483 algorithm-development-"Prof"-"Washington-University-in-St"-"Prof" positions at University of Minnesota
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Code 8208A1 Employee Class Civil Service Add to My Favorite Jobs Email this Job About the Job Summary: The BioGen Center (Departments of Genetics, Cell Biology and Development (GCD) and Biochemistry
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-oriented Clinical Research Coordinator (Research Professional 1 or 2) to join our research team for a series of projects on treatment development for disease of addiction. These project aims to investigate
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transportation. This is a 75% appointment (30 hours per week) position at the Center for Early Education and Development (CEED) in the Institute of Child Development, part of the College of Education and Human
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transportation. This is a 50% appointment (20 hours per week) position at the Center for Early Education and Development (CEED) in the Institute of Child Development, part of the College of Education and Human
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Women in Sport at the University of Minnesota plays a key part in business development and training initiatives while maintaining alignment with branding and partnership requirements. The University
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: 06/02/2025 End Date: 08/01/2025 Pay Rate: $20.01 per hour Essential Functions: Development, Marketing, and Administration (40%) Process, evaluate, and monitor study abroad applications Liaise with
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point person / liaison to SPA, SFR and PIs/CUHCC grant project managers for accounting during post-award, developing PS-friendly budgets, rebudgets, processing retro distributions and payroll distribution
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mentorship in all stages of the research process, from study design to dissemination. The role is ideal for a motivated individual seeking professional growth and development in a collaborative
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Manager, this position will help develop consistent policies, procedures, and best practices to follow collegiate and University policies and procedures in the areas of budget, daily operations of financial
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progression to metastasis and resistance to therapeutic intervention in breast and pancreas cancer, and develop new therapeutic approaches. To answer these fundamental questions we rely heavily on genetically