04/27/2022
Stressed about finals? Come and pick up your final exam survival kit!
Now -May 4 from 9:00 AM - 4:00 PM (while supplies last)
Education Building, Room 1109 (Student Services) or Room 3200 (Dean's Office).
04/25/2022
Dr. Petros Katsioloudis, associate dean with is in beautiful Cypress, Greece to deploy research buoys to learn more about climate change and sea level rise. Learn more at https://www.odu.edu/news/2022/4/odyssey_exploration #.YmciD_cpDDs
04/23/2022
Future Monarchs are here to learn more about our programs at ’s open house!
04/02/2022
Representing the Darden College of Education and Professional Studies at
04/02/2022
Admitted students get a hands-on demonstration at our STEM Lab Tour! 🔬🥼👩💻
04/02/2022
We’re here for ! Student orgs are here to represent their
03/15/2022
It’s Day! Today with your help, you can support our students by giving to student scholarships at the link below. Be sure to include where you want your donation to go.🥳🎉
🔗: give.communityfunded.com/o/old-dominion-university/i/give2odu-day/s/darden-college-of-education-professional-studies-2020
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02/26/2022
Some pics from today’s Scholar’s Day event, including a building tour and demonstration in one of our STEM labs!
06/23/2021
Congratulations to Michala Hendrick, graduate student of Human Movement Sciences and co-author of Do Rising Flows Lift All Boats?: Ecosystem Service Elasticity in the Dolores River Watershed. The manuscript recently won the Best Masters' Student paper award in advance of the 2021 International Association for Society and Natural Resources - IASNR Conference. Way to go! https://bit.ly/2Sivqaa
06/18/2021
Juneteenth. This day is worthy of a national holiday.
Juneteenth refers to June 19th 1865, which is the date, three months after the Civil War came to an end, when Union troops arrived in Texas and a proclamation was made to alert everyone in Texas to the fact that all slaves were free. Texas was the last state to fall under Union control, so Juneteenth marks the true emancipation of slaves in the Confederacy.
The slaves were “freed” in the Confederacy by Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation in 1863, but that proclamation had zero effect on slaves or slave owners living there.
Border states that were loyal to the Union and still had some slaves did not fall under the Emancipation Proclamation, because Lincoln had no authority to abrogate the laws of Union states. So, the final emancipation of slaves in the US didn’t happen until December 1865, when the 13th Amendment was ratified.
So, if we are to celebrate the end of slavery in the US, and we certainly should, should we use the date of Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation, the date the slaves were freed in the last Confederate state, or the date that the final US slaves were freed by the 13th Amendment?
History has solved this question for us. Former slaves in Texas soon began celebrating June 19th, affectionately called Juneteenth. That celebration gradually spread across the country over the next 150+ years, and Congress just passed a law making it a national holiday.