Dubbo
-
Filter articles
chevron_right
A showcase of CSU health research
Researchers from across Charles Sturt University (CSU) will present their latest studies covering a wide-range of health issues during a two day forum at Wagga Wagga this week. Many of the University’s lead health researchers will present their work on various topics, including rural health, complementary medicine, mental illness, injury management, nuclear medicine, cardiovascular disease and farmer health and pesticides. The forum entitled Health Research at CSU: A Showcase of Current Strengths and Strategies for Success, will be held at the Convention Centre, CSU, Wagga Wagga from 2pm Wednesday 14 June until 12.30pm Thursday 15 June. “This forum demonstrates the University’s commitment to meeting the needs of our communities and health professionals for high-quality research that addresses their priority health concerns,” said CSU senior research fellow and forum co-organiser Dr Rod Pope. The event has been organised by the University’s Faculty of Health Studies.Click here to see program.
local_offerHealth
National news network nears the century
An agreement between the National Radio News (NRN), based at Charles Sturt University (CSU), and community radio station, 2MBS has expanded the number of stations subscribing the NRN’s news service to 93. NRN provides regular national radio news to nearly 4 million listeners on community radio stations across Australia in metropolitan, regional and remote areas. Based in Sydney, 2MBS is considered a national “flagship” station of community radio, with over 400 000 residents in the broadcast area. Six CSU communication students are employed as cadets by NRN for 15 months and regularly record news stories while supervised by working journalists. “NRN is not a classroom – our students work in a real newsroom with real pressures to produce 13 live, daily news bulletins for a national audience,” said NRN manager Peter Hetherington. “Exposure on such large stations is great experience for our students.”
local_offerCharles Sturt University
Schmoozing with Nobel Laureates
A young woman scientist from Charles Sturt University (CSU) has been selected from a worldwide pool of outstanding students in the field of chemistry to attend the 56th Meeting of Nobel Laureates in Germany next month (25-30 June). Suzy McDonald, a CSU Doctoral student, will mingle with 24 Laureates and 500 like-minded students for five days. Seven Australians were chosen by the Australian Academy of Science according to strict criteria such as an excellent graduation record, outstanding research and teaching experience and a strong commitment to a principal field of study. “It’s not very often you get to meet Nobel Laureates,” said Suzy McDonald whose research on carbon in the Murrumbidgee River is adding to the scientific knowledge of environmental processes. She is looking forward to meeting Laureate Paul J. Crutzen, who contributed to the realisation that the earth's protective ozone layer is threatened by human activity. Ms McDonald says when she finishes her PhD she would like to continue her work on environmental research and water quality issues.
local_offerCharles Sturt University
Future of practical professional education at CSU
Defining the shape of practical and clinical education to help prepare the professionals of tomorrow was the subject of recent discussions for Charles Sturt University (CSU) staff. With 85 per cent of the University’s undergraduate courses including practicum or clinical requirements, CSU is a leader in providing practical professional education in Australia. Academic and general staff across CSU’s campuses discussed the possible shape of a proposed University-wide institute for clinical and practicum-based education. Speakers at the forum on the Albury-Wodonga Campus examined how the institute could support the administration and funding of clinical practice, internships and practicums as well as assisting research into practical education. The forum meeting was hosted by the CSU Professional Experience Network (PEN) and recommendations from the forum were forwarded to the University’s senior management.
local_offerTeaching and Education
Blowing the myth on youth unemployment
A Charles Sturt University (CSU) academic hopes the latest research into the youth labour market will put to rest the mistaken belief that young Australians are prone to unemployment and there is a need for drastic action and policy change to avoid youth joblessness. Associate Professor Erica Smith from CSU’s Faculty of Education said a recent study released by the Australian Council for Educational Research (ACER) challenges reports of a “crisis” in the youth labour market and supports her own national research conducted over the past eight years. “Young people are not deficient or victims when it comes to entering the labour market. My studies and now other national research shows that they can confidently navigate the transition from school to work,” said Professor Smith. “The risks of the myth that young people are disadvantaged when entering the job market from school is that the school curriculum is constantly being challenged and sometimes amended to mould young people when the changes are unnecessary,” said the vocational education and training specialist.
local_offerCharles Sturt UniversityTeaching and EducationSociety and Community
Rural Ageing Issues Interest Group
As Australia’s population ages, a Charles Sturt University (CSU) academic is warning that Australia is not ready or prepared for the impending changes. Rhonda Shaw from the CSU School of Social Sciences and Liberal Studies wants to establish a community-based group to think about what is happening in older people’s lives now and in the future. The Ageing Issues Interest Group (AIIG) would then identify these issues, and consider ways of preventing, or at least decreasing, the impact on older people’s lives. “They could be health, public transport or social isolation issues. A big problem with older people, especially those who live on their own, is malnutrition,” said the CSU associate lecturer. Ms Shaw is concentrating on the central western city of Bathurst, but says if the AIIG is successful, it could branch out into other areas. She is hoping that the Group will attract interest from those who work with the aged, researchers interested in ageing issues, aged carers, and of course, older people themselves.
local_offerCharles Sturt UniversityHealth
Irrigation research facility launched at CSU
“Water is life and central to Charles Sturt University’s (CSU’s) research plan for the future,” said Professor Paul Burnett, Pro Vice-Chancellor, Research and Graduate Training as he turned on the tap last Friday (19 May) to commission CSU’s new Irrigation and Horticulture Research and Demonstration Area. The new facility at CSU’s Wagga Wagga Campus will be used for research on irrigation systems and testing their performance on a field scale with all the required monitoring facilities. Before the area was developed there was no facility available at CSU and most irrigated agriculture research had to be done on farmer’s fields with limited control environments. Professor Paul Burnett said it was appropriate to be commissioning the new research facility during Water Week at CSU which brought together key international delegates to develop a cooperative approach to agriculture and water management. “CSU is enriched by sharing research projects and infrastructure and this new facility will boost CSU’s competitiveness in bidding for specialist research projects and funding on irrigated crops,” Professor Burnett said. The area will also be used for research projects by students in the School of Agricultural and Veterinary Sciences. Richard Burbury, 19, of Tasmania, a first-year student in CSU’s Bachelor of Irrigation Science degree, was presented with the $10,000 three-year Irrigation Initiative Scholarship to pursue his studies in irrigation.
local_offerCharles Sturt University
NSW ambulance officer and CSU graduate on gold mine rescue
A senior NSW ambulance officer and a member of the Beaconsfield rescue team believes an “amazing strength of mind” help keep the two trapped gold miners alive for a fortnight, almost one kilometre underground. Dominic Morgan, a Superintendent with the Ambulance Service of NSW, was one of six members of the Service’s Special Casualty Access Team (SCAT) to work in the large rescue effort in Tasmania’s northeast. Working in 12 hour shifts with his SCAT colleagues, the Charles Sturt University (CSU) graduate was mainly responsible for maintaining the mental health of Todd Russell and Brant Webb. Communicating through an 87 millimetre PVC pipe, Superintendent Morgan said his team had to “buoy their spirits” and keep the miners “relaxed and confident as possible”. He said the mine rescue posed a “whole new set of challenges” from normal paramedic work due to its sustained nature. The ambulance officer reflected that the two trapped miners showed how “strong the human mind can be” and displayed “incredible support for each other”. CSU was the first university to offer pre-hospital care education in Australia with graduates employed as ambulance officers in paramedic and emergency care settings in Australia and overseas.
local_offerCharles Sturt UniversityHealth
Ontario students ‘down under’ meet Velvet the Red Kangaroo
The seven Charles Sturt University (CSU) Ontario students currently in Wagga Wagga and Dubbo are now in their last week of practicum teaching in the Australian bush. Three are at North Wagga Public School, two at Peak Hill Central School and two at Macquarie Anglican Grammar School in Dubbo. The Peak Hill and Dubbo prac. teachers Crystal Napasney, Laura Lande, Mandy Greenspoon and Erin McAlister spent Saturday night at Western Plains Zoo in Dubbo having close encounters with various wildlife. Crystal describes Peak Hill as “very rural and very flat. It’s not desert but there’s not much green. It’s brown and dusty.” Laura says this overseas practicum “will be like the icing on the teacher's college cake. I’ve definitely gained an international perspective. The training I’ve received means I could teach anywhere in the world.” Read more about CSU in Ontario here.
local_offerCharles Sturt UniversityTeaching and EducationInternational
Social
Explore the world of social