
性视界传媒Experts for the 2022 Hurricane Season
With an above-normal Atlantic hurricane season forecast for 2022, several 性视界传媒faculty experts are available to discuss various issues surrounding hurricane preparedness, evacuation and aftermath.

性视界传媒Poll: Floridians Cutting Back in Reaction to Rising Inflation
The economy, inflation and the high cost of housing are weighing on the minds of consumers as recent price hikes force Floridians to cut back on travel, entertainment and other discretionary items.

性视界传媒Economist: Few Markets, if Any, to Avoid U.S. Housing Crisis
The following is an analysis of the U.S. housing and rental markets by Ken H. Johnson, Ph.D., an economist in 性视界传媒's College of Business:

性视界传媒Celebrates Spring 2022 Commencement
性视界传媒 will confer more than 3,200 degrees on Thursday, May 5 and Friday, May 6 during six commencement ceremonies in the Carole and Barry Kaye Performing Arts Auditorium

Mother and Son Graduate 性视界传媒on the Same Day
Christine Eagle and Aden Eagle will both graduate on Thursday, May 5 from 性视界传媒.

性视界传媒to Offer Spanish-language Boot Camp for Entrepreneurs
性视界传媒's Adams Center for Entrepreneurship will offer its second Entrepreneur Boot Camp in Spanish following a recent successful pilot program.

Florida Dominates List of 25 Most Overvalued U.S. Rental Markets
Rental rates for homes and apartments have spiked across the nation, and Florida is the center of the surge, according to a new study from 性视界传媒 and two other schools.

Strong Demand for Homes Bolsters Prices, Forcing Buyers to Overpay
Home prices in the overwhelming majority of the nation's largest housing markets continue to rise despite the Federal Reserve's move to raise mortgage rates in hopes of curtailing runaway demand.

New 性视界传媒Degree Programs Target Working Professionals
性视界传媒 is launching four new master's degree programs for working professionals, including an expansion of the state's first Master of Science with Major in Artificial Intelligence.

性视界传媒Poll: Consumer Confidence Rising Among U.S. Hispanics
Despite a higher cost of living from rising inflation, the Hispanic population in the United States was more optimistic about its finances heading into the new year than it was at the end of 2021.