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UM Faculty Team Reimagines Arts Elective Intro to Music


UM Faculty Team Reimagines Arts Elective Intro to Music
January 15, 2021
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UM music faculty members meet via Zoom to discuss changes to one of the university’s core arts electives, Introduction to Music, focusing on how students experience music by building listening skills and critical thinking. They are (clockwise from top left) Nave Graham, instructor of flute; Christine Kralik, instructor of cello; David Carlisle; adjunct instructor of percussion; and Michael Rowlett, associate professor of music.
When Michael Rowlett put together a team of music faculty members at the University of Mississippi to rethink the basic arts elective MUS 103: Introduction to Music, he knew he wanted to find a way to connect the process of learning about music to his students’ experiences. ....

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Coronavirus: Black, Latino Americans are less confident about access to vaccine, treatment, study says


With a new shelter-in-place order in California, there are changes to Gov. Gavin Newsom s four-tier, color-coded classification system. Here s how the new system works.
The study also found that while 84% of white Americans have confidence they would receive the same life saving care as other groups, if diagnosed with COVID-19. That is true for 67% of Latinos and 64% of Black Americans. The roots are much deeper than the pandemic.
African Americans have years of the health care system using them inappropriately the Tuskegee experiment, the work of doctors during slavery, etc. etc., Carlisle said. Sterilization of women, even during our recent period of immigration challenges. ....

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In Dr. King's Honor, California Black Doctors Call for Urgent Action During COVID-19 Crisis


Martin Luther King Jr.
Three African American health leaders — advocates for expanded health care who are on the frontlines of the battle against COVID-19 raging across California — took a moment to reflect on the state of health care as the holiday honoring civil rights icon Martin Luther King Jr. approaches on Jan. 18.
Doctors David Carlisle, Elaine Batchlor and Adrian James are admirers of King and find his words of injustice in health care even more profound as hospitals and clinics are overflowing with COVID-19 patients — many of them African Americans and other people of color.
“On the day that we celebrate the great civil rights icon’s birthday, Dr. King’s sentiment has never been more relevant than today, as the pandemic has laid bare the great health inequities that remain in this country,” said Dr. Carlisle, president and CEO of Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science in Los Angeles. “COVID-19’s dispr ....

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Covered California Partnered with Black Healthcare Leaders to Host Webinar that Encouraged the Black Community to Get Vaccinated and Get Covered - Los Angeles Sentinel


 
Covered California Partnered with Black Healthcare Leaders to Host Webinar that Encouraged the Black Community to Get Vaccinated and Get Covered
By Saybin Roberson, Contributing Writer
Published December 24, 2020
Top Row: Executive Director of Covered California, Peter V. Lee and Dr. David Carlisle, president, and CEO of Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science
Bottom Row: Dr. Adrian James, CMO of West Oakland Health Council and Dr. Elaine Batchlor, CEO of Martin Luther King, Jr. Community Hospital
As the year ends and Californians prepare for the next year, officials are working day and night to ensure 2021 is a change of reality for nearly everyone. To help get things back to normal, Covered California partnered with Black healthcare leaders to form a message urging California residents to get COVID-19 vaccinations and for those in need to get health insurance for the upcoming year. ....

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Are You Confident in a COVID-19 Vaccine?


Dorothy Sauser-Monnig, of St. Paul, Minn., considers a COVID-19 vaccine her ticket to travel again. David Bakke, of Atlanta, said no to the flu vaccine in the past, but he got that shot this year and intends to get the coronavirus vaccine. Carol Gee, of Atlanta, is a bit more cautious, but she hopes the COVID-19 vaccine will offer protection against the potentially serious complications the virus could cause for her and her husband, both of whom suffer from type 2 diabetes.
Credit: Adobe
Sauser-Monnig, Bakke and Gee, all over 50, are among the growing number of Americans who are expressing cautious enthusiasm for the coming wave of COVID-19 vaccines. The percentage of Americans who say they intend to get vaccinated is now over 80% up from 51% in September a new poll from ABC News/Ipsos reveals. ....

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