Improving Maternal Health and Well-Being through Medicaid/CHIP Postpartum Coverage Extensions www.urban.org/research/pub...
Posts by Fallon Alexis Jones-Lemmons, PhD, RN
As federal funding is dwindling, researchers are increasingly turning to private foundations for #funding. At Eloquenti, we've built the largest consultant network with 130+ grant experts, ready to help you secure funding from private funders worldwide.💵 💶 💷 Eloquenti experts have helped secure more than $2 billion in non-dilutive funding, and we’re happy to support you with turning your ideas into funded projects.💰 Let us know if you are targeting a specific foundation or grant mechanism, and we'll connect you with a qualified grant expert whose experience best matches your needs. 👩🏻🔬 👉 Visit Eloquenti at: www.eloquenti.com #FederalFunding #FederalGrants #ResearchFunding #researchgrant #researchgrants #ResearchDevelopment #GrantStrategy #GrantsManagement #grantfunding #NonDilutiveFunding #grantsuccess #SponsoredResearch #ResearchAdminstration #ResearchAdmin #resadmin #NIH #NSF #SBIR #STTR #grantwriting #grantwriter #grantconsultant #grantwritingtips #grantapplication #grants #grant #research #science #academia #HigherEd #Entrepreneurship #TechEntrepreneurs #Startups #LifeSciences #innovation #STEMInnovation #eloquenti
As federal funding is dwindling, researchers are increasingly turning to private foundations for #funding.
At Eloquenti, we built the largest consultant network with 130+ grant experts, ready to help you secure funding from private funders worldwide.💵 💶 💷
#research #academia #AcademicSky #HigherEd
XXVII SCECSAL Conference Livingstone 27 April-1 May Lombe Tembo, ORCID Senior Grant Program Officer & Engagement Lead.
Headed to #SCECSAL2026 in Zambia? 🇿🇲
Don't miss the chance to connect with ORCID's Lombe Tembo to talk about how persistent identifiers empower African libraries at the New Crossroads of info science.
🔗 https://conference.scecsal.org/
#ResearchSky
Han-Qing Wang (he/him) is the First Author of the manuscript OsPIN1b, OsPIN1c and OsPIN9 mediate shoot-to-root auxin transport to activate cutting-induced compensatory root growth published 29 August 2025. He s a Postdoc at University of California, Berkeley. Education background includes: 2024 Ph.D at Nanjing Agricultural University,2018 Bachelor of agriculture at Nanjing Agricultural University. Research interests include Plant development, Plasticity, Signaling. Personal interests include Singing, Paiting and Cooking.
Wang’s mentor Professor Fang-Jie Zhao says academic.oup.com/plphys/artic... “Never stay in your comfortable zone.”
#WeAreASPB
Racial Bias in Flexner Report Permeates Medical Education Today www.medpagetoday.com/publichealth...
It’s official — 2nd Annual Getting GRITTY for the New Year is here! 💥
Dec 19, 2025 | 2–8:30 PM EST
LIVE on YouTube & Facebook 🎥
Keynotes + live Vision Board w/ Dr. India White ✨
Build resilience, set bold goals, enter 2026 gritty! 🔥YouTube LIVE: www.youtube.com/watch?v=4n-0...
#GettingGritty
Hey there, Bluesky!
We are excited to share our data and insights here with you, and so are our researchers: go.bsky.app/3QzdR9p
What would you like to see from us? Drop suggestions below!
Japanese illustration: a boy in a patterned kimono reads “Furendo” (Friend) while a cat steals his fish from a low red tray; bold red header with vertical Japanese text.
Want your students to be completely immersed in their next read? 📚
Check out our recent blog post, where we highlight some of the top-read #ebooks on JSTOR & editor picks across disciplines. Perfect for expanding your course materials or #library holdings.
Read the list: https://bit.ly/3WftTij
A circular formation of Pueblo women dancers dressed in black skirts, colorful shawls, and white moccasins surrounds a central cloth decorated with corn, squash, gourds, and bowls. The dancers stand in rhythmically spaced pairs, and the scene reflects balance, tradition, and harvest celebration. Artwork by Awa Tsireh (Alfonso Roybal), San Ildefonso Pueblo, 1930s.
Every November, we honor #NativeAmericanHeritageMonth by celebrating the knowledge, resilience, & creativity of Native communities.
JSTOR Daily offers a roundup of stories exploring Native history and more.
Read the full roundup: https://bit.ly/3WE3J9d
A collage of various book covers including titles such as "Negotiating Economic Inequality in Ghana", "Radical Abundance", "The Revolt of the Black Athlete", "When His People Mattered", "Liberia's Miracle", "Self-Rising", "Pulp Comics", "Imagining a New Natural History", and "Rescue and Remembrance".
Discover a new model for scholarly #ebook access. 📖
JSTOR’s Publisher Collections streamline acquisition by offering a perpetual license to current-year title sets from a press & access to their backlist while participating.
View the full title list: https://bit.ly/3WZrY21
In my latest article, I explore how Theodore Roosevelt was the first White House occupant to seek control over how newspapers covered him. Read it on JSTOR Daily: daily.jstor.org/the-presiden...
Happening today at 1 PM ET!
New #podcast!
'Perspectives on Public Space', hosted by Sara Ivry, features conversations with experts working in fields such as #UrbanDesign, #history, #architecture, and community planning. The podcast is available on JSTOR Daily and other platforms.
@jstordaily.bsky.social @saraivry.bsky.social
A color woodblock print of a woman from Japan’s Edo period, dressed in layered patterned robes with floral designs, seated on the floor and reading a scroll. She wears an elaborate hairstyle decorated with hairpins and looks contemplative. An inkstone and brush rest nearby.
Taking a #reading break this week? 📖
JSTOR makes it easy to build your TBR with books, articles, and primary sources. Get started:
1️⃣ Open access
2️⃣ Institutional access
3️⃣ Public library access
4️⃣ Personal JSTOR account
5️⃣ JPASS
Find the option that works best for you: https://bit.ly/4ola7xJ
A monochrome ink landscape showing bare winter trees along a quiet riverbank. A small house sits near the water’s edge, while distant hills and scattered rocks line the opposite shore. A flock of birds flies across the cloudy sky, and calligraphy with red seals appears in the upper right corner.
This quiet winter scene by Qian Weicheng is just one of over 2M+ #images you can explore through Artstor on JSTOR. ❄️
Artstor brings together curated, rights-cleared visuals from around the world. Many are free to access, and all of them are easy to use.
Start exploring: https://bit.ly/3KzQqEe
74 Ways Characters Die in Shakespeare’s Plays Shown in a Handy Infographic: From Snakebites to Lack of Sleep
Permanent mood.
Crockett: "If feels as if y'all have just decided that y'all are gonna castrate your constitutional duty & hand it over to someone who was unelected. It doesn't matter how many cheerleaders he had on the field campaigning for him. That doesn't mean he gets to go in and sit atop any of our agencies"
This news truly breaks my heart.
We are calling on HHS to take immediate action. Secretary Kennedy needs to bring back weekly measles tracking from the CDC, rehire the health experts, and roll out a serious vaccine campaign. Our kids' safety is on the line!
abcnews.go.com/Health/1st-m...
More tragic news about NIH and NIH science. Grant system is frozen and intramural program is being slashed. All will claw back on treatments and cures for cancer and other human diseases. This can’t be what the public wants. 🧪 www.science.org/content/arti...
(🧵 1/4) This is Dr. Marie Clark Taylor. Dr. Taylor was the first Black woman to receive a PhD in botany in the United States and the first Black woman to receive a PhD in science from @Fordham.edu in New York. Almost 80 years ago, she collected these fungi specimens found in the Garden’s Herbarium.
"Justice will mot be served until those who are unaffected are as outraged as those who are affected. So let's continue to collectively fight for justice and for freedom." -Emmanuel Acho✊