Archive
Vanuatu beckons education students
Wednesday, 1 Jan 2003A group of CSU teacher education students will gain valuable pre-service professional experience in the Republic of Vanuatu during November.
Security high for Royal Wedding
Wednesday, 1 Jan 2003A CSU counter-terrorism and security expert says that police and security services in the United Kingdom will be on heightened alert as the Royal Wedding of Prince William and Ms Kate Middleton approaches.
CSU offers new MBA for law enforcement
Wednesday, 1 Jan 2003Law enforcement and security professionals will have access to Australia's first distance education MBA program designed specifically for their field when Charles Sturt University (CSU) begins a new course next year.
Food security in Australia, worldwide: CSU experts
Wednesday, 1 Jan 2003Four CSU experts in food security provided insights in various aspects of this growing issue for the nation during a public forum held at CSU in Albury-Wodonga on 14 August.
Leave Amy Winehouse out of the '27 Club'
Wednesday, 1 Jan 2003A CSU academic cautions that the way the horrors of drug addiction and alcoholism become romanticised and turn prematurely deceased pop performers like Britain's Amy Winehouse into a mythical figure ignores the realities of her life and death, and the lessons that could be learned from them.
Public education and secular Australia: public lecture
Wednesday, 1 Jan 2003A controversial figure in the Australian legal sector will speak on 'Public education and the third great principle of secularism' in the 2011 Bob Meyenn Lecture this week at Charles Sturt University.
Politicians don't understand science: Jones
Wednesday, 1 Jan 2003Iconic science, former politician and Australia’s longest serving Science Minister, The Hon. Dr Barry Jones, presented a public lecture on 15 August in Albury on the history of science in Australia.
Teaching students to experience Solomon Islands
Wednesday, 1 Jan 2003Ten third- and fourth-year CSU teaching students will spend three weeks from the end of October in the Solomon Islands gaining valuable professional experience to enhance their pre-service teacher education training.
Phone tapping: it's illegal and unethical
Wednesday, 1 Jan 2003An ethicist at CSU says the mounting controversy about continuing revelations of illegal phone tapping by The News of the World newspaper in the United Kingdom is the product of three separate yet interacting issues.
National learning and teaching awards to CSU
Thursday, 30 Jun 2011The Vice-Chancellor and President of CSU, Professor Ian Goulter, has welcomed national awards to four CSU staff for their outstanding contributions to student learning at the University.