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What has happened to the pollen count?
LATEST NEWS  1 Jan 2003

What has happened to the pollen count?

"Frankly, it’s been so low this whole season so far, that we haven’t started reporting it yet!" says Dr George Car of CSU’s School of Biomedical Sciences. He says the pollen count is the lowest ever in the ten years he has been monitoring it in the Wagga Wagga area. "In previous years, the grass pollen count would have been well into the moderate or even into the high range by mid-October."

HealthSociety and Community

Healthy ten year track record for nutrition and dietetics
LATEST NEWS  1 Jan 2003

Healthy ten year track record for nutrition and dietetics

It could be described as CSU’s quiet achiever.

Health

Cooperative agricultural research showcased during Cambodian Prime Minister’s Wagga Wagga visit
LATEST NEWS  1 Jan 2003

Cooperative agricultural research showcased during Cambodian Prime Minister’s Wagga Wagga visit

Cooperative agricultural research projects between the NSW Department of Primary Industries (DPI) and Charles Sturt University (CSU) was a feature of the Cambodian Prime Minister’s visit to Wagga Wagga yesterday (Thursday 12 October).

Teaching and EducationInternationalSociety and Community

PM's proposed carbon tax - a slow compromise
LATEST NEWS  1 Jan 2003

PM's proposed carbon tax - a slow compromise

A CSU academic says the carbon tax proposal announced yesterday by The Hon. Julia Gillard, MP, Prime Minister of Australia, is a compromise that will be slow to provide the economy with the price incentives needed to reduce the nation's greenhouse gas emissions.

Charles Sturt University

Collaborative research helps diabetics
LATEST NEWS  1 Jan 2003

Collaborative research helps diabetics

A research project that has spanned eleven years, and across four regional cities, is giving hope to diabetes sufferers internationally.

Charles Sturt UniversityHealth

Young school-leavers not at risk: CSU research
LATEST NEWS  1 Jan 2003

Young school-leavers not at risk: CSU research

Earlier this month, a senior federal Labor MP put forward a proposal to make Year 12 compulsory for all Australian students. The proposal attracted widespread opposition, and for good reason, according to vocational education researcher Associate Professor Erica Smith from Charles Sturt University (CSU).

Teaching and EducationSociety and Community

Disability insurance highlights international commitment
LATEST NEWS  1 Jan 2003

Disability insurance highlights international commitment

Australia should introduce a national disability insurance scheme as it supports the commitment the nation made when the then Federal government ratified the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disability in July 2008, according to a CSU academic in health services.

HealthSociety and Community

We need a national approach to early childhood education
LATEST NEWS  1 Jan 2003

We need a national approach to early childhood education

Earlier this month, the OECD released a report which shows that Australia spends less on early childhood education than any other nation in the industrialised world. It prompted calls from both sides of federal politics for a national approach to early childhood education. Fran Press, Charles Sturt University senior lecturer in early childhood education, says “What we have at the moment is a dog’s breakfast".

Teaching and EducationSociety and Community

Fat and sugar: Worse than tobacco?
LATEST NEWS  1 Jan 2003

Fat and sugar: Worse than tobacco?

"I believe it is a worse health problem than tobacco," says Professor Patrick Ball, from Charles Sturt University’s School of Biomedical Sciences, "for the first time in human history, Type 2 Diabetes is more common than Type 1."

HealthSociety and Community

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