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development. Students are offered opportunities, services, and activities that promote connectedness, diversity, inclusion and belonging. The Student Affairs team is comprehensive, collaborative, and supports
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students. Our amicus briefs and comment letters are routinely joined by public health and related research and professional organizations and as many as 500 individual amici. We also prepare blog posts
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goals; considering an applicant’s strengths and weaknesses and whether they are ready to apply for law school admissions; how to best prepare for the LSAT or GRE; identifying potential reach, target, and
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development. Students are offered opportunities, services, and activities that promote connectedness, diversity, inclusion, and belonging. The Student Affairs team is comprehensive and collaborative and
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affairs and one of the largest schools of international affairs in the United States. Located in the heart of Washington, D.C., its mission is to educate the next generation of international leaders
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• Developing software tools for analysis of data by other researchers either for specific projects or for specific computational methods (e.g., Shiny apps, R packages, etc.), as needed • Presenting results
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George Washington University | Washington, District of Columbia | United States | about 11 hours ago
Technology Law Clinic and a Small Business and Community Economic Development Clinic. The University and Law School have a strong commitment to preparing students to become resilient leaders who help shape
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, commitment, and respect; including the development and implementation of team standards. Identifies and recruits academically qualified and athletically talented student-athletes. Recruits, develops, and works
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expected by library patrons and other library departments. Assists Access Services Managers in providing initial and ongoing training, development, and evaluation of the Access Services wage staff. Engages
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to develop new vaccines for infectious and neglected tropical diseases- including COVID-19, HIV, influenza, shingles, Ebola, Marburg, hookworm, and schistosomiasis – at sites in the United States, Brazil, and