Archive

Viewing page 128 of 368: Previous | 126 127 128 129 130 | Next

Students donate food to needy

Thursday, 25 Mar 2010
Students at CSU in Wagga Wagga have donated food for the needy. The generosity of Charles Sturt University (CSU) students to those in need within the local community is demonstrated in the latest fundraising event at CSU in Wagga Wagga. The students will hand over 451 cans of food to the Saint Vincent de Paul Society on Monday 29 March. The cans were collected during the weekly student bar night. Organised by the Residential Student Advisors (RAs), the students were asked to donate a tin of food or a gold coin on entry into the University’s Crow Bar on Wednesday 24 March. “We also raised $902 from the gold coin donations and this will be donated to the Red Frogs university support network,” said Head Resident at South Campus and final year Bachelor of Education (Primary) student, Mr Jason Stuart. The RAs are part of the University’s Residential Support Scheme for students living on-campus. “The Residential Advisors regularly conduct fundraising activities throughout the year at student events such as Wednesday’s ‘Traffic Light Night’. Despite their own financial needs while studying, the students are very willing to donate to help other people in the community,” Mr Stuart said. Mr Stuart and other members of the RA Event’s Committee will hand over the donated food to a representative of the Saint Vincent de Paul Society from 1.30pm, Monday 29 March at the Division of Student Services, building 20 (near the Uni Co-Op bookshop) at CSU in Wagga Wagga. Manager of Residential Operations at CSU in Wagga Wagga, Mr Peter Bell will also be in attendance.

Orientation Week at CSU in Bathurst

Friday, 19 Feb 2010
Staff at Charles Sturt University (CSU) in Bathurst expect to enrol approximately 1 000 new students when Orientation Week begins on Monday 22 February. Students will be formally welcomed to the University by Mr Col Sharp, Head of Campus at CSU in Bathurst, at the Commencement Ceremony on Monday. Mr Sharp said, “The University welcomes its new students to the campus and to the city of Bathurst at this defining point in their lives. For them, this is a time of great change – the transition to higher education, perhaps the first time away from family and established friends, a change in climate, a change of lifestyle, different and unfamiliar surroundings. I urge and challenge each of them to make the most of the opportunity, to strive for academic excellence, for personal and professional growth and for happiness and fulfilment.” A team of 50 current returning students, who will wear distinctive yellow T-shirts throughout the week, will lead new students through the orientation process and activities:
 
Monday 22 – new students arrive, receive welcoming instructions, Student ID cards, room keys and check into their accommodation; 2pm Commencement Ceremony at CD Blake Auditorium; socialise at the Rafters Bar on campus to DJ Aston Shuffle that night.
 
Tuesday 23 – Schools Day, new students are orientated to the location of their particular School, its related facilities and staff.
 
Wednesday 24 – a campus-wide scavenger hunt, and the ‘Fresher Cup’, a sports and fun day to familiarise new students with each other and the sport and recreation amenities available on campus.
 
Thursday 25 – Market Day on the CSU library lawn, followed by socialising to the band Jelly Bean Jam at the Rafters Bar on campus that night.
 
Friday 26 – Recovery Day; no formal sessions after a week of fun-filled orientation.

From academia to the Army Reserve

Thursday, 10 Dec 2009
Dr Joanne Connolly, senior lecturer in veterinary microbiology at CSU.It’s a far cry from studying platypus on the banks of the Murrumbidgee River to Army Reserve training in the jungles of Malaysia, but a Charles Sturt University (CSU) lecturer is about to get a taste of what her environmental science (Honours) student has been experiencing in his training with the Army Reserve. Senior lecturer in veterinary microbiology, Dr Joanne Connolly, from the School of Animal and Veterinary Sciences at CSU in Wagga Wagga, will leave on Monday 15 December to spend five days with Rifle Company Butterworth, near Penang in northern Malaysia, at the invitation of the Defence Reserves Support.  Dr Connolly, who researches disease in platypus, will experience life as a soldier in the field, including weapons handling and finding food from the jungle, to gain insight into the Army Reserve. It’s an activity Dr Connolly didn’t know was on the horizon when she became Mr Tom Claridge’s supervisor for his Honours degree.  However, the academic is excited and a bit nervous about the challenge. “We’ve roughed it in streams late at night netting the nocturnal platypus across the Murrumbidgee catchment as part of the current research project, but this will certainly be a bit different. Tom has to write his thesis when he gets back from his three months service, so I’ll gently remind him about that when I see him in Malaysia,” Dr Connolly said.
 

Wetlands vital for Russian caviar

Monday, 7 Dec 2009
The world’s best caviar are eggs from the endangered sturgeon found in the Caspian Sea. These fish spawn in the Lower Volga wetlands of Russia, which are under threat from damage caused by the construction of hydro-electric dams, pollution, unorganised tourism, agriculture and expansion of the oil industry. Charles Sturt University (CSU) at Albury-Wodonga will host a delegation on Tuesday 8 December from the Russian region, which is visiting Australia as part of a study tour that is inspecting Australian wetlands and water management systems. The 12 visitors, involved with a five year project funded by the United Nations Development Program, will discuss the ongoing restoration of CSU’s wetlands on its Thurgoona site and relevant water ecology and management research projects with researchers from the University’s Institute of Land, Water and Society. They will also meet with the University’s new Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Research), Professor Sue Thomas.

Conserving inland frogs

Monday, 23 Nov 2009
CSU’s Dr Skye Wassens.Threats to inland frog species and conservation strategies will be on the agenda when the Declining Frog Working Group meets at Charles Sturt University (CSU) at Albury-Wodonga on Monday 23 November. The independent advisory body is made up of policy makers, managers and scientists including CSU’s Dr Skye Wassens. The group meets three times a year to plan for the conservation and long-term management of Australia’s threatened frog fauna. Ecologist with CSU’s Institute of Land, Water and Society and meeting convenor, Dr Skye Wassens is currently looking at the breeding responses of frogs following changes in wetland flooding regimes along the Murray River. “Inland frogs are vulnerable to factors including habitat loss and degradation, exotic species, disease and climate change,” Dr Wassens said. “Coupled with these factors comes difficulty in finding frogs to actually study. Some species have very erratic activity patterns or live in remote areas or in large wetland systems which are difficult to survey. Cooperation between agencies like the Catchment Management Authorities, state government departments and scientists is vital to pool our expertise and resources,” she said. Read more about Dr Wassens research here.

Early childhood services look to future

Thursday, 12 Nov 2009
CSU's Professor Jennifer SumisonEarly childhood services on the Border can start planning for 2010 with a national perspective at the 2009 Building Bridges Regional Early Years Conference to be held on Thursday 12 and Friday 13 November in Albury and Wodonga. The keynote address for the conference will be delivered by the lead author of the recently released Early Years Learning Framework, Professor Jennifer Sumsion from Charles Sturt University’s (CSU) School of Teacher Education, who will talk about the new national framework and what will be expected of children’s services in 2010. Organised by Wodonga City Council, Wodonga Institute of TAFE and CSU, the Thursday sessions on the new vision for children’s learning will be held at Wodonga TAFE. On Friday, education experts from around Australia will discuss how the national framework will be integrated into local services. The presentations around this theme will take place at the new Learning Hub on CSU’s Thurgoona site, off Elizabeth Mitchell Drive, Thurgoona.

Plea for action for wetlands

Sunday, 8 Nov 2009
Director of CSU's Institute for Land, Water and Society Professor Max Finlayson is one of the presenters at the conference, Wetlands and Waterbirds: Managing for Resilience in Leeton.Globally, the rate of loss of freshwater wetlands exceeds that of any other ecosystem and predicted climate change will greatly exacerbate the trend in the future. According to Charles Sturt University (CSU) vertebrate ecologist Dr Iain Taylor, wetlands provide invaluable ecosystem services to humans throughout the world and are essential habitats for an amazing diversity of flora and fauna. “Many species of water birds are in serious decline and the on-going drought in southeast Australia has caused a massive and probably irreversible decline in most of the larger water birds such as egrets, ibises and spoonbills,” he said. Dr Taylor is the convener of the international conference, Wetlands and Waterbirds: Managing for Resilience in Leeton in the Riverina region of NSW from Monday 9 November. Also presenting at the conference is CSU wetland ecologist Professor Max Finlayson who said climate change will place many wetlands and species under further pressure from rising temperatures and changes to their water regimes as rainfall patterns change. “If anything we should be constructing or restoring more wetlands, not degrading those that are left. They are valuable and have been under stress for far too long,” said Professor Finlayson, Director of CSU’s Institute for Land, Water and Society.

Taking it off for men's health

Thursday, 5 Nov 2009
RA Nude Movember Calendar at CSU. Student leaders at Charles Sturt University (CSU) at Wagga Wagga will reveal more than usual when they unveil a 2010 calendar to raise money for men’s health. The male Residential Advisors or RAs will launch their nude calendar from 2.30pm on Friday 6 November. Funds raised from the sale of the $10 calendars will go to support the annual Movember campaign highlighting men’s health issues, specifically prostate cancer and depression in men. The RAs featured in the calendar will be on hand at CSU at Wagga Wagga on Friday 6 November to autograph their favourite month. During the event, students who participated in the Moctober Challenge – Grow or Design a Mo’ - from Friday 9 October to Friday 6 November will participate in a final shave-off and celebrate with a barbecue. The calendar launch and final shave-off for Moctober will be held near the student canteen, building 20, near car park 2, Darnell Smith Drive, CSU at Wagga Wagga.

Graduates celebrate in Hong Kong

Thursday, 5 Nov 2009
The Chancellor of Charles Sturt University (CSU) Mr Lawrie Willett AO will praise the academic achievements of almost 70 graduates who are eligible to receive their awards at a ceremony in Hong Kong on Saturday 7 November. The graduates will receive their postgraduate and undergraduate awards from the University’s Faculties of Arts, Business, Education and Science from 10.30am in the Langham Place Hotel in Hong Kong. The occasional address will be delivered at the graduation ceremony by Mr Steve O’Conner, the Librarian at the Hong Kong Polytechnic University. Mr O’Conner has worked in Higher Education for most of his career and has researched, published, spoken, consulted and taught very extensively in the areas of change, organisational management, information delivery, scenario and strategic planning, as well as the wider library and information environment. Graduates have completed a range of courses at CSU in areas such as theology, business, information technology, hotel management, arts, primary education, library and information management, medical imaging and clinical nursing.
 

Crafts of Contrast art exhibition at Wagga Wagga

Tuesday, 20 Oct 2009
Artist and CSU student Ms Melanie Evans at the launch of her exhibition Crafts of Contrast.An art exhibition by two Indigenous students at the Charles Sturt University (CSU) School of Visual and Performing Arts at Wagga Wagga will be opened today, Tuesday 20 October. Bachelor of Arts (Fine Arts) student, Ms Melanie Evans, and postgraduate jewellery student, Mr Wayne Simon, will showcase their works in Crafts of Contrast to be opened at the William Merrylees Library at CSU at Wagga Wagga from 3pm by Mr Ray Eldridge, Manager of the University’s Indigenous Student Services. There will be a Welcome to Country by Wiradjuri Elder Aunty Sandy Warren. The exhibition of black and white photographs and linoprints by Ms Evans and jewellery by Mr Simon will remain on display in the library foyer until Tuesday 3 November. “In the exhibition, we play with the differences and similarities of the white and black cultures that we belong to and the journey of self discovery,” said Ms Evans.  “We have walked contrasting paths, but have met at a crossroads where we can nurture and challenge each other’s ideals in order to strengthen our cultural identities.”

Viewing page 128 of 368: Previous | 126 127 128 129 130 | Next