While the pandemic and oil glut create a double dose of devastation, three Texas A&M scholars tell Chancellor John Sharp that they see new economic opportunities rising from the rubble.
Webinar series to support businesses of all sizes
Comcast and industry experts explore critical topics facing today’s business community
Questions about coronavirus? Ask Dr. Ben
Texas A&M University-Texarkana’s Dr. Benjamin Neuman regularly answers questions about the coronavirus from journalists around the world. He also takes the time to answer them from kids.
This can’t be our new normal
When people ask me how my family is coping, I say we are fine. We’re in a house with plenty of food and reliable internet access. If my sons (a high schooler and a college student) need help with at-home learning, they meet with their teachers during Zoom office hours. Like everyone, we’re doing our best to get by. However, I also know the lessons are less engaging, less personalized and my kids can’t socialize the way they do at school. As a mother, I think to myself, this cannot become the “new normal.”
Join the Lone Star Prize
Lyda Hill Philanthropies will award a $10M grant opportunity for a long-term, transformative solution to improve the lives of Texans.
Pandemic scholars warned U.S. was unprepared
Scientists at Bush School talk with Texas A&M System Chancellor John Sharp about COVID-19 and the ignored lessons of SARS, MERS, H1N1 and Ebola.
ER Doc: “Let us help!”
As Texas mobilizes to fight a pandemic, over 200 licensed ERs – staffed with thousands of emergency doctors and nurses, equipped with ventilators, labs, and pharmacies – aren’t part of the plan yet.
Why COVID-19 is so dangerous
World-renowned scientist Dr. Peter Hotez talks straight with Texas A&M System Chancellor John Sharp about the extreme difficulties ahead.
Texas A&M telehealth services hold potential to slow COVID-19 spread.
Assessing COVID-19 patients through telehealth services, like those offered by Texas A&M’s Telebehavioral Care program, can help health care providers treat isolated patients and prevent the spread of the virus.
Why the 2020 census is as important as ever
Even with COVID-19 upending our lives, communities still need to be counted.
