Tenure Track Faculty Workshop on Tenure and Promotion

370 Jay Street, 12th Floor 370 Jay Street, New York, NY, United States

This workshop will be presented by Yao Wang, Director of Faculty Affairs at NYU Tandon, offers invaluable insights and guidance for faculty navigating the tenure process. Members of the Tenure and Promotions Committee will also be invited to take part in this session to share their lessons learned.

Thriving Interactions with Ph.D. Students and Postdocs

Explore the challenges faced by STEM Ph.D. students, focusing on mental health and aspirations. Learn strategies to enhance your role as an advisor, supervisor, and leader, emphasizing key principles like awareness, identity, empathy, motivation, and inclusivity. Gain practical guidance for fostering meaningful interactions with Ph.D. students and Postdocs.

NYU Ecosystem Hub Kickoff

370 Jay Street, Room 1201 370 Jay Street, New York, NY, United States

STEM Faculty come to celebrate and mingle at the NYU Ecosystem Hub Kickoff Event! Join us for an unforgettable kickoff event and panel discussion featuring renowned leaders: Jelena Kovačević, Dean of the NYU Tandon School of Engineering, Stacie Grossman Bloom, NYU Vice Provost for Research, and Lynne Kiorpes, Dean of the NYU Graduate School of Arts & Science. The Ecosystem Hub aims to advance inclusion, dialogue, and innovation among scientists of different genders, races, sexual orientations, and cultures.

🌟 JOURNEY INTO MOVEMENT Dance & Healing Practice with Sivgin Dalkilic 🌟

370 Jay Street, Room 233 370 Jay Street, New York, NY, United States

Join us for a transformative experience where we explore issues such as self-awareness, communication, and interpersonal interactions through the body and movement. This practice offers a safe space to deepen the body-mind connection in a creative approach, enabling us to practice embodied strategies that can improve personal and professional growth while building community bonds.

Round Table Discussion on Emotional Labor: Disparities among Genders at Work and Beyond

Kimmel Center Room 914 60 Washington Square South, New York, NY, United States

Join us for an insightful round table discussion exploring the theme of "Emotional Labor: Disparities among Genders at Work and Beyond." This crucial topic sheds light on the often unseen challenges individuals, particularly women, face in managing emotions and interactions in various settings.

Inaugural Keynote Session: Featuring Alberto Sangiovanni-Vincentelli 

370 Jay Street, Room 1201 370 Jay Street, New York, NY, United States

Join us for an enlightening keynote session with the renowned Dr. Alberto Sangiovanni-Vincentelli, a pioneer in electronic design automation and a leader in embedded systems and IoT. Innovation is the main engine of growth in advanced economies, and fostering it has been a focus for over 50 years. Dr. Sangiovanni-Vincentelli will explore what innovation truly means, how to cultivate it within universities, and the journey from seed ideas to multibillion-dollar enterprises. Drawing on his 40 years of experience, he will share personal insights, examples, and lessons learned in this dynamic field.

New York Nanoscience Discussion Group September 2024

An American Chemical Society New York Section Topical Group hosted by
The New York University’s Department of Chemistry, the Molecular Design Institute & NanoBioX and the CUNY Advanced Science Research Center
Refershments at 5:00; Science at 5:30

Effective Leadership: Exploring Context and Role

Hemmerdinger Hall 31 Washington Place, New York, United States

This interactive session of Ecosystem Effective Leadership program sets the frame for further sessions by focusing on what it takes to be effective as a leader.  Leadership is an activity not necessarily an attribute of an individual.  Ellen Schall, who has both studied and practiced leadership in multiple roles and contexts will help the group to explore how one might take up the work of leadership – and how each of us can begin to build a theory of how we can lead.   

Keynote Speaker Series: Jennifer Doudna

Tishman Auditorium 40 Washington Square South, New York, United States

Join us for a Keynote session by Dr. Jennifer Doudna, who received a Nobel Prize in Chemistry for her pioneering work in CRSIPR gene editing. Dr. Doudna will discuss CRISPR and the scientific and societal advances that will expand both the applications and impact of genome editing across the globe.

Allies for Gender Equity in STEM Workshops

Kimmel Center Room 914 60 Washington Square South, New York, NY, United States

The interactive workshops will explore workplace gender inequities experienced by female-identifying and non-binary faculty, often imposed by primarily male-identifying colleagues, and will empower all participants with tools to promote gender equity at NYU.

Allies for Gender Equity in STEM Workshops

1 MetroTech Center, Jacob's Seminar Room (1930/1931) 1 Metrotech Center, Brooklyn, United States

The interactive workshops will explore workplace gender inequities experienced by female-identifying and non-binary faculty, often imposed by primarily male-identifying colleagues, and will empower all participants with tools to promote gender equity at NYU.

Allies for Gender Equity in STEM Workshops

Kimmel Center Room 914 60 Washington Square South, New York, NY, United States

The interactive workshops will explore workplace gender inequities experienced by female-identifying and non-binary faculty, often imposed by primarily male-identifying colleagues, and will empower all participants with tools to promote gender equity at NYU.

Mimicking Nature: Controlling Charge, Heat, and Spin

1 MetroTech Center, Jacob's Seminar Room (1930/1931) 1 Metrotech Center, Brooklyn, United States

Paul S. Weiss, Ph.D. California NanoSystems Institute and Departments of Chemistry & Biochemistry, Bioengineering, and Materials Science & Engineering, UCLA Abstract:  Mimicking Nature: Controlling Charge, Heat, and Spin. One of the key advances in nanoscience and nanotechnology has been our increasing ability to reach the limits of atomically precise structures. By having developed the “eyes”...