CSU Commits to In-Person Learning Next Fall that reminds citizens to wear a mask, wash your hands, physically distance and support local as Northern Colorado recovers from the COVID-19 pandemic.
When it comes to education, at both the collegiate level and otherwise, so much has changed. From Zoom classrooms, isolation in dorms, and spaced-out labs, Colorado State University has tried incredibly hard to keep their students safety a priority.
However, now, it seems faculty wants to get back to normal .
In a lengthy statement on the CSU website, President Joyce McConnell wrote:
All students coming to CSU campuses can feel confident that our classrooms are arranged according to physical distancing guidelines, with hygienic supply stations and posted public health protocols. This fall we will also continue our extremely successful messaging that Rams Take Care of Rams by observing and reinforcing all current Larimer County public health protocols.
Board of Governors reduces Summer 2021 tuition for CSU non-resident students 08 Feb, 2021
Non-resident students at Colorado State University will see a 30% cut in tuition during Summer 2021 in a move the CSU System Board of Governors approved at its February meeting.
The one-term tuition reduction aims to help non-resident students stay consistently engaged with CSU and to reduce their time to graduation.
Since 2014, CSU has been working to increase summer session enrollment by using discounts and scholarships to reduce the cost for non-resident students. The new rate reduction will simplify and clarify the tuition non-resident students can expect to pay this summer.
COGEN seeks faculty members to work on gender equity 04 Feb, 2021
Colorado State University’s Council on Gender Equity on the Faculty has two openings for members from across campus to serve the mission of addressing issues facing faculty women.
COGEN, originally established in 2014 by CSU President Tony Frank as the Standing Committee on the Status of Women Faculty as part of the President’s Commission on Women and Gender, is looking to fill two vacant at-large seats this semester, according to co-chair Jimena Sagàs, an associate professor in Libraries. While the council includes representatives of every faculty status from all eight colleges and the CSU Libraries, the at-large seats are designed to ensure gender diversity on the council itself, with at least two members who are men.
CSU athletic trainers say they left because of athletic department s negligent, toxic culture Miles Blumhardt, Fort Collins Coloradoan
CSU athletes, staff say athletic administration covering up COVID-19 health threat
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The final day of athletic trainer Mike DeLuca s six-year Colorado State career came last Friday, the same day the university announced it paid $107,397.50 to an outside firm for its two-month investigation into the CSU athletic department s handling of COVID-19 and racial insensitivity issues.
He said that was appropriate given the reasons why he left the university included the university s so-called investigation by law firm Husch Blackwell and subsequent report that President Joyce McConnell used to create an action plan to address the issues.