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Celebrating global culture

Thursday, 27 Sep 2012
A celebration of the diverse cultures that make up Charles Sturt University (CSU) in Wagga Wagga will be held on Friday 28 September. The Global Day activity begins on the sporting field when 100 students and staff from the CSU Study Centres in Melbourne and Sydney take on a team from CSU in Wagga Wagga in friendly cricket and soccer matches. Members of the student social organisation, the International Students Club will also put their cricket skills to the test in a match against University staff. CSU Student Support Officer, Mr Roger Ansell said the day will wrap up with live music and international food at the Crow Bar with students encouraged to wear their national costume. “Charles Sturt University is proud to host students and staff from many different cultures and backgrounds, Mr Ansell said. “The University thrives on this diversity. Global Day is a chance to not only recognise the diversity, it’s a day to celebrate, share and appreciate our differences in music, sport, dance, food and religion while also celebrating our ‘sameness’ in just about everything else.” 

NSW Bike Week rolls into CSU

Thursday, 13 Sep 2012
Charles Sturt University (CSU) staff and student cyclists will gather for a group social ride to the University in Bathurst on Wednesday 19 September as part of NSW Bike Week activities. Bike Week event coordinator at CSU, Ms Nicola Smith, from CSU Green,  said events were planned for all CSU campus towns. “We encourage the University’s staff and students to cycle-to-work as a fun, healthy and low carbon means of transport which is gaining in popularity,” Ms Smith said. “The group ride during Bike Week also promotes safety and economic savings, as fuel prices and motoring costs continue to climb.” There will be a Bike Ready Event on the library lawn at CSU on Tuesday 18 September from 12pm to 2pm for cyclists to check and prepare bikes ahead of the group ride the following day. Cyclists will meet at 8am on Wednesday 19 September at Banjo’s café, William Street, Bathurst, for a free breakfast before departing at 8.30am to ride to the University.

Teaching English in Taipei

Wednesday, 5 Sep 2012
Mr Donald Joyce in the classroomTeaching English to young Taiwanese students is a rewarding experience for Charles Sturt University (CSU) in Ontario graduate Mr Donald Joyce. Born and raised in Canada, Mr Joyce had been teaching in Taiwan but wanted to gain formal qualifications, so completed a Bachelor of Primary Education Studies (BPES) at CSU in 2011. He’s now teaching at the Zhongshan Private Elementary School in Taipei. “There are many challenges that go along with teaching students whose first language is not English. You have to be creative in how you deliver your lessons and manage the classroom,” he said. Mr Joyce believes the skills gained studying at CSU have made him a better teacher. “I bring in my guitar and sing because I now recognize the importance of music and how it can be a useful tool in teaching,” he said. “This is something I would never have done in the past as my guitar skills are very basic and my singing defies description.  Now I feel compelled to take risks as a teacher because I know it will be beneficial for the students.” Read the full story here.

Participants needed for CSU cancer treatment research

Wednesday, 29 Aug 2012
Researchers at Charles Sturt University (CSU) are seeking post-treatment cancer survivors in the Bathurst area to participate in the CanLift research and exercise program. The research-based resistance exercise program has been developed by Ms Danielle Girard, a PhD student at the CSU School of Human Movement Studies in Bathurst who is an accredited exercise physiologist. Ms Girard said, “The purpose of the CanLift research and exercise program is to provide post-cancer patients an opportunity to participate in a supervised resistance training program that will assist in managing some of the long-term effects of cancer and/or its treatment. It will also provide research data that will help to develop evidence-based guidelines for the prescription of resistance exercise post-cancer.” The program seeks disease-free cancer survivors aged 40 to 70 who are non-smokers and have ceased receiving cancer-related treatments for a minimum of six months. People experiencing post-cancer fatigue are particularly encouraged to become involved, and healthy participants are also required as a comparison group. All exercise sessions will held in the Exercise Physiology and Functional Rehabilitation Clinic at CSU in Bathurst.

Images of the aftermath of flood

Friday, 24 Aug 2012
CSU student Ms Natasha Gow who joined the SES after her experience in the 2010 floods in Wagga Wagga. Photo by Ms Kate Lewis. A photographic series by Charles Sturt University (CSU) graduate Ms Kate Lewis will feature in a new multi media exhibition in Wagga Wagga on the aftermath of natural disasters in regional Australia. Curated by ABC Riverina Open producer, Ms Sonya Gee, the exhibition is a record of the rebuilding process as a result of the devastation from the Black Saturday bushfires, Cyclone Yasi and floods in Queensland and the Riverina, as told by the people who lived through them. The photos by Ms Lewis, a Master of Arts Practice (Photomedia) graduate, feature portraits of State Emergency Service (SES) volunteers in Wagga Wagga. Aftermath: Disaster, Resilience & Recovery will be launched from 2pm on Saturday 25 August in the Wagga Wagga Art Gallery, Civic Centre, Baylis Street, Wagga Wagga. A five-member panel, including Ms Lewis, will discuss the exhibition and answer questions from the floor from 2.30pm. The exhibition runs until Sunday 14 October 2012.

Injured horses in the care of CSU vets and students

Thursday, 23 Aug 2012
CSU's Dr Gareth Trope with veterinary science student Ms Joelle Tiffin and one of the injured racehorses.Around-the-clock care is being provided at Charles Sturt University (CSU) in Wagga Wagga to horses injured in a stable fire in Leeton early Tuesday 21 August. Five horses died in the blaze in one of four stable blocks at the Leeton Showground. Specialist in Equine Surgery Dr Gareth Trope, from the School of Animal and Veterinary Sciences at CSU said, “Four horses were initially transported to our Veterinary Clinical Centre but only two were admitted to the large animal hospital with burns and smoke inhalation.” A fifth horse, deemed too ill to move immediately after the fire, was examined on Wednesday 22 this afternoon. “The horses are being regularly monitored in their stalls and are receiving intravenous fluids and drugs for pain relief. The protein loss associated with burns is a major concern,” said Dr Trope, who is being supported by Dr Sharanne Raidal, a specialist in Equine Medicine. “The level of care being afforded these injured animals is a credit to our veterinary science students. The final year students on clinical duties at the Veterinary Clinical Centre are involved in the treatment of the horses. However, other veterinary science students volunteered to return to Charles Sturt University from their holidays when the call went out for assistance.”

Plain cigarette packs a healthy win: CSU Expert

Wednesday, 15 Aug 2012
CIH director, Mr Tony KolbePublic health advocate Mr Tony Kolbe from Charles Sturt University (CSU) has welcomed the High Court’s rejection of a challenge to plain packaging laws in Australia. The High Court today ruled in favour of federal government legislation to put cigarettes in olive green packets without trademarks. The ruling could see the plain packs in retail outlets by December. As Director of the University’s Centre for Inland Health (CIH), Mr Kolbe said, “Not only is this a win for the health of Australians, it sets a welcome precedent for other countries contemplating plain packaging laws. Tobacco companies can no longer use their packaging as a branding tool to sell cigarettes in Australia.” Read more about Mr Kolbe’s views on the High Court challenge by major tobacco companies on CSU News here. The CIH is a research centre at CSU, focussed on improving the health of inland communities. Read more here.
 

CSU welcomes community to Information Day

Wednesday, 15 Aug 2012
Supporting the Information Day 2012 at CSU in Port Macquarie is NSW police officers Steve Cherry and Wendy Hudson and NSW paramedics Maxine Wallace and Leisa Brunyee. The expansion of courses available at Charles Sturt University’s (CSU) newest campus in Port Macquarie in 2013 will be detailed at a special Information Day on Thursday 23 August.  Four information sessions will be held throughout the day at 27 Grant Street, Port Macquarie from 10am to 8pm. Open to the community, the event will highlight the four new CSU undergraduate degrees available for full-time study, on campus on the Mid North Coast. These include Bachelor degrees in business, paramedics, policing and medical imaging. Read more on course expansion at Port Macquarie on CSU News here. Campus Director in Port Macquarie Dr Muyesser Durur said,” These undergraduate degrees available from 2013 are in addition to the four courses now available in Port Macquarie in conjunction with North Coast TAFE including accounting, creative industries, social work, and health and rehabilitation science. Our lecturers will be on hand throughout the day to talk about our range of courses and where they can lead in terms of employment. Information about the academic and non-academic support available from Charles Sturt University for new students will also be available during the event.” You can register online for one of the four Information Day sessions here or telephone 1800 334 733. Information Day sessions on Thursday 23 August will be held from 10am to 11am; 11am to 12noon; 1pm to 2pm; and 6pm to 8pm.

Writing for kids with Andrew Daddo

Monday, 13 Aug 2012
Mr Andrew DaddoYou might know him from television but Mr Andrew Daddo will share his experience as a children’s author with literature students at Charles Sturt University (CSU) in Wagga Wagga this week.  Mr Daddo has written 18 best-selling books for children and teenagers. As writer-in-residence at the Booranga Writers’ Centre Mr Daddo will read some of his work and answer questions at a public event at the Wagga Wagga City Library on Tuesday 14 August at 5pm. On Thursday 16 August he will also speak to CSU students studying his collection of short stories for teenagers called DACKED!  Senior Lecturer in English from CSU’s School of Humanities and Social Sciences Dr Mark MacLeod said being able to talk with an author directly about their work is a fantastic learning opportunity.  “Regardless of the discipline, we are communicating all day long and while emailing and texting are convenient, they are notoriously bad at conveying the subtleties of language,” he said. “Having a fiction writer on campus is an opportunity for us to learn more about the ways we can use language to communicate our intentions more precisely and to target specific audiences.”

Developing ties with China

Wednesday, 1 Aug 2012
A 15-member delegation from one of Charles Sturt University's (CSU) international partners in China will be in Wagga Wagga on Thursday 2 August. Yangzhou University (YU) is located in the city of Yangzhou in the province of Jiangsu in China’s east. CSU currently delivers a Bachelor of Business Studies to students through YU and three other universities in China. (Read more here.) The visit from 9.30am to 5pm is aimed at exploring opportunities for research in agricultural and animal science. The Chinese delegates will meet with a range of CSU staff including Deputy Vice-Chancellor and Vice-President (Research) Professor Sue Thomas, Deputy Vice-Chancellor and Vice-President (Administration) Professor Ken Dillon and Director of the EH Graham Centre for Agricultural Innovation, Professor Deirdre Lemerle. It will also include academic staff from the School of Agricultural and Wine Sciences and School of Animal and Veterinary Sciences at CSU in Wagga Wagga. On Wednesday 4 July, six senior officials from Yangzhou University travelled to CSU in Wagga Wagga.

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