Internships Give Avila Students Professional Advantage

Reaching graduation is just the first big challenge facing college students. Finding a job, or even knowing where to start looking, is the next formidable hurdle waiting for graduates when they receive their degree. 

But for students such as junior Colin Hendricks, that upcoming hurdle is a bit less daunting thanks to the internship opportunities and professional resources available at Avila.

Timothy Klocko named Avila University VP for Finance and Administration

Avila University today announced the appointment of Timothy Klocko as vice president for finance and administration. In this role, Klocko will oversee all aspects of the financial life of the University, providing management and direction for Avila’s financial activities.

Enduring Connections: Inspiring Through Mentorship

Enduring Connections: Inspiring Through Mentorship

Avila mentors make an impact that lasts a lifetime. From the moment a student takes their first steps on campus, faculty and staff see their worth, dignity, and potential. This value is ingrained in the student experience from convocare to commencement, through mentorship. 

High-sensitivity microsensors on the horizon

High-sensitivity microsensors on the horizon

Wireless microsensors have enabled new ways to monitor our environment by allowing users to measure spaces previously off limits to research, such as toxic areas, vehicle components, or remote areas in the human body. Researchers, however, have been stymied by limited improvements in the quality of data and sensitivity of these devices stemming from challenges associated with the environments they operate in and the need for sensors with extremely small footprints.

Scientists realize breakthrough in controlling the transmission of light

Scientists realize breakthrough in controlling the transmission of light

Operation of modern-day technology requires an ever-increasing use of broadband frequency signals. This, in turn, has grown the demand for reliable, efficient methods of signal transmission that prevent interference and are more efficient in their use of the scarcely available frequency spectrum. These requirements are constrained, however, by reciprocity–a law of physics that forces the transmission of light to be identical in opposite directions.

Groffman’s Study into Urban Ecosystem Homogenization published in Nature Ecology & Evolution

Expansion of urban, suburban and exurban land in the United States over the past several decades has led to neighborhoods in very different parts of the country featuring patterns of roads, residential lots, commercial areas and aquatic features that are more similar to each other than the native ecosystems they replaced.