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Creating a suicide-safer community
Suicides and attempts at suicide are a serious community health problem. In 2007, the Division of Student Services at Charles Sturt University (CSU) began a program to create a ‘suicide-safer community’ among its students and staff. “Deaths and injuries due to suicide can be reduced and a community-centred approach is considered an effective strategy,” said Mr Peter Bell, CSU residential operations manager for Albury-Wodonga and Wagga Wagga campuses. “We aim to equip members of the University community with the skills to help students and fellow staff members when they may be struggling emotionally.” The University delivers suicide awareness seminars to its staff to create direct, open and honest talk about suicide. Mr Bell will discuss suicide and ways in which the community can help prevent it in a public lecture starting at 6pm on Wednesday 21 May in the Nowik Theatre, CSU Albury City site, Guinea St, Albury. CSU wines and cheeses will be served after the lecture.
Ceremony recognises Dubbo students
As part of Charles Sturt University’s (CSU) 20th anniversary celebrations, more than 20 students at CSU Dubbo will receive special recognition at the annual Scholarships and Prizes Presentation Ceremony on Tuesday 5 May. Providing an opportunity for the students to meet their scholarship donor, the presentation ceremony sees scholarships awarded on the basis of academic merit, leadership and contribution to the community, and will be awarded to new and continuing students studying across the five main campuses at CSU. Prizes for academic achievement will be awarded to students in the Faculties of Business, Education, Arts and Science, with business student Mr Michael Howlett receiving two prizes along with science student Ms Sarah Cooke.
local_offerCharles Sturt University
Scholarship for rural health merger study
A Charles Sturt University (CSU) student has secured a national scholarship to assist her research into the development of multi-purpose health services in rural NSW. PhD student Ms Judith Anderson is the recipient of the Joan Hardy Scholarship from the National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU). The Joan Hardy Scholarship for postgraduate nursing research recognises the contributions the late Joan Hardy made to higher education and higher education unionism.“I was involved in a small rural health service when it became a ‘multi-purpose service’, making me intrigued by the cultural change and leading me to begin my study in 2006,” said Ms Anderson, who is studying through the School of Nursing and Midwifery at CSU at Bathurst. Her thesis examines the process of developing this new model of health care for small rural communities. “As the majority of staff and managers who work at these facilities are nurses, this study aims to give them a voice, enabling them to describe current practices and their roles within this process. I hope that recommendations and guidelines will emerge from this to enable the process to be improved in the future.”
local_offerCharles Sturt UniversityHealth
Wiradjuri elder honoured
Wiradjuri and religious leader, the late Pastor Cec Grant, will be honoured this week in a public lecture at Charles Sturt University (CSU) in Albury. The Pastor Cec Grant (Wongamar) Lecture for 2009 will be delivered by CSU academic Yalmambirra from the University’s School of Environmental Science. CSU established the annual lecture in 2008 in collaboration with the Wiradjuri Council of Elders and the Wiradjuri Christian Development Ministries. Pastor Grant was a leading Wiradjuri elder who made important contributions to the development of Indigenous education at the University. The lecture, the second in the series, will commence at 7pm on Friday 1 May in the Nowik Lecture Theatre, on CSU’s Albury City site, Guinea St, Albury.
local_offerCharles Sturt UniversityIndigenous
Scholarships help students tap into IT future
Charles Sturt University (CSU) will be well represented at a key international event for developers and IT professionals in June. The week-long Apple World-Wide Developers Conference 2009 (WWDC) will be held in San Francisco, California,from Monday 8 June,and third year Bachelor of Computer Science (Games Technology) student Mr David Winder, from Bathurst, has won a $3 200 Apple University Consortium (AUC) Competitive Student Scholarship to attend. “To be able to meet and communicate with some of the leading intellects in the industry is extremely exciting,” said Mr Winder. He’ll be joining CSU PhD student Mr James Bekkema who received a two year AUC Student Developer Scholarship in 2008 to attend the same event. “The conference is vital for those who work or study in the computer industry as the sessions provide incredibly valuable information on the current and future state of software technologies, such as OpenCL and ‘Grand Central’,” said Mr Bekkema, who is also based in Bathurst. “However one of the most important aspects of WWDC is the networking. I have met extremely talented developers and have made valuable contacts within the industry.”
local_offerCharles Sturt UniversityInternational
Time for a blood pressure check?
Residents of Albury-Wodonga are urged to think about their health and take advantage of free blood pressure checks being offered by Charles Sturt University (CSU) nursing students as part of Wodonga Library’s Health Week promotion from Monday 27 April to Saturday 2 May. A group of CSU nursing students, under the supervision of lecturer Ms Sharon Laver, have volunteered their time during the University’s mid-semester break to take blood pressure of residents, while allied health students including speech therapists, physiotherapists and occupational therapists will talk about promoting good health. The students and academics will also provide course information to people interested in a career in health through the CSU Faculty of Science.
local_offerCharles Sturt UniversityHealth
Industry accreditation for advertising course
The advertising course at Charles Sturt University (CSU) is now fully accredited by the national industry body, the Media Federation of Australia (MFA). Associate Professor Rod McCulloch, Head of the CSU School of Communication and advertising course coordinator, said “This is great news for the University and our students, and is a tribute to the hard work of Mr David Maxwell, lecturer in advertising at CSU, who made it happen. It means that the overarching national body of advertising media professionals in Australia recognises and endorses the course, and this ensures that CSU is a leading provider of job-ready professionals who can work anywhere in Australia or the world. In line with the speed of change media is experiencing, our advertising course is going from strength to strength, and our students are prepared for exciting roles in a dynamic and challenging economic climate where advertisers increasingly seek more bang for their bucks. The accreditation of the course adds a level of certainty to our students’ and graduates’ prospects.”
local_offerCharles Sturt University
Visit by Animal Health Australia
Veterinary science facilities at Charles Sturt University (CSU) and collaborative research in animal production and health have recently been given a vote of confidence during a key visit to Wagga Wagga. The support for facilities, research and diagnostic scientists came from the Board of Animal Health Australia, a not-for-profit public company established by government and major national livestock industry organisations. The visit in early April included meetings with the Director of the EH Graham Centre for Agricultural Innovation, Professor Deirdre Lemerle, Head of the CSU School of Animal and Veterinary Sciences, Professor Kym Abbott, as well as Professor of Veterinary Parasitology, Professor Terry Spithill, and Professor of Veterinary Pathobiology, Professor Nicholas Sangster, who organised the visit. “The Board was particularly interested in the construction of the University’s Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory,” said Professor Abbott. “The laboratory will make a critical contribution to the Australian Animal Health Laboratory Network, by virtue of its location, facilities, staff and the opportunities it will offer to educate the next generation of veterinary pathobiologists.” Ongoing discussions are planned between Animal Health Australia and CSU during the $8.2 million construction of the Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory during 2009.
local_offerCharles Sturt University
High level advice for rural R&D
Professor of Agriculture at Charles Sturt University (CSU), Professor Jim Pratley, has been appointed to a key Australian Government advisory body on rural research and development. The Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry, the Hon. Tony Burke, MP, this year announced the establishment of the Rural Research & Development (R&D) Council. The Council is the government’s key advisory body on rural R&D and aims to provide high level advice and coordination to better target and improve the effectiveness of the government’s investment in rural R&D. Professor Pratley, who is also Secretary of the Australian Council of Deans of Agriculture, is one of 10 members on the new Council. Professor Pratley is a staff member at the E H Graham Centre for Agricultural Innovation in Wagga Wagga, a collaborative alliance between CSU and the NSW Department of Primary Industries. The Rural R & D Council is due to meet again in May.
local_offerCharles Sturt University

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