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Students seek business involvement in CSU Orientation Week


Starting on Monday 11 February, Orientation Week at Charles Sturt University (CSU) will welcome over 1100 new students to the Bathurst Campus as well as introduce them to the social attractions and businesses in Bathurst. Ms Pamela Rudge, a CSU student who is also Orientation Week Sponsorship Coordinator, says “This is a time that students remember fondly for the rest of their lives. The experiences new students have and the associations they form during Orientation Week will influence their spending behaviour and preferences for the rest of their time at CSU. That’s why this is the perfect opportunity for businesses to introduce and promote their services and products to new students whose combined long-term spending contributes millions of dollars to the Bathurst economy.* I encourage all Bathurst business people to contact me to arrange to promote their businesses to the new CSU students during Orientation Week,” Ms Rudge said. Orientation Week activities run from Monday 11 to Friday 15 February, and will centre on the theme for 2008, ‘Orientation Games - Achieving Your Goals’. Highlights of the week will include; an information market day for local community organisations to promote their services to new university students; a market day for commercial businesses to promote their products and services to students from stalls on the CSU library lawn; mystery bus tours which familiarises students with landmarks, essential services and participating business houses; and day and night entertainment. Bathurst businesses interested in becoming involved with Orientation Week can contact Ms Rudge at the CSU Orientation office on 6338 4799.


Media Officer: Bruce Andrews
Telephone: 02 63386084

Media Note:
* Reference: The Economic Impact of Charles Sturt University, Western Research Institute report 2005. Contact CSU Media to arrange interviews with Ms Rudge.

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VC honours teaching excellence in 2007


Winner of the Vice-Chancellor’s Awards for Teaching Excellence 2007 is Ms Lucia Zundans from the CSU School of Teacher Education in Bathurst. The dedication of a lecturer from Charles Sturt University’s (CSU) School of Teacher Education in Bathurst has been recognised by the CSU Vice-Chancellor Professor Ian Goulter. Ms Lucia Zundans has been awarded the Vice-Chancellor’s Awards for Teaching Excellence 2007. The annual award recognises and rewards outstanding contributions to learning and teaching within the University. “Ms Zundans was considered to be an outstanding application that illustrates her commitment to, and excellence in, teaching, and especially her contribution to student learning,” said Professor Goulter.  Ms Zundans’ research interests include inclusive education and gifted and talented education. The Head of the CSU School of Teacher Education, Associate Professor Noel Thomas has described Ms Zundans as an “outstanding teacher”. “Her teaching ensures explicit connections between theory and practice, she employs a range of pedagogies to achieve effective learning and she models her passion for learning and teaching. Ms Zundans is a highly competent and dedicated academic which is evidenced by her commitment to students, colleagues and the advancement of learning within the University’s Faculty of Education,” concluded Professor Thomas.
  


Media Officer: Fiona Halloran
Telephone: 02 6933 2207


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Brain gain for CSU research


Professor Leslie Weston will relocate to the EH Graham Centre for Agricultural Innovation at CSU. The NSW Government has been successful in encouraging one of the world’s ‘best and brightest’ minds to relocate to inland NSW to carry out innovative research into the development of natural herbicides. Professor Leslie Weston, from Cornell University, one of the United State’s premier research universities, will relocate to the EH Graham Centre for Agricultural Innovation at Charles Sturt University’s (CSU) Wagga Wagga Campus under the government’s Life Science Research Awards. The NSW Minister for Science and Medical Research, Ms Verity Firth said, “Professor Weston is a recognised leader in her field of research and her relocation to the state is a major scientific coup and will cement NSW at the leading edge of scientific research into natural herbicides.” CSU Deputy Vice-Chancellor and Vice-President (Research), Professor Paul Burnett has welcomed Professor Weston’s move, stating it is a fantastic outcome for the University. The EH Graham Centre for Agricultural Innovation is a collaborative alliance between CSU and the NSW Department of Primary Industries.



Media Officer: Peter Andrea
Telephone: 02 6338 4839

Media Note: More information about Professor Leslie Weston is available here. For interviews contact CSU Media.
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Biennial Medal for water specialist


The award was presented to Professor Shahbaz Khan at the MODSIM Conference, held in Christchurch, New Zealand.Charles Sturt University’s (CSU) Professor of Hydrology, Shahbaz Khan has been presented the highly prestigious Biennial Medal from the Modelling and Simulation Society for Australia and New Zealand (MSSANZ) at a gala dinner in Christchurch New Zealand. The Biennial Medal for Natural Systems goes go to outstanding contributors to modelling and simulation over a sustained period and who have a record of service to the Society. Medallists automatically become Fellows of the MSSANZ. They are recognised for their unselfish dedication to the aims of the Society as well as for their contributions to modelling and simulation. Professor Khan, who’s also with CSIRO Land and Water, leads the Rural Water Use research stream for Water for a Healthy Country Flagship, is Director of the International Centre of WATER for Food Security at CSU and Regional Coordinator UNESCO IHP-HELP. Professor Khan says "the award is a great recognition of the end user driven development and application of innovative systems linking viable production, sustainable environment and real people to help solve real problems in real catchments."


Media Officer: Peter Andrea
Telephone: 02 6338 4839

Media Note:
For interviews contact CSU Media.

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A generous breeding gift


Mr Bill Concannon (far left) donated the Connemara Pony, Siobhan, to CSU. He is pictured with Mrs Zita Denholm from the Connemara Pony Breeders' Society, equine science student Ms Fiona Edwards and Mr Hunter Doughty from CSU. Photo by Keith Wheeler.A breeding, teaching and research program involving the Connemara Pony has been given a healthy start thanks to the generous donation to Charles Sturt University (CSU) by Brisbane businessman, Bill Concannon. His three year old mare, Siobhan, has been delivered to the CSU Equine Centre on the Wagga Wagga Campus. A member of the Connemara Pony Breeders’ Society of Australia, Mr Concannon recently visited CSU to inspect Siobhan who will be joined with a Connemara stallion in 2008. The compact size, good temperament and marketability of the Connemara Pony make the breed ideal for the needs of CSU’s equine science and veterinary science students. In welcoming the new links between the University and the Society, equine science course coordinator, Mr Hunter Doughty, has praised the generosity of Mr Concannon and his support for the University. The Connemara Pony Breeders’ Society is establishing a fund to support research and education through the Charles Sturt Foundation to aid in education of their members and to support equine student scholarships.


Media Officer: Fiona Halloran
Telephone: 02 6933 2207

Media Note:
CSU lecturer, Mr Hunter Doughty is available for comment. Contact CSU Media for interviews or photos.

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A taste of the Australian summer


Staff from CSU Ontario, Canada recently visited the Wagga Wagga Public School in Australia. Photo by Keith Wheeler.Charles Sturt University (CSU) staff from Ontario, Canada, had a brief taste of the Australian summer during a visit to CSU campuses in December. As students in the successful Bachelor of Primary Education Studies in Ontario undertook their teaching practical work, lecturers Ms Janet Adler, Ms Gail Grant, a lecturer in language and literacy, and Mr Don Jones travelled to CSU campuses at Albury-Wodonga, Bathurst and Wagga Wagga. Their trip included a visit to meet primary school students at the Wagga Wagga Public School by Ms Grant and Mr Jones.


Media Officer: Fiona Halloran
Telephone: 02 6933 2207

Media Note: For photos, contact CSU Media.
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Developing clinical education and community care models in rural NSW


A Charles Sturt University (CSU) research team from the Centre for Inland Health is investigating ways of providing health and veterinary education and services in the community, through university clinics involving students of health and veterinary disciplines practicing under supervision. Educators, students, practitioners and community members with an interest or experience in this area are invited to make written submissions. The submissions must include a brief description of your current role and interest in university clinics. They must address a short discussion of the problems, solutions or benefits in areas such as Community – how would a local university clinic affect local health and veterinary service provision, Education - how would a university clinic affect health and veterinary education for students and educators and Sustainability -  how can university clinics be sustained in your area. Submissions are confidential and should not exceed three pages.


Media Officer: Peter Andrea
Telephone: 02 6338 4839

Media Note:
Please send submissions to Dr Julaine Allan, Centre for Inland Health, CSU, Leeds Parade, Orange, NSW, 2800 or send an email. For interviews, contact CSU Media.
 
 

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CSU convenes text and the mind forum


Scientists from around Australia and overseas will discuss how the brain processes text at a forum convened by Charles Sturt University (CSU) in the Blue Mountains of NSW on Thursday 13 and Friday 14 December. Dr Joanne Arciuli, from CSU’s School of Social Sciences and Liberal Studies, said that the forum - It’s all in the Mind; Information Processing and our Language and Literacy Development - will consider questions such as: What parts of the brain are active during reading? Do we inherit our reading ability? Do you have to be a good speller to be a good reader? and Artificial intelligence is largely based on understanding of the left hemisphere - but what about the right hemisphere? The forum, at the Fairmont Resort, Leura, will report on new research in studies of text, gathering researchers, students, clinicians, educators and technology developers from the Australian Research Council’s Research Network in Human Communication Science (HCSNet), who are working in areas such as visual word recognition, reading and spelling, literacy development, text analyses, brain imaging and computer modelling.

Media Officer: Bruce Andrews
Telephone: 02 63386084

Media Note:
Contact CSU Media to arrange interviews with Dr Joanne Arciuli. See the conference website to find out more about the forum, or to download the program, discussion topics, speaker biographies and an abstracts booklet. Conference website

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Strong interest in Web 2.0


Dr Bob Pymm of CSU’s School of Information Studies presenting at the National Library of Australia in Canberra.Strong demand for a one-day seminar at the National Library of Australia (NLA) on Web 2.0 and its potential for the library community has seen the event’s audio recording placed online. The conference on the potential of the new generation of online technologies attracted interest from across Australia. This led organisers from Charles Sturt University’s (CSU) School of Information Studies to ‘podcast’ the event held recently in Canberra. “The event filled within hours of the registration process going online. With an impressive selection of speakers and demand for the event from across the country, we decided to record the presentations and make the audio available over the web to encourage its use in professional development,” said CSU lecturer Mr Jake Wallis. The audio is available here.

Media Officer: Fiona Halloran
Telephone: 02 6933 2207

Media Note:
Seminar organiser and CSU lecturer Mr Jake Wallis is available for interview on telephone 02 6933 4397 or mobile 0406 857 121.
 

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Suicide and drought


CSU social sustainability lecturer, Dr Judith Crockett. The reported link between the suicide rate amongst farmers and the drought is often based on hearsay, according to Charles Sturt University (CSU) academic, Dr Judith Crockett. The lecturer in social sustainability, from the School of Rural Management on CSU’s Orange Campus says that while the tragedy of suicide must not be downplayed and undoubtedly continues to be of major concern, many of these comments are based on hearsay. However, there is a lack of evidence concerning the actual rate of suicide in rural areas linked to the drought. “What is clear is that an early intervention approach linked to improved referral pathways to care is the most effective way of assisting rural people. The Drought Mental Health Assistance Package, funded by the NSW Government, has resulted in the implementation of a multifaceted approach across rural areas to increase the capacity of individuals, communities and service providers in drought affected areas to deal with mental health issues and to encourage practices that promote mental well-being,” said Dr Crockett. “Extensive evaluation of the program shows very positive results, including helping to reduce the stigma of mental illness in rural communities.”


Media Officer: Peter Andrea
Telephone: 02 6338 4839

Media Note:
For interviews with CSU lecturer, Dr Judith Crockett contact CSU Media

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