Community Impact Archives | University of Central Florida News Central Florida Research, Arts, Technology, Student Life and College News, Stories and More Tue, 24 Feb 2026 19:14:10 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 /wp-content/blogs.dir/20/files/2019/05/cropped-logo-150x150.png Community Impact Archives | University of Central Florida News 32 32 UCF Researcher, Nonprofit Create AI-Powered Tool to Reduce Florida Overdoses /news/health-informatics-school-director-curates-ai-powered-drug-tracking-tool-with-local-nonprofit/ Wed, 14 Jan 2026 14:58:39 +0000 /news/?p=150465 Through her collaborative research with Project Overdose, Kendall Cortelyou helped develop an online dashboard to prevent fatal drug overdoses by alerting local authorities to the presence of prevalent drugs in the community.

]]>
More than 5,500 fatal overdoses occurred in Florida last year, with 353 occurring in Orange County alone, according to data compiled by the Florida Department of Health. Director aims to reduce this number by helping predict when and where overdoses could occur before it 鶹Ʒ Ss too late, an area health researchers have long suffered a disadvantage.

The needed breakthrough may be just around the corner with the development of an online dashboard DrugTRAC, which uses an AI-powered algorithm to synthesize information provided from statewide lab records 鶹Ʒ S allowing for nearly real-time insights on the local drug supply.

Kendall Cortelyou
(Photo by Natalie Fedor)

鶹Ʒ SEven though I 鶹Ʒ Sm an administrator, this research is something I think I 鶹Ʒ Sll always be involved in because it is so important, 鶹Ʒ S she says. 鶹Ʒ SThis is how we save lives 鶹Ʒ S by reaching out and doing things proactively instead of retrospectively. 鶹Ʒ S

This initiative was created through Project Overdose, a community-based nonprofit focused on combating overdoses resulting from the opioid and drug epidemic that Cortelyou worked with for six years. Formerly called Project Opioid, Project Overdose partners with local business, faith, philanthropy and public health leaders to address substance use in Florida.

How DrugTRAC Works

Cortelyou collaborated with tech developer Social Innovation Technologies to help design DrugTRAC, which stands for tracking, reporting, advocacy and coordination. The data, which is anonymized and privacy-protected, relies on routine lab tests like urine and toxicology screens to offer researchers new insights into which substances are circulating in Florida communities.

鶹Ʒ SOne of the biggest challenges in this field is that we 鶹Ʒ Sve always been behind, 鶹Ʒ S Cortelyou says. 鶹Ʒ SThe only real data about what is happening in the drug supply in your community has been from mortality data, which takes almost 12 to 18 months to get after someone dies from an overdose. That means you 鶹Ʒ Sre dealing with yesterday 鶹Ʒ Ss problem. If you’re trying to make decisions based on trends that were happening a year ago, you’re always behind. 鶹Ʒ S

The dashboard compiles nightly drug-screen results and tracks more than 90 different substances before mapping emerging trends down to the ZIP code level. That information can then be used to alert community leaders and first responders to potential spikes and co-occurring substances, like the presence of fentanyl in cocaine.

DrugTRAC 鶹Ʒ Ss Current and Future Impact

The tool recently detected the presence of carfentanil, an extremely dangerous synthetic opioid that is nearly 1,000 times more potent than morphine and 100 times more than regular fentanyl. It could require four or five administrations of Narcan to revive someone from a fatal overdose, making it crucial that first responders and community leaders are alerted to any presence in the community.

However, artificial intelligence will take the tool 鶹Ʒ Ss impact to the next level. Cortelyou and the Social Innovation Technologies team anticipate being able to launch a more proactive approach with the help of AI in the next six months. By integrating an innovative, AI-powered algorithm into the system based on a range of data 鶹Ʒ S including economic indicators, major events, arrest records and time of year 鶹Ʒ S to predict future trends. That information can be used to provide early warnings to hospitals, emergency medical services, law enforcement and community organizations.

鶹Ʒ SI’m working with the programmer to help them identify the data sources that will feed into the algorithm, like the factors that cause spikes in drug usage, 鶹Ʒ S Cortelyou says. 鶹Ʒ SThe dream is that once this system becomes predictive, we 鶹Ʒ Sll be better prepared and able to say, 鶹Ʒ SHey, in the next couple of weeks, we’re expecting to see X, Y and Z happen in your community. Get ready. 鶹Ʒ S 鶹Ʒ S

Cortelyou says they are also currently investigating ways to make the alerts and information more accessible, like social media content targeted toward younger, more at-risk age groups.

Ultimately, Cortelyou hopes this technology can help communities get ahead of drug overdoses and help communities respond faster than ever before.

]]>
UCF_Kendall Cortelyou_2026_2
Could This Be a Simple Solution to Reducing Childhood Obesity? /news/could-this-be-a-simple-solution-to-reducing-childhood-obesity/ Fri, 09 Jan 2026 15:29:28 +0000 /news/?p=150415 A research team led by 鶹Ʒ Ss Keith Brazendale will bring together pediatricians and summer camp leaders to explore an overlooked way to make more kids healthier.

]]>
For decades, researchers have studied the rising rates of childhood obesity in the United States, where now one in five children are affected by epidemic. The prescription is always the same: limit screen time, eat a well-balanced diet, exercise.

Keith Brazendale standing next to a research poster
UCF Associate Professor Keith Brazendale

UCF Associate Professor Keith Brazendale believes society is overlooking a simple intervention that could be a major game-changer for kids everywhere, so much so that the National Institutes of Health awarded him a $453,000 funding grant to move forward with his study.

The solution? Free summer camp for kids.

鶹Ʒ SThis won 鶹Ʒ St require 20 years in a lab, 鶹Ʒ S Brazendale says of his study over the next two summers. 鶹Ʒ SEverything is already in place to impact childhood obesity. I think that 鶹Ʒ Ss what raised so much curiosity from my proposal. Can it really be this simple? 鶹Ʒ S

Why Summer Camp?

鶹Ʒ SMy ultimate goal is to shift our mindset about how we improve the health of kids, 鶹Ʒ S Brazendale says from his office in 鶹Ʒ Ss College of Health Professions and Sciences, 鶹Ʒ Sbecause up until now, I believe we 鶹Ʒ Sve gotten it all wrong. 鶹Ʒ S

Getting it right has inspired Brazendale 鶹Ʒ Ss research across two decades, including his next project on combatting childhood obesity.

Brazendale 鶹Ʒ Ss project will bring together community pediatricians, organizers of summer day camps, and low-income families. Before the summers of 2026 and 2027 begin, the pediatricians will provide camp vouchers to 40 kids who meet certain weight and body mass index (BMI) criteria. Data collected before camp and after camp will build upon Brazendale 鶹Ʒ Ss Structured Day Hypothesis.

鶹Ʒ SIt 鶹Ʒ Ss clear that structure is enough to mitigate much of the weight gain we 鶹Ʒ Sre observing in American children. I 鶹Ʒ Sm hopeful a study like this will affect change in public health policy. 鶹Ʒ S
鶹Ʒ S Keith Brazendale, UCF associate professor

鶹Ʒ SWe know what happens when kids have no structure, 鶹Ʒ S says Brazendale, a father of two. 鶹Ʒ SWhen schools closed during COVID, it became our largest experiment of unstructured days. Children 鶹Ʒ Ss obesity levels went through the roof. It 鶹Ʒ Ss clear that structure is enough to mitigate much of the weight gain we 鶹Ʒ Sre observing in American children. I 鶹Ʒ Sm hopeful a study like this will affect change in public health policy. 鶹Ʒ S

If this is true, then it raises the question, 鶹Ʒ SWhy have we overlooked a structured summer as a solution to childhood obesity? 鶹Ʒ S

Consider that more than 90% of past studies have taken place during the school year 鶹Ʒ S the most convenient time to find kids for research. The timing has led to a repetitive focus on school lunch programs and physical education. Brazendale, however, draws upon his own experiences with kids from low-income communities and believes that studies on schools may be occurring where a natural intervention is already happening.

鶹Ʒ SSchools actually do a great job because of structure built into each day 鶹Ʒ S he says. 鶹Ʒ SMeanwhile, we 鶹Ʒ Sve ignored 20 years of evidence showing weight gain and loss of fitness occurring during summer. 鶹Ʒ S

He 鶹Ʒ Ss referring to evidence which had become 鶹Ʒ Sbricks buried in a brickyard. 鶹Ʒ S It happens with a lot of studies. They 鶹Ʒ Sre filed away, waiting for another researcher to come along and dig them up years later. That 鶹Ʒ Ss how Brazendale began to learn about the link between summer breaks and childhood obesity.

鶹Ʒ SPediatricians have reported for years that children are heavier toward the end of summer, 鶹Ʒ S he says. 鶹Ʒ SPeople my age think of summer as an active time when it really isn 鶹Ʒ St, especially for kids whose families can 鶹Ʒ St afford pricey camps and club sports. So, let 鶹Ʒ Ss see what happens when we help them fill those empty weeks with free and fun structured activity. 鶹Ʒ S

Man in black polo, khaki pants and white sneakers measures a child's height using medical equipment
The National Institutes of Health awarded UCF Associate Professor Keith Brazendale (right) a a $453,000 funding grant to further his research on combating childhood obesity.

Community Buy-In

If Brazendale 鶹Ʒ Ss hypothesis is correct, it could cultivate the kind of healthy long-term lifestyle Brazendale experienced while growing up in Scotland. His intrigue about children 鶹Ʒ Ss health brought him to study in the U.S., where his research momentum eventually landed at UCF. Among his first action items upon arriving was to contact pediatricians at Nemours and leaders of the Boys & Girls Clubs of Central Florida.

鶹Ʒ SWhen I mentioned bringing all of us together as a potential health intervention for kids, they said, 鶹Ʒ SWe 鶹Ʒ Sre in, 鶹Ʒ S 鶹Ʒ S Brazendale says. 鶹Ʒ SHaving them involved means we have trusted people in the community to create bridges rather than hoping families respond to a researcher out of nowhere asking them to sign up for a study. 鶹Ʒ S

The research side will include experts from 鶹Ʒ Ss College of Nursing, a statistician, a pediatrician and consultants from the University of South Carolina. They 鶹Ʒ Sll compare health markers for the 40 kids who attend summer camp with 40 kids who spend summer at home. Then they 鶹Ʒ Sll do it again with two more groups the following summer.

With additional funding, a second research phase would include hundreds of children nationwide. The results 鶹Ʒ S ripple effects would be monumental.

According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 鶹Ʒ Sin 2019, the estimated annual medical cost of obesity among U.S. children was $1.3 billion. Medical costs for children with obesity were $116 higher per person per year than for children with healthy weight. Medical costs for children with severe obesity were $310 higher per person per year than for children with healthy weight. 鶹Ʒ S

鶹Ʒ SImagine where this could lead, 鶹Ʒ S Brazendale says. 鶹Ʒ SPediatricians would prescribe summer camp as medicine. The health of children would not be limited by family incomes. The research findings would encourage public policy to subsidize camp enrollment the way we do with Head Start. There would be relief on our medical practitioners and on our healthcare system. Childhood obesity rates would decline and long-term health would improve. 鶹Ʒ S

]]>
UCF_ Keith Brazendale ucf-Brazendale-childhood-obesity The National Institutes of Health awarded UCF Associate Professor Keith Brazendale (right) a a $453,000 funding grant to further his research on combating childhood obesity.
UCF Relationship Education Program to Support First Responder Couples, Parents /news/ucf-relationship-education-program-to-support-first-responder-couples-parents/ Thu, 04 Dec 2025 14:18:34 +0000 /news/?p=150116 Supported through a U.S. Department of Health and Human Services-funded grant, Project Harmony is building a tailored, free curriculum to address relationship stressors unique to couples in the first responder and parenting communities.

]]>
Over the next five years, will equip 1,500 Central Florida couples with tools to strengthen bonds, improve communication and build more resilient relationships through the latest iteration of 鶹Ʒ S this time with a focus on targeted support for first responders and parents.

Project Harmony, a grant-funded research project initially funded and launched at UCF in 2015, helps couples connect and strengthen their relationships by equipping them with skills for improving communication and resolving conflict. It uses Prevention and Relationship Enhancement Program (PREP), an established evidence-based relationship intervention curriculum, to teach core skills but also offers a personalized approach through tailored programming and relationship coaching.

Participants learn strategies for effective communication, hone active listening and conflict management skills, and gain tools for coping with stressful situations 鶹Ʒ S all taught in a group format with flexible scheduling options to accommodate participants, who also receive free childcare, meals and gift cards to help mitigate barriers to participation.

鶹Ʒ SWe talk about what healthy relationships look like, the communication pitfalls we can fall into when we feel invalidated or unheard, and understanding love languages and styles, 鶹Ʒ S says , professor of counselor education and Project Harmony 鶹Ʒ Ss principal investigator. 鶹Ʒ SUltimately, it leaves couples with a new curiosity for what their needs are and how to meet their partner 鶹Ʒ Ss needs with consideration for who and where they are now. By knowing that relationships are constantly evolving, they can use these skills to position themselves to evolve together as opposed to growing apart. 鶹Ʒ S

Meeting a Need in the Community

Funded by a five-year, $6.25 million grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Project Harmony builds on decades of relationship education research through the MFRI. Couples will be placed in one of three subgroups tailored to their needs: Unite in Harmony for general relationship education, Shield in Harmony for first responders and their partners, or Raise in Harmony for couples who are also parents.

Barden says the tailored programming stems from both research and prior feedback indicating a need for relational support based on specific stressors unique to couples in these subgroups. All couples participate in the core PREP curriculum, but those in the Shield and Raise groups will engage in four to five hours of their own unique curriculum 鶹Ʒ S something that is being developed with input from members of the first responder community and parenting experts, respectively.

For first responders and their partners, relationship stressors can be more nuanced due to the nature of the job. These can include varying shift schedules, occupational hazards and the stress that often accompanies them. Barden 鶹Ʒ Ss team is currently conducting focus groups with Central Florida-area firefighters, law enforcement officers and paramedics, as well as their partners, to learn more about their experiences.

鶹Ʒ SI don 鶹Ʒ St think we can underestimate the impact of the occupational demands of being a first responder, not only on the individual but on the family dynamic at home, 鶹Ʒ S Barden says. 鶹Ʒ SThey keep our communities safe, so the least we can do is provide a service back to them. 鶹Ʒ S

Sejal Barden, left, and a student sit across from each other in matching blue armchairs in a counseling room as they engage in conversation.
Sejal Barden helps counselor education students gain real-world counseling experience through initiatives like Project Harmony and the UCF Community Counseling and Research Center.

Designed With a First Responder for First Responders

It’s a group that Benoit Aubin, a first-year student in the counselor education doctoral program, is particularly passionate about. A former medic in the U.S. Navy and firefighter/paramedic, Aubin found himself assisting with the peer support team while in the fire service 鶹Ʒ S an experience that inspired him to pursue further education and a career in clinical mental health counseling.

Now a mental health clinician for the District Fire Department that services the Walt Disney World Resort area, Aubin is not only working on his doctorate, he 鶹Ʒ Ss also a graduate research assistant helping to build the curriculum for Shield in Harmony. He has facilitated outreach and recruitment of focus group members, fostered connections between fire service leadership and MFRI staff, analyzed prior research and educated colleagues on the fire service culture.

鶹Ʒ SA lot of what I 鶹Ʒ Sm hearing from participants is that they didn 鶹Ʒ St know other first responders were having the same issues regarding the mental health crisis and relationships, 鶹Ʒ S he says. 鶹Ʒ SThere 鶹Ʒ Ss a powerful stigma with mental health among first responders, but I didn 鶹Ʒ St know it was to that extent. It showed me how important this is and fuels me to spend countless hours assisting in curriculum development. 鶹Ʒ S

Under Barden 鶹Ʒ Ss mentorship, Aubin is gaining hands-on experience in synthesizing and incorporating what he 鶹Ʒ Ss hearing in focus groups to ensure the training modules are addressing real experiences in alignment with the core content. For example, he 鶹Ʒ Ss creating a module focused on empowering first responder couples to help their partners decompress after coming home from a stressful shift. He also tailors the language to first responders while being mindful of stigmatizations and other barriers that prevent them from accessing mental health services.

鶹Ʒ SWhen I started recruiting and telling people about a free relationship education program that 鶹Ʒ Ss being created with a first responder for first responders, people were so enthusiastic about it, 鶹Ʒ S Aubin says. 鶹Ʒ SI think of and picture the people that this will help, hold onto those images, and that gives me the motivation to do this because it 鶹Ʒ Ss something that we know is so needed. 鶹Ʒ S

Life-Changing Education

For couples who are also parents, the work lies in not just learning to connect and communicate with each other but also with their children, including navigating how to parent adolescents through the prevalence of social media. This curriculum is being developed through focus groups with parents and feedback from parenting experts around the country.

鶹Ʒ SWe want to ensure parents have the tools for connecting with each other through the more challenging chapters in life and in parenthood. 鶹Ʒ S 鶹Ʒ S Sejal Barden, MFRI 鶹Ʒ Ss executive director

鶹Ʒ SWe want to ensure parents have the tools for connecting with each other through the more challenging chapters in life and in parenthood, which includes helping them translate these skills into building stronger relationships with their children, 鶹Ʒ S Barden says.

Barden and her team hope to begin enrolling couples in the Unite group in the spring, with Raise and Shield to follow shortly after. Although word of mouth is their top source of referral, the MFRI team will also be out in the community recruiting participants at fire stations, police stations, libraries, health departments and wellness events.

鶹Ʒ SLearning that we can change the trajectory of a couple 鶹Ʒ Ss life and their connection with a short amount of education and intervention is life-changing, 鶹Ʒ S Barden says. 鶹Ʒ SIf we know that this works, how could we not do it? It feels like a calling and commitment I couldn 鶹Ʒ St imagine not being a part of. 鶹Ʒ S

Researcher Credentials

Barden received her Ph.D. in counseling and education development from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, and both her master 鶹Ʒ Ss and education specialist degrees in marriage and family therapy from the University of Florida. She joined , part of the , in 2011, and has served as MFRI 鶹Ʒ Ss executive director and the principal investigator of Project Harmony since 2015.

]]>
Sejal Barden-MFRI Sejal Barden helps counselor education students gain real-world counseling experience through initiatives like Project Harmony and the UCF Community Counseling and Research Center.
Orlando 鶹Ʒ Ss New Poet Laureate, UCF Alumna Finds Healing Through Words /news/orlandos-new-poet-laureate-ucf-alum-finds-healing-through-words/ Wed, 03 Dec 2025 18:02:44 +0000 /news/?p=150124 As the third UCF alumna to earn the Orlando poet laureate honor, Camara Gaither 鶹Ʒ S23MSW sees poetry as a practice that enhances social work and service to others.

]]>
When Orlando poet laureate Camara Gaither 鶹Ʒ S23MSW steps up to a microphone, her presence is both grounded and electric. She doesn 鶹Ʒ St just perform poetry 鶹Ʒ S she opens a space for healing.

鶹Ʒ SPoetry gives us permission to feel without judgment, 鶹Ʒ S she says. 鶹Ʒ SAnd when we share those feelings out loud, we remember that we 鶹Ʒ Sre not alone. 鶹Ʒ S

As a mental health therapist at Heart Bonds Counseling, working toward becoming a licensed social worker, Gaither has built her life around helping people find their voice. Whether she 鶹Ʒ Ss guiding veterans through trauma, leading poetry workshops for youth or performing for packed audiences, her message is the same: words can transform pain into power.

鶹Ʒ SPoetry gives us a place to put pain, 鶹Ʒ S says Gaither, who earned a master’s in social work from UCF. 鶹Ʒ SIt 鶹Ʒ Ss an accessible way to approach emotions that feel too threatening to face directly. 鶹Ʒ S

A Call for Change

Before she ever found the courage to share her poetry publicly, Gaither was navigating a season of change. Seven years ago, she and her husband moved to Orlando with their infant daughter, drawn by opportunity and the promise of new beginnings. Gaither had worked in the nonprofit sector for several years but felt called to something deeper 鶹Ʒ S something that could merge advocacy, creativity and care.

When the pandemic arrived, that call grew louder.

鶹Ʒ SI realized I couldn 鶹Ʒ St keep waiting for the perfect time to go back to school, 鶹Ʒ S she says. 鶹Ʒ SThe world was changing 鶹Ʒ S and so was I. 鶹Ʒ S

She applied to 鶹Ʒ Ss social work program in the College of Health Professions and Sciences, drawn by its emphasis on evidence-based practice and serving others. The program offered her flexibility to balance graduate studies with motherhood and work, and it challenged her to explore the intersections between mental health, identity and storytelling.

A Transformative Journey

During her field placement at the Orlando Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Gaither worked closely with veterans processing trauma and loss. There, she saw the power of creative expression in action.

鶹Ʒ SWhen we create a metaphor for something painful, we give ourselves a little space from it 鶹Ʒ S enough to begin understanding, 鶹Ʒ S she says. 鶹Ʒ SA veteran once described grief as 鶹Ʒ Smy neighbor. 鶹Ʒ S That line stuck with me. It gave him language for something that felt impossible to name. 鶹Ʒ S

Camara Gaither 鶹Ʒ S23MSW now uses her training to lead workshops that help trauma survivors, caregivers and young people reclaim their narratives.

That moment became a turning point. Gaither began studying poetry therapy, a clinical practice that uses creative writing to foster emotional healing. She later trained through the International Federation for Biblio/Poetry Therapy and now facilitates workshops that help trauma survivors, caregivers and young people reclaim their narratives.

鶹Ʒ SPeople who have been silenced in different ways often rediscover their agency through language, 鶹Ʒ S Gaither says. 鶹Ʒ SPoetry becomes a form of resistance and restoration. 鶹Ʒ S

Her dual background in art and social work allows her to see poetry as both medicine and a mirror. In her therapeutic work, she encourages clients to explore their experiences through metaphor and rhythm. In her performances, she models that same courage, voicing joy, grief and transformation in equal measure.

鶹Ʒ SThe holes in our lives 鶹Ʒ S the losses, the wounds 鶹Ʒ S they can be filled with good things, 鶹Ʒ S she says. 鶹Ʒ SThat 鶹Ʒ Ss what poetry has done for me. 鶹Ʒ S

Gaither 鶹Ʒ Ss own journey with spoken word began as an undergraduate student in Tampa, where she first encountered the art form that would later shape her identity. She had been writing poetry since childhood, but the first time she experienced the spoken word genre was pivotal to her journey as a poet.

鶹Ʒ SIt was the first time I saw poetry embodied, 鶹Ʒ S she says. 鶹Ʒ SThe way performers used not only words, but also vocal cadence and physicality to tell a story 鶹Ʒ S it all expanded what I believed poetry could be. I remember thinking, 鶹Ʒ SI want to do that. 鶹Ʒ S 鶹Ʒ S

After graduation, she continued writing and performing, eventually becoming a fixture in Orlando 鶹Ʒ Ss poetry community. Her work, known for its emotional depth and precise rhythm, explores themes of identity, mental health and faith. She has performed at the Dr. Phillips Center for the Performing Arts and at events across Central Florida, earning recognition as one of the region 鶹Ʒ Ss most resonant and thoughtful voices.

Strengthening Orlando 鶹Ʒ Ss Community

In 2025, the City of Orlando named Gaither its third poet laureate 鶹Ʒ S and the third consecutive UCF alumni to hold the title ( and Shawn Welcome 鶹Ʒ S17 鶹Ʒ S25MA in 2021. In this role, Gaither will use poetry to connect communities, celebrate culture and promote literacy across the city. She plans to create youth workshops, write commissioned works for civic events, and lead Orlando 鶹Ʒ Ss Words and Wonders poetry contest, where winning poems are displayed at the Orlando International Airport.

鶹Ʒ SBeing poet laureate isn 鶹Ʒ St just about performing, it 鶹Ʒ Ss about service 鶹Ʒ S showing people that poetry belongs to everyone. 鶹Ʒ S

Despite the growing spotlight, Gaither remains grounded in her purpose as both a clinician and an artist. She continues to work in mental health, blending her clinical training with creative approaches to trauma recovery. She says she believes that healing often begins with expression 鶹Ʒ S with finding a way to say what has long gone unsaid.

鶹Ʒ SWhen someone writes, I 鶹Ʒ Sm angry, that 鶹Ʒ Ss a start, 鶹Ʒ S she says. 鶹Ʒ SBut when they write, my anger is a storm that doesn 鶹Ʒ St know where to land, suddenly, we have something to hold and understand. That 鶹Ʒ Ss the power of poetry. 鶹Ʒ S

For Gaither, every poem is an act of courage and an invitation to connection. It 鶹Ʒ Ss a truth she carries from her UCF days to every stage she stands on: that the human voice, when used with honesty and empathy, can help others heal.

]]>
New UCF Mobile Health Clinic Increases Access to Care /news/new-ucf-mobile-health-clinic-increases-access-to-care/ Wed, 03 Dec 2025 17:56:05 +0000 /news/?p=150106 The clinic also serves as real-world classroom for medical, nursing, speech-language pathology and physical therapy students.

]]>
UCF unveiled a new 38-foot UCF Heath Mobile Health Clinic on Wednesday, designed to bring free, high-quality healthcare directly to communities that need it most.

The clinic also serves as a mobile classroom, preparing UCF healthcare students in programs including medicine, nursing, physical therapy and speech-language pathology with hands-on experience delivering community-based care.

The clinic is the first interdisciplinary clinical care program offered by 鶹Ʒ Ss Academic Health Sciences Center (AHSC). The center unites 鶹Ʒ Ss colleges of Health Professions and Sciences, Medicine and Nursing to create more interprofessional health education, research and patient care efforts.

鶹Ʒ SThis new mobile health clinic is expanding access to healthcare in our community, 鶹Ʒ S says Deborah German, who as vice president for health affairs leads the AHSC and serves as College of Medicine dean. 鶹Ʒ SOur goal is simple and powerful 鶹Ʒ S when healthcare providers work together, the patient receives better care. 鶹Ʒ S

The clinic is focused on low income, uninsured and underinsured populations in Orange and Osceola counties, helping patients who face transportation, mobility or financial barriers that restrict their access to healthcare.

Services include screenings for blood pressure, diabetes, cholesterol and hearing, along with chronic disease monitoring, fall-risk assessments, medication reviews, audiology services and health education.

With two private exam rooms, diagnostic equipment, and point-of-care testing capabilities, the clinic is aiming to reduce preventable conditions and improve long-term health for the Central Florida region.

鶹Ʒ SThe UCF Health Mobile Health Clinic is designed to complement the incredible work being done by community health centers, federally qualified health centers and charitable clinics across Central Florida, 鶹Ʒ S says Caridad Hernandez, chair of medical education at the College of Medicine, who has worked for years to make the mobile clinic a reality. 鶹Ʒ SOur goal is to fill gaps and meet people where they are, working hand in hand with these organizations to amplify resources and create a seamless continuum of care. 鶹Ʒ S

A dozen adults stand in front of white vehicle with mobile health clinic branding
The clinic is the first interdisciplinary clinical care program offered by 鶹Ʒ Ss Academic Health Sciences Center (AHSC), which is made up of healthcare providers, faculty, researchers, staff and students committed to improving healthcare and educating the next generation of healthcare leaders.

Training Future Health Leaders

鶹Ʒ Ss Academic Health Sciences Center is made up of healthcare providers, faculty, researchers, staff and students committed to improving healthcare. It is focused on educating the next generation of healthcare leaders and finding better ways to treat disease through innovation, discovery and collaboration.

The mobile clinic serves as a classroom on wheels that provides future UCF physicians, nurses, audiologists, physical therapists, occupational therapists and others with the opportunity to learn in real-world settings, side by side, as part of interprofessional teams.

鶹Ʒ SThese experiences prepare graduates who are not only clinically skilled but know how to work and communicate better in healthcare teams. 鶹Ʒ S 鶹Ʒ S Caridad Hernandez, chair of medical education at the College of Medicine

鶹Ʒ SThey will see firsthand how life and social circumstances impact health and care, and how collaboration strengthens outcomes, 鶹Ʒ S Hernandez says. 鶹Ʒ SThese experiences prepare graduates who are not only clinically skilled but know how to work and communicate better in healthcare teams. That training stays with them when they go into clinics and hospitals to care for us all. 鶹Ʒ S

Mimi Alliance 鶹Ʒ S22 is a family nurse practitioner doctoral student at 鶹Ʒ Ss College of Nursing who is providing care on the mobile health unit and conducting doctoral research on hearing screenings for seniors.

鶹Ʒ S 鶹Ʒ Ss mobile health clinic is an incredible and innovative tool that will allow us, as a group of providers, the ability to care for patients by serving them where they are, 鶹Ʒ S she says. 鶹Ʒ SUltimately, this is going to improve the health of our communities. 鶹Ʒ S

Addressing a Community Need

The mobile clinic serves Florida residents who are uninsured or underinsured with income levels at or below 300% of the Federal Poverty Level. Nearly 15% of both Orange and Osceola County residents are not insured, regardless of income level. In addition, 27% of Floridians say they do not have a personal physician.

Since March, almost 500 patients have visited the clinic for blood pressure checks, hearing screenings and point-of-care testing for blood sugar levels and cholesterol. It has provided care at Four Roots Farm, Kinneret Council on Aging, Grace Medical Home, the Central Florida Fairgrounds and four Central Florida YMCA locations. UCF has also reached an agreement with Osceola County to provide care at community centers in the future.

Thanks to a grant from the Florida Department of Health, the clinic is working to improve care for the community 鶹Ʒ Ss diabetic patients with limited access to care.

Diabetes is a worldwide epidemic. In Florida, at least 2.17 million adults have been diagnosed with diabetes and an estimated 550,000 more are unaware they have it. The state 鶹Ʒ Ss diabetes rate is higher than the national average and it is getting worse 鶹Ʒ S an additional 6 million adults in Florida have prediabetes.

鶹Ʒ SMany of our neighbors with diabetes have no access to healthcare. That leads to premature death, blindness, loss of limbs and kidney failure, 鶹Ʒ S Hernandez says. 鶹Ʒ SThrough the FDOH grant, we can help provide these patients with needed care. We screen patients for diabetes, can provide prescriptions at no cost, and offer education on diet changes that will help them manage their disease. 鶹Ʒ S

As one recent patient at Kinneret Council on Aging explains, 鶹Ʒ SUCF helped me know what kind of food and protein I can eat to help my blood sugar not get too high or too low. Thank you so much. You are helping. 鶹Ʒ S

The clinic also started a diabetic foot program after one of the Kinneret patients said she and other diabetics lacked mobility and eyesight to regularly check their feet for ulcers or blisters. Diabetes increases a patient 鶹Ʒ Ss risk for foot ulcers that can lead to amputation. Thanks to the foot program, UCF College of Nursing faculty and students are providing hands-on education and preventive screenings to patients, who also received their own telescoping mirrors to do regular foot checks at home.

UCF Mobile Health Clinic vehicle is parked
With two private exam rooms, diagnostic equipment, and point-of-care testing capabilities, the clinic is aiming to reduce preventable conditions and improve long-term health for the Central Florida region.

Providing Needed Audiology Care

One of the clinic 鶹Ʒ Ss major health services is hearing health and the prevention of hearing loss.

鶹Ʒ SThis is not just a 鶹Ʒ Snice to have 鶹Ʒ S screening, 鶹Ʒ S says Bari Hoffman 鶹Ʒ S96 鶹Ʒ S98MA, associate dean for clinical affairs at 鶹Ʒ Ss College of Health Professions and Sciences and a certified speech pathologist who has helped lead the mobile clinic effort. 鶹Ʒ SHearing loss is linked to diabetes, cardiovascular and cardiometabolic conditions, balance, cognition and overall health. When we catch hearing loss early, we can intervene before it affects someone 鶹Ʒ Ss safety, memory, their social connections, or their long-term health trajectory. 鶹Ʒ S

Thanks to a gift from the Edyth Bush Charitable Foundation, UCF purchased diagnostic hearing equipment to provide clinical-grade hearing assessments in the community. And though a collaboration with Central Florida Hearing Aid Recycling Programs, the mobile clinic can help connect patients with reprogrammed, refurbished hearing aids at no cost.

鶹Ʒ SThis is such a meaningful addition, 鶹Ʒ S Hoffman says. 鶹Ʒ SIdentifying hearing loss is important, but ensuring people have access to hearing aids is what truly changes lives. 鶹Ʒ S

The mobile unit is also supported by the Community Fund of our teaching hospital 鶹Ʒ S UCF Lake Nona Hospital and our partners HCA Florida Healthcare and The Jules B. Chapman MD and Annie Lou Chapman Private Foundation.

Stephanie Garris is CEO of Orlando 鶹Ʒ Ss Grace Medical Home, which provides high-quality, continuous care to some of Orange County 鶹Ʒ Ss more than 160,000 uninsured residents. Grace patients have received audiology care from the UCF mobile clinic.

鶹Ʒ SThis mobile clinic is an incredible resource for our patients, offering essential services they otherwise wouldn 鶹Ʒ St have access to. 鶹Ʒ S 鶹Ʒ SStephanie Garris, CEO of Orlando 鶹Ʒ Ss Grace Medical Home

鶹Ʒ SThis mobile clinic is an incredible resource for our patients, offering essential services they otherwise wouldn 鶹Ʒ St have access to, 鶹Ʒ S Garris says. 鶹Ʒ SThrough our partnership with UCF, we are expanding access to care 鶹Ʒ Sespecially for the working poor, whose jobs often don 鶹Ʒ St include healthcare benefits. 鶹Ʒ S

Expanding Efforts

Mobile clinic leaders are eager to expand services and work with additional community organizations.

Plans also include expanding the mobile clinic into an innovation hub to pilot and evaluate emerging aging-in-place and digital health technologies and integrate new diagnostic and disease prevention tools.

UCF research faculty also want to use the vehicle 鶹Ʒ Ss services to study better ways to advance health accessibility and chronic disease management. Educators from the AHSC 鶹Ʒ Ss three colleges also plan to grow interdisciplinary student training across areas including audiology, nursing, medicine, physical therapy and speech language pathology.

Community organizations wishing to partner with the mobile health clinic can contact anna.cisneros@ucf.edu.

]]>
ucf mobile health clinic-partnerships ucf mobile health clinic vehicle With two private exam rooms, diagnostic equipment, and point-of-care testing capabilities, the clinic is aiming to reduce preventable conditions and improve long-term health for the Central Florida region.
Orlando Ranks No. 1 for Florida 鶹Ʒ Ss Best College City, Place to Start Career for Third Year /news/orlando-ranks-no-1-for-floridas-best-college-city-place-to-start-career-for-second-year/ Wed, 22 Oct 2025 16:29:05 +0000 /news/?p=138151 The City Beautiful is continuously recognized as the top place to live and learn across Florida 鶹Ʒ S and among the top three nationally.

]]>
鶹Ʒ SLocation, location, location 鶹Ʒ S may be a well-known cliche, but it has a significant impact, like influencing where you 鶹Ʒ Sll vacation next, where you 鶹Ʒ Sll call home or even which college you 鶹Ʒ Sll attend. Working towards being the best place to learn and work, UCF couldn 鶹Ʒ St be in a better location.

For the third year in a row, Orlando ranks as the No. 2 Best College City in America among large cities, according to WalletHub 鶹Ʒ Ss 2026 list. The City Beautiful maintained the No. 3 spot among cities overall 鶹Ʒ S making this the fifth year Orlando has placed in the top five nationally.

The rankings serve as a go-to guide for prospective college students deciding where to pursue their college journey. WalletHub dives deep, considering 31 key factors, from the quality of higher education to academic, social and economic opportunities, to pinpoint the best of the best college towns and cities among more than 400 U.S. cities.

As WalletHub puts it, a college’s geographical location matters as much as its curriculum and social environment. And Orlando has all the perks you 鶹Ʒ Sd imagine 鶹Ʒ S from a reasonable cost of living to academic and work prospects to a wide variety of activities that make for a fun social environment for students. To top it off, WalletHub named Orlando the No. 1 Best Foodie City in America for 2023, and it has remained in the top five ever since 鶹Ʒ S solidifying its reputation as a food lover 鶹Ʒ Ss paradise.

鶹Ʒ SAll of the restaurants [in Orlando] are incredible, and it 鶹Ʒ Ss so fun finding 鶹Ʒ Shole-in-the-wall 鶹Ʒ S restaurants and sharing them (with) your friends, 鶹Ʒ S says Jean-Thomas Mateesco ’24, an advertising and public relations alum.

Opportunity abounds in Orlando 鶹Ʒ S one of the fastest-growing cities in Central Florida and home to UCF.

Many factors led Shannon Nauta ’24, a UCF art alum who minored in event management and art history, from her home state of New Jersey to UCF 鶹Ʒ S including its internationally recognized Rosen College of Hospitality Management.

鶹Ʒ SI decided on UCF because I am interested in pursuing a career within the industry, 鶹Ʒ S Nauta says. 鶹Ʒ SUCF has amazing programs that provide opportunities for experience and immersion in the creative and hospitality fields, with Orlando as the perfect location [home to world-famous attractions, resorts, restaurants and more]. 鶹Ʒ S

UCF is uniquely positioned amongst a variety of industries, including hospitality, healthcare, tech and aerospace. And some of the nation 鶹Ʒ Ss top companies, such as Electronic Arts, Lockheed Martin, NASA’s Kennedy Space Center, Nemours Children 鶹Ʒ Ss Hospital and Walt Disney World Resort have all planted roots in Orlando and have partnerships with UCF. Students can chart their path to success by accessing industries and experiences that are connected to their coursework. The knowledge they 鶹Ʒ Sll gain, discoveries they 鶹Ʒ Sll make and personal growth they 鶹Ʒ Sll achieve while studying at UCF will come to benefit them for a lifetime.

Among factors like abundant activities, safety and plenty of jobs, 鶹Ʒ Ssome of the best college towns blend great academics with low costs, 鶹Ʒ S says WalletHub Analyst Cassandra Happe.

Orlando ranks among the top 40 cities with the best cost of higher education, per WalletHub 鶹Ʒ Ss 2024 rankings release. Here, the cost of 鶹Ʒ Sin-state tuition, room and board and other college expenses are among the lowest in the country, 鶹Ʒ S Happe says.

For the ninth year in a row, U.S. News & World Report has ranked the state of Florida No. 1 in the nation for higher education, with Orlando offering the 14th-lowest tuition (including room and board) for in-state students.

A thriving hub of innovation and economic growth, Orlando maintained the No. 1 spot for Best City to Start a Career among Florida cities, according to WalletHub’s 2025 list. The city retains the No. 2 spot among cities overall. WalletHub compared the relative market strength and overall livability of more than 180 U.S. cities to achieve these rankings. Each city was examined by 26 key factors, ranging from the availability of entry-level jobs to the monthly average starting salary to housing affordability.

Orlando’s thriving job market is one of the main reasons Nauta, an out-of-state student, moved to Orlando. While studying at UCF, she says she was able to work within the entertainment industry.

Mateesco shares a similar sentiment, adding that 鶹Ʒ Sother cities are becoming [overly saturated while] Orlando is an ever-growing city with loads of jobs and cool opportunities. 鶹Ʒ S

Fortunately, new graduates are entering the workforce at a good time, with the current employment shortage and companies eager to hire.

鶹Ʒ SOrlando has the highest job growth rate of any city, at 8.69%, so it 鶹Ʒ Ss a good place for students to stay even after they 鶹Ʒ Sve graduated, 鶹Ʒ S Happe says.

]]>
UCF Opens Dr. Phillips Nursing Pavilion in Lake Nona, Fueling a Talent Pipeline and Healthcare Innovation /news/ucf-opens-dr-phillips-nursing-pavilion-in-lake-nona-fueling-a-talent-pipeline-and-healthcare-innovation/ Mon, 18 Aug 2025 18:04:43 +0000 /news/?p=148660 The state-of-the-art facility will enable UCF to graduate an additional 150 newly licensed eligible nurses annually to address the critical shortage and will feature the latest immersive modeling and simulation technology.

]]>
鶹Ʒ Ss opened today as Knight nurses excitedly began fall classes, ushering in a bright future for them, the nursing profession and the health of Florida 鶹Ʒ Ss communities.

Elected leaders joined founding donors to celebrate the pavilion 鶹Ʒ Ss opening on 鶹Ʒ Ss at Lake Nona. They gathered for a ribbon-cutting ceremony and toured the pavilion, which will help to address Florida 鶹Ʒ Ss critical nursing shortage. Fittingly for Florida 鶹Ʒ Ss Premier Engineering and Technology University, the pavilion also features the latest in immersive modeling and simulation technologies.

“This facility will help strengthen Florida 鶹Ʒ Ss nursing talent pipeline in ways that make communities across our state healthier.” 鶹Ʒ S UCF President Alexander N. Cartwright

鶹Ʒ SThe Dr. Phillips Nursing Pavilion is a powerful example of what is possible when vision, community and partnership come together. Built with the generous support of state leaders, donors and health care champions, this facility will help strengthen Florida 鶹Ʒ Ss nursing talent pipeline in ways that make communities across our state healthier, 鶹Ʒ S says UCF President Alexander N. Cartwright. 鶹Ʒ STogether, we are fueling hands-on learning, enabling new research and discovery, and preparing generations of Knight Nurses who will have a lasting impact on the lives of those they serve. 鶹Ʒ S

With the opening, UCF will increase access to its accredited and nationally ranked nursing degree programs and graduate an additional 150 newly licensed nurses annually. These graduates will have a direct impact on the state. Of the 17,000 Knight nurse alumni, 85% live and work in Florida, and nearly 60% remain in Central Florida.

Located next to the College of Medicine and in Lake Nona 鶹Ʒ Ss Medical City, a nationally recognized hub of healthcare innovation, the Dr. Phillips Nursing Pavilion will bolster interdisciplinary collaboration to prepare providers to thrive in the workforce and deploy cutting-edge research to solve the industry 鶹Ʒ Ss greatest challenges and ensure a healthier future for all.

Agriculture Commissioner Wilton Simpson played a vital role as Senate President in securing about $43 million in state funding for the Dr. Phillips Nursing Pavilion, as well as additional funding for state university and state college nursing initiatives throughout Florida.

鶹Ʒ SWe worked very hard to secure the funding, 鶹Ʒ S he says. 鶹Ʒ SWhen you think about state-of the-art nursing, when you think about doubling the capacity of nursing, this couldn 鶹Ʒ St come at a better time. Florida is growing 400,000 people a year still. We 鶹Ʒ Sre going to continue to grow. 鶹Ʒ S

“Thanks to the leadership of Governor DeSantis and the Florida Legislature, the state continues to invest in key academic programs that set an example nationwide, 鶹Ʒ S says State University System Chancellor Ray Rodrigues. 鶹Ʒ SThe new Dr. Phillips Nursing Pavilion at the University of Central Florida is no exception 鶹Ʒ S by providing innovative educational opportunities for nursing students now, Florida is ensuring a promising future of skilled nurses that will care for our communities. 鶹Ʒ S

The Power of Partnerships

The Dr. Phillips Nursing Pavilion, which came to fruition through $43 million from the State of Florida and over $29 million from private donors, will directly impact the community that created it and will be a longstanding symbol of what can be achieved through the power of community partnerships 鶹Ʒ S unleashing potential for generations to come.

鶹Ʒ SWe are honored to be part of this transformative moment for Central Florida, 鶹Ʒ S says Kenneth Robinson, president and CEO of Dr. Phillips Inc. and the Dr. Phillips Foundation. 鶹Ʒ SThis investment will help address the nursing shortage, strengthen our healthcare system, and expand access to exceptional education and career opportunities. By supporting this project, we 鶹Ʒ Sre helping to graduate more Knight nurses who will make a lasting impact. We 鶹Ʒ Sre proud to stand with UCF and our community partners to shape a healthier, brighter future. 鶹Ʒ S

Founding donors of the facility also include the Helene Fuld Health Trust; UCF Pegasus Partners AdventHealth, Orlando Health, Nemours Children 鶹Ʒ Ss Health and Addition Financial; Zaby and Suree Vyas; and many others.

鶹Ʒ SToday we are witnessing the power of partnerships, 鶹Ʒ S says Professor Emerita Mary Lou Sole, who, as the previous College of Nursing dean, led the efforts to advocate and raise funds for the new building. 鶹Ʒ SThe Dr. Phillips Nursing Pavilion is the result of the collective efforts of UCF and this community to come together to solve one of our greatest healthcare challenges. We are incredibly grateful for the support, which will have an immeasurable impact for generations to come. 鶹Ʒ S

Inside the Future of Nursing

Every aspect of the 90,000-square-foot, state-of-the-art facility was thoughtfully designed to foster collaboration, innovation, and student success and well-being.

鶹Ʒ SThe Dr. Phillips Nursing Pavilion will serve as a catalyst for ensuring a brighter, healthier future, 鶹Ʒ S says new College of Nursing Dean Sharon Tucker. 鶹Ʒ SIn this space, UCF will strengthen and empower future nurses and nurse leaders to advance healthcare innovation and collaboration to improve evidence-based patient care and outcomes. 鶹Ʒ S

On the second and third floors is a hub of healthcare innovation, the Helene Fuld Health Trust Simulation, Technology, Innovation and Modeling (STIM) Center. UCF is Florida 鶹Ʒ Ss first simulation center to earn three international accolades in the field and the new, expanded space will build upon its global leadership to innovate healthcare education using the latest immersive technologies to prepare nurses for practice as compassionate, skilled providers.

The second floor also features the Dr. Colleen Conway Welch Virtual Reality Learning Studio, a makerspace design studio to accelerate nurse-led innovations, a home health apartment to meet growing demand for home-based healthcare, and the Elizabeth Morse Genius Foundation Healthy Aging Research Lab for interdisciplinary research and innovations led by renowned aging expert Ladda Thiamwong.

Upon entering the pavilion, students, faculty, staff and visitors are greeted with the inspiring 鶹Ʒ S 鶹Ʒ S public art commissioned by Florida 鶹Ʒ Ss Art in State Building program. The first floor also includes three large high-tech learning studios, the Zaby and Suree Vyas Collaboration Concourse, the Martin Andersen-Gracia Andersen Foundation Study Cafe and a student success suite.

The opening comes a little over a year and a half after the groundbreaking in January 2024. UCF built the Dr. Phillips Nursing Pavilion in conjunction with HuntonBrady Architects, Ayers Saint Gross and DPR Construction.

鶹Ʒ Ss Industry Partners Highlight Transformational Impact

AdventHealth

鶹Ʒ SAt AdventHealth, we 鶹Ʒ Sve seen firsthand the extraordinary caliber of nurses who graduate from UCF. They bring clinical excellence, compassion and an unwavering commitment to their patients 鶹Ʒ S values that perfectly align with our mission to provide whole-person care. As the demand for skilled nurses continues to grow, we 鶹Ʒ Sre happy to support this exciting new chapter for the UCF College of Nursing. And as a UCF alum, I 鶹Ʒ Sm excited to welcome even more outstanding Knight nurses to AdventHealth. 鶹Ʒ S

-Cathy Stankiewicz, (MSN 鶹Ʒ S11), chief nursing officer, Central Florida Division

Helene Fuld Health Trust

鶹Ʒ SThe Helene Fuld Health Trust Simulation, Technology, Innovation and Modeling Center at UCF exemplifies our mission to support the education of nursing students. Simulation is a critical component [of] nursing education and will continue to be in the future, and we 鶹Ʒ Sre proud to make this investment to strengthen nursing skills and improve the welfare of our communities. 鶹Ʒ S

-Robert Campbell, vice president of Trust & Fiduciary Services at HSBC, who oversees the trust

Nemours Children 鶹Ʒ Ss Health

鶹Ʒ SGrowing and solidifying the nursing workforce is critical to care delivery across the healthcare sector. Through our longtime relationship with the UCF College of Nursing, we have seen firsthand the benefits of hiring their well-trained, work-ready graduates. The new nursing pavilion will be a tremendous asset in our continued collaboration, partnership, and investment to support the education, development, and maturation of emerging nurses. 鶹Ʒ S

-Nicole Johnson, (DNP 鶹Ʒ S17), senior vice president and chief nursing and patient operations officer  

Orlando Health

鶹Ʒ SIt is an honor and privilege to be associated with UCF, and we are thankful for our partnership with the university, nursing professors, and students. 鶹Ʒ S

-David Strong, president and CEO

 

]]>
Summer Camp Hosts High School Students from Across the World to Learn About Photonics /news/summer-camp-hosts-high-school-students-from-across-the-world-to-learn-about-photonics/ Thu, 31 Jul 2025 14:17:58 +0000 /news/?p=148428 The hands-on program also introduces teenagers to the many STEM opportunities offered at UCF.

]]>
鶹Ʒ SIt basically keeps our world running. 鶹Ʒ S

That 鶹Ʒ Ss the understanding 11th grader Micah Terry now has about photonics after spending a week at CREOL, the College of Optics and Photonics 鶹Ʒ S Laser and Photonics Summer Camp. The Orlando Science High School student learned how to solder, constructed a pinhole camera, built a homemade telescope and brainstormed some ideas for his future.

鶹Ʒ SI 鶹Ʒ Sm definitely considering photonics as a career, 鶹Ʒ S he says.

Terry was one of about 50 high school students from across Central Florida 鶹Ʒ S and the world 鶹Ʒ S who will return to their classrooms with a new understanding of the science of light and as an advocate for Florida 鶹Ʒ Ss only bachelor 鶹Ʒ Ss degree in photonic science and engineering.

Student holding oat container.
A student builds a custom telescope using an oat container.

“There are only six universities in the United States with this degree, 鶹Ʒ S CREOL Undergraduate Adviser Mike McKee says. 鶹Ʒ SBecause of that, students don’t know that this is a potential career that they could go into. 鶹Ʒ S

This is the third year CREOL has hosted the camp and the second year that organizers expanded the program into three one-week sessions to meet the demand. Each week, about 15 students collaborated in the teaching lab, helping each other assemble their projects in between talks by CREOL students and faculty members.

“It’s an opportunity for high school students to learn about the many important things that you can do with the science of light, whether it’s applications in imaging or in measuring distances, such as LIDAR in cars or fiber optic communications, 鶹Ʒ S CREOL Dean David Hagan says.

Those connections aren 鶹Ʒ St always made in high school classrooms. CREOL senior Kiva McCracken kept that in mind as she planned the activities for the camp.

“There’s very few programs that teach photonics, and there’s basically no exposure on a pre-college level, 鶹Ʒ S McCracken says.

Professor works on soldering project.
Orange County Public Schools teacher Jorge Vallin works with a student on a soldering project.

Changing that reality promises to grow enrollment in the bachelor 鶹Ʒ Ss program as the awareness grows, but there are broader implications for the photonics industry. The U.S. Department of Labor projects that each year, there are more than 10,000 job openings for photonics engineers 鶹Ʒ S 700 of which are in Florida. But only 80 to 100 students in the entire U.S. graduate with bachelor 鶹Ʒ Ss degrees in photonics engineering. UCF and CREOL proudly supply more than one third of those graduates.

鶹Ʒ SThey’re high-paying jobs, and some of them are companies in the Central Florida area, 鶹Ʒ S McKee says. 鶹Ʒ SWith CREOL, they’re going to be able to get home-grown people, versus going outside of the state and bringing them in, so we’re going to enable some of these companies to continue to grow and advance in photonics locally.”

Often, local growth is made possible by international talent. Chloe Phung attends high school in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. She was awarded a scholarship to make the trip to Orlando to learn about photonics.

“I had the chance to learn many things, to know more about optics and lenses, and lasers,” Phung says.

Students hold up electronics in front of audience.
Students present what they learned to parents.

Orange County Public Schools teachers Bill Young and Jorge Vallin helped McCracken facilitate the lessons and activities. At the end of the camp, parents gathered to watch their students present what they learned. Campers explained the science behind printed circuit boards, LED lighting, lasers and light diffraction. Parents were also given information about what classes their children might take to get on the right track for the bachelor 鶹Ʒ Ss degree program. There are multiple pathways, including earning credits at Valencia College that will ultimately transfer. One day of the camp was dedicated to a tour of Valencia 鶹Ʒ Ss Osceola campus, which offers introductory courses in photonics.

“We have a really strong undergraduate program in optics and photonics at UCF, and not many people know about it, 鶹Ʒ S Hagan says. 鶹Ʒ SThis is a chance for students to get familiar. It’s also just as important for them to get a broader view of science than they might get in high school.”

The camp follows an inaugural Teacher Ambassador Program at CREOL. Eight teachers from across Central Florida spent three days doing similar hands-on activities that they could bring back to their classrooms. Unlike normal professional development workshops, the sessions also empowered teachers to become representatives for the college 鶹Ʒ S and in turn, introduce more high school students to what CREOL has to offer.

]]>
CREOL Summer Camp 1 A student builds a custom telescope using an oat container. CREOL Summer Camp 2 Orange County Public Schools teacher Jorge Vallin works with a student on a soldering project. CREOL Summer Camp 3 Students present what they learned to parents.
Honoring the 80th VE Day, Memorial Day 2025: Florida France Soldier Stories /news/honoring-the-80th-ve-day-memorial-day-2025-florida-france-soldier-stories/ Fri, 23 May 2025 13:00:04 +0000 /news/?p=146907 This year 鶹Ʒ Ss history department 鶹Ʒ Ss Florida France Soldier Stories project published 10 new biographies in observance of Victory in Europe Day on May 8 and Memorial Day on May 26.

]]>
This May marks the 80th anniversary of Victory in Europe (VE) Day 鶹Ʒ S the end of World War II in Europe 鶹Ʒ S and serves as a powerful reminder of the courage and sacrifice of the men and women who fought to liberate Europe. Each Memorial Day we commemorate veterans who served and are no longer with us.

To honor their legacy and ensure their stories aren 鶹Ʒ St forgotten, the (FFSS) project, through 鶹Ʒ Ss , recognizes the Floridians who fought and died in Europe during World War II and are now buried in the American Battle Monuments Commission cemeteries in France.

The project, which intends to memorialize Gold Star Floridians from World War II, also teaches history students how to conduct research and construct a historical narrative. This year 10 new biographies are being published through the project in honor of VE Day on May 8 and Memorial Day on May 26.

鶹Ʒ SThe young men whom our UCF students learn about died [around] the age [they] are when they research these stories. [Students] learn valuable research and writing skills, as well as about an individual who paid the ultimate price during World War II, 鶹Ʒ S says Amelia Lyons, leader of the FFSS project and an associate professor in the UCF history department.

鶹Ʒ S[FFSS] is bringing back all these men who died in service, 鶹Ʒ S says history graduate student Marie Oury. 鶹Ʒ SToday they teach students how to be better historians. Without their willingness to serve again, we couldn 鶹Ʒ St do the project. It 鶹Ʒ Ss a bridge between Florida and France, where local histories in two places become one. 鶹Ʒ S

FFSS graduate students verify all sources, edit biographies written by undergraduates and manage the FFSS website. In the process, they develop a range of professional skills they can carry into their careers after graduation.

Rows of white crosses stand in formation at the Normandy American Cemetery in Colleville-sur-Mer, France, beneath a bright blue sky. Pink roses bloom in the foreground.
The Normandy American Cemetery in France is a World War II cemetery and memorial that honors American service members who died in Europe, including Steward 鶹Ʒ Ss Mate Second Class Charles Stripling, who lost his life during the Allied invasion in June 1944.

Michael Richardson ’22, a U.S. Navy veteran and history graduate student, recently edited the biography of Steward 鶹Ʒ Ss Mate Second Class Charles Stripling. Stripling is the FFSS 鶹Ʒ Ss first biography from the Normandy American Cemetery and one of the African American sailors to pay the ultimate price during the Allied invasion in June 1944.

鶹Ʒ SCharles is FFSS 鶹Ʒ Ss first U.S. Navy biography, and to tell my brother 鶹Ʒ Ss story means a lot, 鶹Ʒ S Richardson says. 鶹Ʒ S[He] served at the front of the ship, right where the sea mine hit his Landing Ship Tank on June 11, 1944. The fact that he was reported missing and never recovered really hits home. It lets students share the veteran 鶹Ʒ Ss perspective. 鶹Ʒ S

This summer, Oury and Lyons will travel to Alsace in eastern France to meet with U.S. Consulate representatives, officials from France 鶹Ʒ Ss Ministry of Culture, and regional officials and WWII museums that have expressed interest in featuring UCF student-authored stories of American soldiers in their exhibits.

鶹Ʒ SMarie and I are excited to meet with so many people in Alsace who care about the Floridians who liberated their hometowns. In addition to local interest, WWII museums along the Rhine River get many American tourists who want to know more about the American experience in WWII, 鶹Ʒ S Lyons says. 鶹Ʒ SOur project provides these personal narratives through our rigorously researched biographies. This summer Marie and I will be working where this project started in 2015, with the first biographies our students wrote about Floridians buried in the Epinal American Cemetery. 鶹Ʒ S

This project is deeply personal for Richardson, past president of 鶹Ʒ Ss Student Veterans of America chapter.

鶹Ʒ SIt gives me a mission in peacetime. It allows me to serve my community by ensuring that these stories are told professionally and with respect for the men whose stories we tell, 鶹Ʒ S Richardson says. 鶹Ʒ SA lot of our students have not even been in the same room as a veteran, and this project helps history and veterans’ experiences come to life. 鶹Ʒ S

As we pay tribute to our nation 鶹Ʒ Ss fallen on Memorial Day, we invite you to read some of the newly published biographies by the Florida France Soldier Stories project. Many of these men never had the chance to start families, and those who did often didn 鶹Ʒ St live to see them grow up. Memorial Day is a time to reflect and honor those who are no longer with us, but whose sacrifice allows us to celebrate this holiday weekend.

New Florida France Soldier Stories

*Cities in parentheses indicate where the veterans are buried.

  • (Rhone)
  • (Lorraine)
  • (Rhone)
  • (Epinal)
  • (Lorraine)
  • (Lorraine)
  • (Normandy)
  • (Epinal)
  • (Lorraine)
  • (Epinal)
]]>
Normandy American Cemetery
The Last Line of Defense /news/the-last-line-of-defense/ Fri, 21 Mar 2025 19:34:43 +0000 /news/?p=145712 For students experiencing unexpected expenses like Ryan Hatcher 鶹Ʒ S23, the Student Emergency Fund can often mean the difference between making rent, buying food, receiving medical care 鶹Ʒ S and not.

]]>
Entering his final semester majoring in kinesiology, Ryan Hatcher 鶹Ʒ S23 found himself homeless.

His legal guardian 鶹Ʒ S the woman who raised him and whom he considers his mom 鶹Ʒ S was notified in June that her property manager had sold the home they were renting, and they had 30 days to move out. He bounced around a bit, living in his car briefly and with another family that proved toxic, before he was able to secure a room in 鶹Ʒ Ss NorthView.

It came with a cost: That was the first time in his four years in college that Hatcher, who paid for both Valencia and UCF with the Department of Children and Families 鶹Ʒ S Foster Child Tuition Waiver, had taken out a student loan. He needed the money to cover the cost of his apartment.

UCF Day of Giving is April 10. Consider supporting UCF students through difficult times .

Then, he learned he also needed an emergency root canal.

鶹Ʒ SI 鶹Ʒ Sm someone who doesn 鶹Ʒ St really like to ask for support until I really feel like I need it, 鶹Ʒ S Hatcher says. 鶹Ʒ SI try to do things by myself as much as I can. But I didn 鶹Ʒ St have insurance, and I didn 鶹Ʒ St have the money to pay for a root canal. 鶹Ʒ S

It 鶹Ʒ Ss exactly the type of unplanned predicament that UCF’s Student Emergency Fund is designed to help with.

鶹Ʒ SThe purpose of the Student Emergency Fund is to ensure that students have the financial support they need when faced with those short-term crises or emergencies, which can look different for each and every student, 鶹Ʒ S says Tammie Nadeau, director of Student Care Services. 鶹Ʒ SOur role is to ensure that those basic, short-term needs 鶹Ʒ S whether it 鶹Ʒ Ss housing, food, transportation or medical 鶹Ʒ S are met by the Emergency Fund Committee so that students can be successful and move forward. 鶹Ʒ S

According to Nadeau, her team receives roughly 100 requests a month for assistance. Typically, they 鶹Ʒ Sre in response to an emergency, such as the loss of a job or a natural disaster, including when a nearby apartment complex flooded and students needed to find 鶹Ʒ S and pay for 鶹Ʒ S temporary housing. But there are also simply random events, such as when a student 鶹Ʒ Ss car caught on fire and she lost her textbooks and laptop and didn 鶹Ʒ St have the money to replace everything.

That 鶹Ʒ Ss when students can apply for up to $2,500 per degree for assistance. Every Thursday, a committee comprised of Nadeau and staff members from Student Care Services, financial aid, the Registrar 鶹Ʒ Ss Office and Student Accounts Services gather to review applications and ensure students have exhausted every other resource. Not every student will qualify for financial aid reasons. Those that do are invited to meet remotely with the committee and review their request. For Hatcher, that included sharing his X-rays, the cost of the procedure and how he had used his other funding.

“It 鶹Ʒ Ss nice to know that as a student, UCF provides a security net in the form of the Student Emergency Fund. 鶹Ʒ S 鶹Ʒ S Ryan Hatcher 鶹Ʒ S23

鶹Ʒ SIt 鶹Ʒ Ss remarkable how this fund has been elevated to a place where we 鶹Ʒ Sre not only able to support our students with their basic needs, but also to respond to emergencies and crises as they occur, 鶹Ʒ S says Nadeau, who says they often receive calls from other universities asking how they 鶹Ʒ Sre able to get so many different departments to the table and award funds so quickly. 鶹Ʒ SBecause it 鶹Ʒ Ss so easy to get derailed when something unexpected comes up. Without this funding, many of our students probably wouldn 鶹Ʒ St still be at UCF 鶹Ʒ S or in college. Many times, this fund is a last resource for students who have nowhere else to go.

For Hatcher, the funding helped ensure he completed his bachelor 鶹Ʒ Ss on time 鶹Ʒ S as the first person in his birth family to earn a college degree. He 鶹Ʒ Ss now in his second semester of grad school at UCF, pursuing a master 鶹Ʒ Ss in public administration because he wants to 鶹Ʒ Shelp others like myself. 鶹Ʒ S

鶹Ʒ SIt 鶹Ʒ Ss corny to say this, but the people at Student Care Services really do care, 鶹Ʒ S he says. 鶹Ʒ SThey 鶹Ʒ Sre consistently at the forefront of making going to UCF the best experience possible for students. And it 鶹Ʒ Ss nice to know that as a student, UCF provides a security net in the form of the Student Emergency Fund. 鶹Ʒ S


.

]]>