chase Lee, co-founders of Fetchnotes Writer: Jon ZemkeRead more about Metro Detroit's growing entrepreneurial ecosystem at SEMichiganStartup.com.  

The Big House is Ann Arbor’s city within a city

Ann Arbor is the sixth-largest city in Michigan. On game weekends it becomes the eight... if you count The Big House as its own community. A Nebraska paper offers a good thumbnail history of the stadium that could be its own city.Excerpt:"Yost, who coached at Nebraska in the 1890s, pioneered the building project that broke ground in 1926 and opened Oct. 1, 1927 with a 33-0 victory over Ohio Wesleyan. And since a mid-season matchup against Indiana in 1975, every game has drawn a crowd of 100,000-plus to Michigan Stadium. They even had a hockey game — the Big Chill at the Big House last December — reel in six-digit attendance."Read the rest here 

U-M and city of Ann Arbor team up to pursue gigabit broadband networks

Blink and it's gone. Or maybe it's still coming. In a push to reach eye-opening speeds for broadband internet service, the University of Michigan and the city of Ann Arbor have joined Gig.U, a nationwide consortium of 29 universities pressing for the deployment of ultra high-speed networks to research universities and their home communities. We're talking networks with speeds in gigabits per second – 1,000 times faster than the megabits per second services commercially available.Gig.U, launched in late July, was fueled by the unprecedented public response to the Google Community Fiber competition, says Dan Atkins, the associate vice president for residential cyber infrastructure and W.K. Kellogg Professor of Community Information at the University of Michigan. Over 1,100 communities nationwide, including Ann Arbor, vied last year to be the recipients of an experimental one-gigabit broadband network. Just two – Kansas City, Kan. and Kansas City, Mo. – were chosen.This enthusiasm prompted Blair Levin, former staff director of the Federal Communications Commission's National Broadband Plan, to visit universities around the country to see whether this interest could be funneled into finding other sources to build these high-performance networks. The thinking went, as Atkins relates it, "Is there any way we can form a coalition to get additional resources to invest in more gigabit community experiments than the two that Google has?"Such powerful networks could be used in high definition video conferencing, for possible applications in the biomedical and telemedicine fields, and for information sharing between universities, Atkins says. And Gig.U sees them as a driver of economic growth and entrepreneurship in their neighboring communities, enabling advances made on campus to be applied offsite.Yet the fact that there's no crisp answer to the demand question is part of the problem of why gigabit speeds aren't yet a reality, according to Atkins. "This does have the flavor of a build it and they will come figure out what to do with it kind of thing." He coins the effort a "long shot". It's a 'Which comes first?' issue of entities like AT&T and Comcast wanting to know the demand before investing in such costly infrastructure. Gig.U is calling for private funding for this initiative."So the question is, is there any way that this coalition of universities could help break the chicken or the egg cycle... could they play a kind of a neutral convening ground that might even get an AT&T and Comcast and a Verizon or some others to come together and try some pilot projects, co-invest in some pilot projects to establish some additional gigabit communities beyond what Google is doing. And maybe a little bit of their incentive might be the fear of Google, of Google actually entering the gigabit network market and figuring out a business model for supporting gigabit networks before they do," he poses."The whole history of technology illustrates that when a fundamental capability is there, that people figure out how to use it and it quickly doesn't become enough," Atkins points out. He cites Thomas Watson, an early president of IBM, who speculated that at most six computers would be all the country would need. And, he adds, "The original backbone for the ARPANET, the thing that started the internet – the speed of that, the superhighway for that – was an order of magnitude slower than the network connection you have coming into your home."Google has made its awards, but that doesn't mean this gig is up. "There are some [entities] who've stepped forward to try to capitalize on the work and energy and the statements of interest and to find a way of getting resources for more communities to explore gigabit connectivity. Ann Arbor and the U-M are one of those," Atkins says. "And stand by for future developments."Sources: Dan Atkins, associate vice president for residential cyber infrastructure and W.K. Kellogg Professor of Community Information at the University of Michigan; Gig.UWriter: Tanya Muzumdar

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