Researchers developed a way to guide effective, timely treatments for children with cancer — 83% of clinical trial patients showed improvement.
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The Latest
- Student earns prestigious Truman Scholarship for impact on homeless youth
Jahneé Smith joins a select group of students across the country who will receive Truman scholarships to help fund grad school.
- Personalized cancer treatments based on testing drugs quickly leads to faster treatment, better outcomes
Diana Azzam, assistant professor of environmental health sciences at FIU writes in The Conversation.
- FIU graduate programs among the best in the nation in U.S. News rankings
FIU graduate programs were in the top 50 among public universities in U.S. News & World Report's 2024-2025 edition of Best Graduate Schools.
- FIU receives $100,000 grant to commemorate Miami's HIV/AIDS history
Department of History invited the local community to helping with the planning of local memorials.
- An innovation is born: new mom pitches baby bottle monitor on Shark Tank
A Ph.D. student whose invention solves a problem she encountered after the birth of her son has been featured on the reality show.
- Doctoral student’s documentary on Bay of Pigs to air on PBS and streaming services
The work of Eliecer Jiménez-Almeida has received critical acclaim, and now his film on the failed 1961 CIA-sponsored military operation to overthrow Fidel Castro will be available nationally.
Highlighted Articles
- Freshman helps with groundbreaking cancer research
FIU undergraduate Baylee Holcomb is 19 years old. Cancer research she helped with just got published in Nature Medicine.
- FIU Law graduates earn highest passage rate on the Florida Bar exam again
FIU College of Law has set the bar once again.
Student Success
- American Express offers jobs, internships to 25 FIU students
Cyber threats have no borders. One hacker in one place can damage an entire company – along with its employees and clients – all over the world.
- FIU launches first-of-its-kind Center for Fraternity and Sorority Enrichment
Cyber threats have no borders. One hacker in one place can damage an entire company – along with its employees and clients – all over the world.
Research
- FIU receives $2.45 million federal grant to address disparities related to deaths of Black women from pregnancy-related causes
Cyber threats have no borders. One hacker in one place can damage an entire company – along with its employees and clients – all over the world.
- Too often left unsaid: the connection between climate change and health
Cyber threats have no borders. One hacker in one place can damage an entire company – along with its employees and clients – all over the world.
FIU in the news
- The Great Atlantic Sargassum Belt is carrying a massive bloom of brown seaweed toward Florida and the Caribbean
Cyber threats have no borders. One hacker in one place can damage an entire company – along with its employees and clients – all over the world.
Community & Government Relations
- 305 in the 202: FIU brews up the Congressional Cafecito Challenge
Cyber threats have no borders. One hacker in one place can damage an entire company – along with its employees and clients – all over the world.