Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
research program that will attract high caliber PhD- and MS-level graduate students. Possible areas of core expertise include, but are not limited to, hydrologic impacts to coastal environments and
-
Nursing Education (CCNE). The MS and DNP programs focus on preparation of Family Nurse Practitioners and Adult/Gerontological Nurse Practitioners. The major focus of the PhD in nursing program is on
-
financial management experience with all types of award mechanisms, including grants, contracts, subcontracts and cooperative agreements experience is required. Demonstrated knowledge of program
-
. Responsibilities include maintaining a research program leading to publications in high-quality journals, teaching courses at the undergraduate and graduate l evels in on-campus and online modalities, and providing
-
required; post-doctoral experience is preferred. The applicant will have the potential (or a demonstrated capability) to carry on an active, externally funded research program of international caliber and to
-
, sociology, psychology, demography, economics, social work, public health, or an interdisciplinary program. Applicants with terminal degrees in other fields will also be considered. UMass Boston is an urban
-
of the following fields: gerontology, nursing, sociology, psychology, demography, economics, social work, public health, or an interdisciplinary program. Applicants with terminal degrees in other fields will also be
-
to establish a highly productive, externally-funded, research program. Candidates whose scientific interests complement those of existing faculty within the Department and College, and who can develop cross
-
to university, college, departmental, and program committees, to professional associations, and to local, national, and/or international communities. The College recognizes that the scholarly work of faculty
-
mathematics, while promoting world class research that advances scientific, computational, and mathematical knowledge. Founded in 1964, UMass Boston, part of the University of Massachusetts system, is the only