Monday 23 November 2009 | 01:12 PM AEST

Subscribe

Subscribe to CSU News to receive regular news and upcoming events subscribe
 
ALBURY-WODONGA

Home > Regional News > Albury-Wodonga

Sustainable food on show


Charles Sturt University (CSU) students will put local food on show at a Sustainable Food Day to be held on Wednesday 5 September at its Thurgoona site. The event has resulted from their participation in the national 2007 Students of Sustainability Conference held recently in Perth, where as their coordinator Peter Barrett says, “We ate vegan food all week and it was pretty good!”.  The Sustainable Food Day will run from 12noon at the Gums Café on the University’s Thurgoona site and is part of the activities that the students have held since they returned from the Perth conference. “As much of the food as possible comes from local sources, making every dish as sustainable as possible. We will also have recipes and information for CSU students and staff and the public to take with them and make delicious sustainable food at home,” Mr Barrett said.


Media Officer: Wes Ward
Telephone: 02 6051 9906

Media Note:
For interviews with Peter Barrett on Wednesday 5 Spetember, contact CSU Media.

Print this story

Up close and personal


Happiness is desired by all, yet achieved by only a few. But according to Dr Timothy Sharp, it does not always have to be like this. Dr Sharp will show participants how to get more out of life using principles from positive psychology during a seminar hosted by Charles Sturt University (CSU) on Friday morning 7 September on its Albury-Wodonga Campus. “My colleagues and I are achieving some wonderful results with individuals and organisations all over Australia, and I look forward to sharing the knowledge and experience we’ve gained over the last few years to Albury,” said Dr Sharp, who has three degrees in psychology and has worked as a clinical and academic psychologist. Australia's leading expert in positive psychology, in 2003 Dr Sharp founded The Happiness Institute in Sydney, NSW. The seminar will start at 9.30am at the boardroom, CSU’s Gordon Bevan building, off Old Sydney Road, Thurgoona.


Media Officer: Wes Ward
Telephone: 02 6051 9906

Media Note: Dr Sharp is available for interviews in Albury from 10.30am on Thursday 6 June.
Print this story

Equine influenza – be vigilant and compliant


A panel of CSU equine health experts, led by Director of Veterinary Science Professor Kym Abbott, outlined the status of the EI outbreak, how the highly contagious virus is transmitted and ways to prevent its spread through the nation’s equine population. Members of the Riverina equine community at a Charles Sturt University (CSU) Equine Influenza (EI) forum have been urged to work together so that NSW Department of Primary Industries (DPI) quarantine restrictions, imposed in response to Australia’s first EI outbreak, are upheld by everyone in the community. Participants emphasised that the disease poses a threat to all horses, ponies and donkeys. Around 130 people attended the forum which was organised in Wagga Wagga by the CSU School of Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences. A panel of CSU equine health experts, led by Director of Veterinary Science Professor Kym Abbott, outlined the status of the EI outbreak, how the highly contagious virus is transmitted and ways to prevent its spread through the nation’s equine population. CSU veterinary science lecturer Dr Sharanne Raidal stressed the importance of community vigilance and compliance to halt the advance of equine flu, which can be transmitted by humans, vehicles and equipment.


Media Officer: Peter Andrea
Telephone: 02 6338 4839

Media Note: For interviews contact CSU Media
Print this story

CSU horse flu experts at public forum


Following the outbreak of equine flu that has threatened the Australian horse industry, experts from Charles Sturt University (CSU) will provide information and advice at a public forum in Wagga Wagga on Wednesday 29 August. Dr Sharanne Raidal, senior lecturer in Veterinary Science at the School of Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences on Wagga Wagga Campus, says, “This is a very important issue for the Australian equine industry. Halting the spread of disease can only be achieved through strict compliance with DPI instructions regarding movement of horses, personnel and equipment. This means keeping horses at their current locations, and restricting movement of people and vehicles. CSU equine facilities at Orange and Wagga Wagga are providing a good example of doing the right thing by suspending classes and imposing industry-standard precautions to contain the outbreak of equine flu in NSW.”


Media Officer: Bruce Andrews
Telephone: 02 63386084

Media Note:
Contact CSU Media to arrange interviews with Dr Sharanne Raidal. The public forum, ‘Equine Flu: facts and fiction’, will be at 6pm Wednesday 29 August in Joyes Hall, Pine Gully Rd, CSU Wagga Wagga Campus. Speakers from the CSU School of Agricultural and Veterinary Science include Professor Kym Abbott, Dr Sharanne Raidal, Dr Brian Hilbert, Dr Jan Lievaart, Ms Petra Buckley, Mr Hunter Doughty, and Dr Scott Norman.

Print this story

CSU graduate’s international success


Charles Sturt University (CSU) 2006 television production graduates Luke Heywood and Tim Pass are ecstatic with the news that their production Chance Your Hand will be screened at the 2007 New York Television Festival Independent Pilot Competition. Chance Your Hand, a situation comedy showing the behind the scenes drama of a television game show, was a major project during the students’ third year studies. Produced at the CSU School of Visual and Performing Arts studios at the Wagga Wagga Campus in inland NSW, Chance Your Hand is one of only three productions selected from outside the United States. CSU Associate Lecturer Patrick Sproule says, “this is a major accolade for the both the course and the students, showcasing just how capable, creative and talented our television, acting and theatre design graduates are”. Luke and Tim will travel to New York to attend the festival from 5 – 9 September and hope to meet network executives to further their television careers.


Media Officer: Peter Andrea
Telephone: 02 6338 4839

Media Note:
For interviews contact CSU Media. The festival website in here. The production Chance Your Hand can be viewed online.  (be aware Chance Your Hand contains coarse language that may offend some viewers).
Email Luke Heywood, writer and co-producer of Chance Your Hand here.

Print this story

CSU embraces podcast education


Charles Sturt University (CSU) is reaching out to students in distant and remote locations through the growing education resource of podcasting, the broadcast of audio files across the internet. CSU School of Computing and Mathematics lecturer Anthony Chan says: “Podcasting is now happening in CSU biomedical sciences, accounting, information technology, food and wine sciences and commercial radio and management courses. Podcasts are provided to students before and after classes and include interviews with experts from around the world”. An international collaborative project between CSU and USA’s Bentley College allows students in a first year computing subject to learn from each other and another lecturer half way round the world. The School of Computing and Mathematics also uses podcasting with a local Wagga Wagga high school, with their work in Japanese learning and teaching featured on Japanese television. Studies within CSU have shown that podcasting reduces the effects of isolation and promotes inclusiveness. Surveys with CSU undergraduate students also show podcasting reduces their stress levels, especially students who are coming into a higher education environment for the first time.


Media Officer: Peter Andrea
Telephone: 02 6338 4839

Media Note: For interviews contact CSU Media. Click here to hear a sample of CSU podcasting - an interview with Vice-Chancellor Professor Ian Goulter regarding the new dental school at CSU.
Print this story

CSU Winery’s Royal Melbourne success.


CSU Winemaker Andrew Drumm and Marketing Manager Richard LawsonCharles Sturt University ( CSU ) winery has enhanced its reputation as an innovative producer of fine wines. The CSU Winery, based at the Wagga Wagga Campus, was awarded one silver medal and four bronze medals at the recent Royal Melbourne Wine Show. The 2004 Shiraz was awarded a silver medal, with this wine also earning four Bronze Medals at other major Australian wine shows. Bronze medals were awarded to CSU ’s 2005 Shiraz , the follow up vintage to the silver medal winning 2004 Shiraz , the 2006 Cabernet Sauvignon Merlot, the 2005 Limited Release Cabernet Sauvignon Merlot and the 2004 Limited Release Cabernet Sauvignon Merlot. The Melbourne Wine Show is one of the major wine shows in and is very highly regarded worldwide. CSU Winery Mark eting Manager Richard Lawson says “there were over 3 600 entries from around , so it is a great achievement”.

Media Officer: Peter Andrea
Telephone: 02 6338 4839

Media Note: The CSU 2005 Shiraz, 2006 Cabernet Sauvignon Merlot, the 2005 Limited Release Cabernet Sauvignon Merlot and the 2004 Limited Release Cabernet Sauvignon Merlot are yet to be released to the public. For interviews with CSU Winery Marketing Manager Richard Lawson or Winemaker Andrew Drumm, contact CSU Media.
Print this story

Early childhood conference builds bridges


Building Bridges is the theme of this year’s annual early childhood conference to be hosted by Charles Sturt University (CSU), together with the City of Wodonga. The aim of the conference is to build many bridges: between Victoria and NSW, between early childhood educators and primary school teachers, between student teachers and teachers, and between educators and the public. The two day conference, to be held this Friday 17 and Saturday 18 August for the first time in Wodonga, features guest speakers with national and international experience, including the motivational Cathy McGowan, leading educator and Principal of Benalla Primary School Heather Leary and CSU’s Professor Sue Dockett and Associate Professor Bob Perry. The program also includes research completed and presented by CSU final year education students at the University’s Albury-Wodonga Campus on such topics as autism, computer literacy and language in early childhood. Teachers and parents across southern NSW and North East Victoria have been invited to attend.


Media Officer: Peter Andrea
Telephone: 02 6338 4839

Media Note:
Interviews with conference coordinators Dr Louise Hard and Dr Richard Taffe from CSU’s Murray School of Education will be available at the Wodonga Civic Centre, Hovell St, Wodonga, at 10.30am on Friday 17 August. Also contact City of Wodonga communication adviser Sue Beattie on mobile 0417 533 962 for further details on the conference including the program, or visit the conference website. http://www.wodonga.vic.gov.au/earlychildhood/


Print this story

Macbeth, the play


No.  Not of Eastwick but of Wagga. The Macbeth Witches from the University Theatre Ensembles’ upcoming production of Macbeth at the Riverina Playhouse.Macbeth is one of Shakespeare’s shortest and bloodiest tragedies, depicting a naked lust for power at any cost. Written four hundred years ago, its central theme of power and ambition has contemporary parallels, making the play as relevant now as when it was first written. The University Theatre Ensemble’s production is directed by John Bolton, an award winning director from Melbourne, and features third year acting students from Charles Sturt University (CSU). The play is also designed and stage managed by final year students in CSU’s degree in design for theatre and television production. The play’s director John Bolton has taken an innovative approach to the play by producing a shorter, clearer, playful and vibrant piece of theatre working with the students to dissect the text and incorporate the motifs and symbols at the heart of the play.


Media Officer: Peter Andrea
Telephone: 02 6338 4839

Media Note:
Macbeth plays at the Riverina Playhouse from 17 August to 1 September. For interviews contact CSU Media.

Print this story

Healthy feet take on city slickers


Five podiatry students from Charles Sturt University’s Albury-Wodonga Campus will this Sunday 12 August take on the mighty mass of runners in the Sydney City-to-Surf Fun Run. Local third year students and regular entrants in the local Nail Can Hill run, Brad White and Dominique Ferguson, will be joined by three second- and first-year students in the annual event. The students are being sponsored by the Podiatry Association of NSW, which gives the Albury-based students direct association with their professional body. “Podiatry has close contact with runners and sports groups and jobs are plentiful when we qualify,” said Mr White. Running partner Dominique Ferguson said “this event helps me combine my love for running with work in my chosen profession, and get paid for it when I qualify.”


Media Officer: Wes Ward
Telephone: 02 6051 9906

Media Note:
For interviews, contact CSU Media.

Print this story
Events

CSU Home  Legals  Search  IT Service Desk
©2009 Charles Sturt University CRICOS 00005F (NSW), 01947G (VIC) and 02960B (ACT)