AcaRevival Initiative

Experienced academic misconduct or bullying? We're building a real weapon against it.

Read Manifesto →
TW

Tarsha Ward

Developmental Biology and Genetics

University of Virginia

No ratings yetBe the first to rate
Loading...

About Tarsha Ward at University of Virginia (UVA)

Tarsha Ward is a researcher at Harvard University focusing on the genetic and cellular mechanisms underlying congenital heart defects and related developmental disorders.

Research Areas

congenital heart defectsinduced pluripotent stem cellsSMAD2 mutationscardiovascular disease modelingdevelopmental geneticsneurofibromatosismicrotubule dynamicsmitosis
Stop Acting Like a Student.

Most PhDs fail because they never learn the hidden rules of the lab. The top 15% do.

sponsored · disclosure

Curated by the RateMySupervisor community for research productivity. · As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases.

Academic Impact Matrix

Research output metrics for Tarsha Ward aggregated from public academic databases. Student lab experience data is pending.

Academic data verified · April 2026 · Next sync: May 2026

Research Output

Total Citations1,471

Emerging researcher

Publications139

Selective publication record

h-index18

Developing track record

i10-index28

Early-stage portfolio

Lab Environment

No lab data yet for Tarsha Ward

+ Contribute First Review
  • Supervisionawaiting data
  • Responsivenessawaiting data
  • Fundingawaiting data
  • Communicationawaiting data
  • Work-Life Balanceawaiting data

Reviews (0)

No reviews yet for this supervisor.

Be the first to share your experience!

Is your PI driving you crazy?

Featured Article

The Sunday Night Dread: Surviving a Micromanaging PhD Supervisor

Real advice from PhD students on recognizing and navigating difficult supervisor relationships

Your experience matters. After reading the guide, share your review to help other PhD students.

Frequently Asked Questions

Not sure how to interpret mixed signals? A structured decision guide can help you think through high-risk supervision choices more clearly. Download the free guide.