New DPT Program for Remote Students
Spalding University in Louisville, Ky, announces plans to launch a hybrid online/on-campus Doctor of Physical Therapy program in the fall of 2022. Applications for the new program are being accepted starting June 15.
The new Spalding School of Physical Therapy will offer an entry-level DPT track for aspiring physical therapists as well as an online post-professional track for practicing PTs who want to earn a doctorate.
The program will be presented in a hybrid, low-residency format of online lecture courses and in-person laboratory experiences held 1 week each month in a state-of-the-art facility that is currently being renovated from its previous use as a Chevrolet dealership. The renovation is set to be completed in late 2021, according to a news release from the university.
âPeople all over came to helpâ: Louisville âsnow baby,â Michelle Schmitt, dies at 30 âPeople all over came to helpâ: Louisville âsnow baby,â Michelle Schmitt, dies at 30 (Source: WAVE 3) By Stephen Goin | May 8, 2021 at 7:29 PM EDT - Updated May 8 at 8:05 PM
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (WAVE) - For 27 years, people in Louisville knew Michelle Schmitt-Cobble as the âsnow baby,â but she will always be âlittle sisterâ to Ashley Schmitt.
âShe was passionate, caring and loving to everyone, she treated everyone equally,â Ashley said. âWe went through a lot with each other growing up and we leaned on each other growing up because we both knew what we were going through⦠she wanted to help other people because weâve had so many people help us.â
Release date: May 04, 2021
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Andi Kennedy knows the best cure for her breakup is a weekend at a music festival with her twin brother. Nothing gets her mind right like great bands, Andi Kennedy knows the best cure for her breakup is a weekend at a music festival with her twin brother. Nothing gets her mind right like great bands, footage for her popular YouTube channel, and cute boys-including the charming guy in the next campsite.
Can therapy ease the trauma of U.S. racist attacks and systemic racism?
Reuters | May 01, 2021 12:40 AM EDT
Tracy Park sits in the park in which she was shouted at with her daughter, as the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic continues, in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, U.S. (Photo : REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson)
Chinese-American mental health counselor Monica Band started getting a flood of calls and emails soon after former U.S. President Donald Trump began blaming China for the deadly COVID-19 pandemic.
News followed of the killings of six Asian-born spa workers in Atlanta and brutal attacks on people of Asian descent nationwide. Band s mostly Asian-American clients in the Washington, D.C., area have been spat on, called racist names and in one case physically assaulted on a commuter rail line by an assailant yelling, Go back to China!