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Campus head shows sustainable way for Albury
ALBURY-WODONGA  1 Jan 2003

Campus head shows sustainable way for Albury

Acting Head of Charles Sturt University  (CSU) at Albury-Wodonga and Head of the Murray School of Education, Associate Professor Louise Hard, is showing the way to fellow staff and the wider Albury community by riding regularly to work at CSU’s Thurgoona site. Professor Hard, who lives in Thurgoona, decided to make a point of riding to work after trips to Europe where she noticed so many people riding everywhere. “In a world where we need to be increasingly responsible for our use of resources and find more sustainable ways to work and live, riding to work is one small contribution. Here in Albury we are very fortunate to have good access to many services, and living and working locally means I can begin to reduce my impact on our environment. I hope that this approach can be adopted by others so we can all continue to enjoy a healthy, sustainable lifestyle,” Professor Hard said.

Charles Sturt University

International agreement to increase enrolments
ALBURY-WODONGA  1 Jan 2003

International agreement to increase enrolments

Charles Sturt University (CSU) will increase the number of courses offered to Dongguk University students when a senior delegation from the South Korean university visits CSU in Albury-Wodonga. The delegation, led by the Head of School from the Computer Science Institute at Dongguk, will be in Albury on Wednesday 16 and Thursday 17 June to speak with 20 undergraduate Korean students currently undertaking business degrees in Albury and inspect the new buildings and facilities on the Thurgoona site. On Tuesday 15 June, the delegation including the Dean of the Computer Science Institute met with senior CSU staff to sign an agreement to allow Dongguk students to obtain recognition for units they study into a CSU Master of Business degree. CSU’s Head of the International School of Business and Partnerships in the Faculty of Business, Associate Professor John Atkinson, said this will encourage more South Korean students to study on CSU campuses, including Albury-Wodonga.

Charles Sturt University

Fiji students at CSU
ALBURY-WODONGA  1 Jan 2003

Fiji students at CSU

Charles Sturt University (CSU) in Albury-Wodonga and Wagga Wagga is this week playing host to Fijian students hoping to learn more about the discipline of pathology. Six students studying medical laboratory science at the University of South Pacific (UPS) in the Fijian capital of Suva will be in Albury and the Riverina from Monday 14 June until Friday 18 June. The visit is part of the CSU Global program,   the University’s initiative to promote international student experiences. “In 2009, I took a group of CSU Bachelor of Medical Science students to Fiji to tour the USP as well as pathology laboratories in Suva, Lautoka and Sigatoka,” Ms Helen Moriarty, lecturer with the School of Biomedical Sciences at CSU in Wagga Wagga said. “I hope this return visit to CSU by the Fijian students and one of their lecturers will lead to biannual student exchange. While in Albury-Wodonga, Cootamundra, Griffith, Temora and Wagga Wagga, the students will learn about our Bachelor of Medical Science program and our facilities as well as tour private pathology and hospital laboratories.”

Charles Sturt UniversityHealth

Too old too soon
ALBURY-WODONGA  1 Jan 2003

Too old too soon

The challenging issue of the sexualisation of girls will the subject of discussion at a public lecture in Griffith on Wednesday 23 June. Lecturer in Philosophy and Ethics at Charles Sturt University (CSU) Dr Emma Rush will give an overview of what researchers and experts have to say about the risks associated with the sexualisation of girls and explain the government’s response. Dr Rush will also identify resources for parents and professionals who work with girls. “As a society we must strive for the development of healthy and happy girls,” Dr Rush said. “Yet we are now seeing miniature celebrity fashion magazines, lip gloss and padded bras being sold for everyday use by girls from the age of eight. The increasing pressure on girls to meet very narrow appearance ideals at younger and younger ages is of significant concern to experts in child health and welfare.” The free lecture will be held from 6pm in the Burley Griffin Room, Griffith Regional Theatre in Neville Place, Griffith on Wednesday 23 June. CSU wine and cheese will be served after the lecture.

Society and Community

Pilot project launched
ALBURY-WODONGA  1 Jan 2003

Pilot project launched

A joint project between Charles Sturt University (CSU), TAFE NSW - Western Institute, TAFE NSW Riverina Institute, and the Batchelor Institute of Indigenous Tertiary Education is set to make training easier for future early childhood educators who live in regional Australia. The Early Childhood Education Workforce Capacity Project (ECEWC) aims to build workforce capacity in early childhood education throughout inland and Indigenous areas in NSW and the Northern Territory. “The aim is to assist the aspirations and needs of regional communities, and individual practitioners in the Early Childhood Education field,” said project manager and CSU lecturer in the School of Teacher Education, Ms Alison Lord. “We can do this by providing an opportunity for students, both recent school leavers and mature age, a means to study at home supported by the provision of Mentors and Community Facilitators, without the need to relocate to another town or city, or leave employment in order to undertake university study,” Community Orientation Professional Development Days will be held over the next two weekends in Griffiths and Parkes giving the 42 students enrolled in the project the support they need to continue their studies.

Teaching and Education

Physiotherapy building on the rise
ALBURY-WODONGA  1 Jan 2003

Physiotherapy building on the rise

A $7.7 million dollar development at Charles Sturt University (CSU) in Orange will see the campus with restructured roads and a brand new Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation Science teaching facility constructed for the School of Community Health. With the Bachelor of Physiotherapy course established at the Orange Campus this year, CSU will continue its development of the campus with a new purpose-built facility including academic offices, and simulated health spaces such as a rehabilitation gym and practice clinic. Head of the School of Community Health, Associate Professor Julia Coyle says, “Both the students and academics are very excited about the construction beginning in September, and the introduction of the Bachelor of Health and Rehabilitation Science degree which starts in Orange in March 2011.  The new Health Rehabilitation students will learn in the new facility alongside the Physiotherapy students.”

Charles Sturt UniversityHealth

More awards for new dentistry building
ALBURY-WODONGA  1 Jan 2003

More awards for new dentistry building

One of Charles Sturt University’s (CSU) newest buildings is up for a national architecture award after it was recognised at the state level last week. The School of Dentistry and Health Sciences building at CSU in Wagga Wagga was named a winner at the Australian Institute of Architects' 2010 NSW Architecture Awards in Sydney on Friday 18 June. The two-storey structure by Brewster Hjorth Architects won the Colorbond Award for Steel Architecture. The building, which is home to the new Dental and Oral Health Clinic, will now go into the Institute’s national awards in October 2010. This is not the first award for the CSU building. In November 2009, builders Joss Construction were named a winner at the Master Builders Association Excellence in Construction Awards. The building, comprising of teaching, research and academic facilities including the clinic and a 20-place simulation laboratory, was officially opened in December 2009. Read more about the award-winning building at CSU in Wagga Wagga here.

Charles Sturt University

Botany educator wins international recognition
ALBURY-WODONGA  1 Jan 2003

Botany educator wins international recognition

An award-winning website that helps learners recognise the finer points of living plants has helped win international recognition for a Charles Sturt University (CSU) lecturer in botany. Dr Geoff Burrows has been awarded the 2010 CE Bessey Award from the Botanical Society of America for his contributions to teaching botany to undergraduate university students, many of whom complete his subjects by distance education. Dr Burrows, who is also a researcher with the University’s Institute for Land, Water and Society, said it was gratifying to receive this recognition from an international society of botanists. “It shows that Charles Sturt University students are receiving a world-class introduction to their education in plant science,” Dr Burrows said. Read more about the website, Supermarket Botany here.

Charles Sturt University

Regional robotics championship at CSU
ALBURY-WODONGA  1 Jan 2003

Regional robotics championship at CSU

The 2010 Central West RoboCup Junior Challenge robotics competition will see 153 students from 11 schools across the region build and operate mini robots at Charles Sturt University (CSU) in Bathurst on Friday 25 June. The coordinator of the competition, Mr Allen Benter, a PhD student and researcher at the CSU Centre for Research in Complex Systems (CRiCS)  in Bathurst, said, “Charles Sturt University is now the official sponsor of the RoboCup Junior Challenge in the NSW central west following its strong support for the event in recent years. Staff at the University have provided technical advice to students and their teachers, have been judges at previous RoboCup events, and in February this year we held a training workshop on campus in Bathurst for students and teachers. It’s very exciting to now see this developing field so enthusiastically embraced by schools in the region.”

Charles Sturt University

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