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Champion for community services retires
A leading advocate for community services in regional Australia and an academic who has championed the cause for older Australians, Celia Bevan, will retire from Charles Sturt University (CSU) this week. Apart from a 12-year academic career as course coordinator in gerontology with CSU, Ms Bevan was a NSW representative with the Australian Council for Social Services (ACOSS) and NSW president and national secretary with the National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU). Ms Bevan will be farewelled by her academic colleagues this Thursday 13 July at the University’s Albury-Wodonga Campus.
local_offerCharles Sturt UniversityHealth
Local expert on national diabetes concern
Charles Sturt University (CSU) diabetes expert Dr Herbert Jelinek is concerned at the rapid growth of diabetes on the Border and around Australia in recent years. “Diabetes is the fastest growing disease in Australia, a trend reflected in regional areas including Albury-Wodonga,” he said. Dr Jelinek leads a group of CSU researchers investigating low-cost methods of assessing people for diabetes at the early stages of the disease. “We aim to allow diabetes and its complications to be assessed quickly in screening units in regional and rural areas before people face the more debilitating symptoms of the disease, such as high blood pressure and blindness,” Dr Jelinek said. This week is National Diabetes Week which runs until 15 July.
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Leading CSU woman Professor named in Who’s Who
One of Charles Sturt University’s (CSU) leading academics Professor Gail Whiteford has been added to the latest list of top achieving women in Australia. Professor Whiteford joins over 4 000 high-profile achievers and unsung heroes across Australia in the new Who’s Who of Australian Women released on Friday 30 June. Originally educated as an occupational therapist (OT) working extensively in Australia and overseas, Professor Whiteford has over 20 years involvement in OT and holds several national professional positions. Her current research interests include research into occupational and professional and intercultural practice with research projects in the Murray Valley of southern Australia and in Vietnam. Professor Whiteford is now Head of the University’s Albury-Wodonga Campus as well as Director of the University’s Centre for Research into Professional Practical Learning and Education (RIPPLE) and a senior researcher with the centre. In her work to nurture other academics, Professor Whiteford also spearheaded a new program at CSU in 2004, the Banksia Program, to encourage more women researchers to undertake and complete research.
local_offerCharles Sturt University
Drought research prompts a philanthropic visit to CSU
The importance of recent drought research by rural social researchers from Charles Sturt University (CSU) was on the agenda during a visit to the University’s Wagga Wagga Campus by members of the national philanthropic organisation, the Rural Education Program of the Foundation for Rural and Regional Renewal (FRRR). Led by FRRR patron and head of the Myer Foundation, Ballieau Myer, the group met with Professor Margaret Alston and Dr Jenny Kent from the University’s Centre for Rural Social Research on Saturday 1 July. As part of the vision of Federation for Rural and Regional Renewal to support communities to respond positively to change and build social and economic wealth in rural and regional Australia, the Foundation funded research into the impact of drought on young people’s access to education. The report, entitled The impact of drought on secondary education access in Australia's rural and remote areas, was also funded by the Federal Government. “The visit to the University gave us a chance to thank the Foundation for financially supporting significant research into the impact of one of the country’s worst droughts,” said Professor Alston. Further information on the drought report, including key recommendations can be found here.
local_offerSociety and Community
The US pharmacy experience
The pharmacy program at Charles Sturt University (CSU) has been learning throughout June from the experiences of a visiting Professor from Denver in the USA. Professor Christopher Turner is Director of Experiential Programs at the School of Pharmacy, University of Colorado. Taking the opportunity of a change in the registration requirements for pharmacists in the USA, the University revised its pharmacy program so that students would gain experiences that would better position them to accept their professional responsibilities at graduation. This was based on progressively pushing students beyond their comfort zones through a range of experiential learning throughout their training. “This has had the effect of bringing students to greater competence and confidence at graduation,” said CSU Professor of Rural Pharmacy Patrick Ball, who has been accompanying the visiting US Professor. “Being competent in specific tasks before taking up a student placement has allowed the students to contribute actively to their workplace,” he added. More than 120 students started in CSU’s pharmacy program in 2006 including 45 in Orange and 79 in Wagga Wagga. This brings the total number of students in the first non-metropolitan pharmacy program in Australia in 2006 to about 340.
local_offerPharmacy
A different kind of training and development
Charles Sturt University’s (CSU) Professional Development Unit (PDU) has been contracted by the NSW Aboriginal Land Council to develop a training and development strategy for Aboriginal Land Councils. The PDU will evaluate the current training packages, make recommendations for the development of new ones to fill any gaps and provide recommendations regarding delivery schedules and methods. Pat Bradbery, manager of the PDU at Bathurst CSU, says this is an important step for the PDU in its efforts to develop targeted business-related courses for Indigenous people. “The PDU will ensure the training is aligned with the Aboriginal Land Rights Act (ALRA) with the object of making the local Aboriginal Land Councils more effective and efficient in carrying out their work which primarily is to acquire and manage land on behalf of Aboriginal people.” He says the strategy can’t be the same for all as Land Councils can vary considerably. “It certainly is an interesting project because of the ALRA requirements. It is very different to developing a training strategy for a corporate customer. Because of the community involvement in Local Aboriginal Land Councils, we need to be conscious of what the executive wants as well as what the rank and file members desire,” Mr Bradbery added.
local_offerCharles Sturt UniversityTeaching and EducationIndigenousSociety and Community
Speech research wins prestigious Fellowship for CSU academic
It has been an exciting six months for Dr Sharynne McLeod, senior lecturer in language acquisition at Charles Sturt University’s (CSU) School of Teacher Education. As a world-renowned speech pathologist, she is just back from Edinburgh’s Queen Margaret University College after successfully applying for a prestigious British Academy Visiting Fellowship worth over £8000. Dr McLeod was there for a project entitled Mapping tongue/palate contact for speech sound production. “I needed to go to Edinburgh to finish analysing my work. They have been developing new technology combining ultrasound and electropalatography so you can actually map the tongue’s movement during speech. No one has combined these techniques before,” Dr McLeod said. Whilst in Europe, Dr McLeod presented some of her mapping research to the British Association of Academic Phoneticians in Scotland as well as presenting to speech pathologists, students and academics at universities in London, Sheffield and Edinburgh. There was more good news waiting for Dr McLeod on her return home when she discovered she had been awarded a Fellowship of Speech Pathology Australia, one of only two Fellowships awarded throughout Australia.
local_offerCharles Sturt UniversityTeaching and EducationHealth
Examining grapevine dieback in the Hunter Valley
An increasingly significant disease in grapevines in eastern Australia is the subject of new research at Charles Sturt University (CSU). PhD student Micheal Qiu is examining the grapevine trunk disease known as Bot canker in the Hunter Valley and Mudgee wine grape growing regions. The disease is thought to be responsible for productivity losses of overseas grapevines of up to one-third. The postgraduate research is being conducted through the National Wine and Grape Industry Centre (NWGIC) at CSU in Wagga Wagga. It aims to provide a better understanding of the disease and therefore better management of the problem. The project will examine the distribution, identity, pathogenicity and genetic variation of the causal agents of Bot canker. Several fungicides will also be tested in the laboratory for their ability to control the disease. The research is being funded by the Australian Research Council, Bayer Crop Science Pty Ltd, Hunter Valley Vineyard Association and the Mudgee Wine Grape Growers Association.
local_offerCharles Sturt University
Supporting the wine industry
Researchers at the National Wine and Grape Industry Centre (NWGIC) at Charles Sturt University (CSU) in Wagga Wagga will present their latest studies and the research benefits for industry during the annual symposium on Thursday 22 June in Wagga Wagga. Entitled The Full Circle, the symposium will cover topics such as environmental issues surrounding irrigation and nitrogen management of vineyards; vascular transport in grapevines and the impact of vineyard floor management researchers. “The communication of our research results to industry is a major and key component of the NWGIC,” said centre Director Professor Geoff Scollary. President of the NSW Wine Industry Association David Lowe will open the 2006 research symposium at 10.30am. The program for The Full Circle can be found here. The NWGIC is an alliance between Charles Sturt University, NSW Department of Primary Industries, the NSW Wine Industry Association and Deakin University.
local_offerWine &Grape Production
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