https://www.fox.temple.edu/directory/subodha-kumar-tuh48280
Biography Subodha Kumar is the Paul R. Anderson Distinguished Chair Professor of Statistics, Operations, and Data Science and the Founding Director of the Center for Business Analytics and Disruptive Technologies at Temple University’s Fox School of Business. He has a secondary appointment in Information Systems. He also serves as the Concentration Director for Ph.D. Program in Operations ...
https://bulletin.temple.edu/courses/phil/
America once was envisioned by its colonizers as a new world, as a city upon a hill beckoning to humanity. After centuries of conquest, enslavement, immigration, and political struggle, conditions for sustaining this early vision continue to evolve. Explore the emergence of some of the most distinctive and influential American voices to inform our national debate about freedom, the individual ...
https://bulletin.temple.edu/courses/thtr/
Theater is a universal form of human expression - found in almost every society throughout history. We use it not only for entertainment, but also to explore the deepest questions about ourselves and our society. But do we know how it works? Can we identify the techniques that playwrights, actors, directors and designers use to create meaning on the stage? And what is unique about experiencing ...
https://law.temple.edu/contact/robert-j-reinstein/
Robert J. Reinstein has served Temple Law School with his global vision, thoughtful leadership and constant dedication for nearly 40 years, fulfilling administrative, managerial, and academic roles as Vice President of the University, Dean of Temple Law School, and Professor of Law. Professor Reinstein earned broad respect as Dean of the Law School from 1989 to 2008, spearheading many academic ...
https://commencement.temple.edu/sites/commencement/files/TU-Comm-Digital-Program-5-7-2024.pdf
Traditionally, the hood’s silk lining was the color of the university, and the color of the bordering velvet indicated the special area of study, still used today. White represents arts, letters and humanities; dark blue, philosophy; light blue, education; yellow, science; brown, fine arts; mustard, business; purple, law; dark green, medicine; lilac, dentistry; olive, pharmacy; pink, music ...
https://sites.temple.edu/ticlj/2001/04/04/volume-15-number-1-spring-2001/
Articles “Procedural Weakness” of German Criminal Justice and its Unique Exclusionary Rules Based on the Right of Personality Kuk Cho Multidisciplinary Practices and the Public Interest…
https://medicine.temple.edu/education/graduate-medical-education/residency-programs-fellowships/anesthesiology/residency-program/meet-our-residents
Categorical Interns (Class of 2028) Sundiata (Sunny) Annacius, DO Dr. Sundiata Annacius is a proud New Jersey native and first-generation Jamaican-American. She completed her undergraduate degree in Biology with a minor in African-American Studies at Montclair State University and earned a Master’s in Biomedical Sciences at Rutgers University in Newark, NJ. She attended the Philadelphia ...
https://bulletin.temple.edu/courses/econ/
Should the federal government more forcefully engage health care issues, or are its current obligations a hidden time bomb facing the federal budget? Should we be concerned about the outsourcing of U.S. jobs? Is the minimum wage too low, or will increases in the minimum simply lead to greater unemployment? Students will engage these and other pressing issues, write position papers advocating ...
https://sites.temple.edu/nsfcareerakt/files/2019/06/Ding_2016_MTL.pdf
ABSTRACT This study, focusing on inverse relations, examines how representative U.S. and Chinese elementary textbooks may provide opportunities to learn fundamental mathematical ideas. Findings from this study indicate that both of the U.S. textbook series (grades K-6) in comparison to the Chinese textbook samples (grades 1–6), presented more instances of inverse rela-tions, while also ...
https://bulletin.temple.edu/courses/amst/
You live in a country that possesses the world's strongest military forces. Up through the Vietnam War, Americans viewed military service in wartime as a basic obligation for all adult male citizens - the ultimate test of their patriotism and manhood - but a temporary sacrifice that ceased for most on the return of peace. Today, the American people have outsourced their awesome war-making ...