How will AI affect the way we learn and the way we interact with one another, and how can it be used in the classroom to benefit students? These are questions educators everywhere are grappling with – along with concerns about students relying too heavily on tools like generative AI.
As part of a U.S. Department of Energy study, CSU is partnering with Boise State University to research how to improve the approach of locating these storage facilities by encouraging meaningful community engagement and participation in decision-making to enhance environmental equity.
To celebrate the completion of the mural, there will be a party from 6-8 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 3 at CSU Housing and Dining. The event will include live music and food and is open to the public.
Woven throughout the 46-year law career of Mike Liggett (B.S., ’73) is a vision of civic engagement based on improving the health and education of others. Pursuing his passions for the arts and great conversation is part of leading a life energized by curiosity.
Summers of smoke are no longer confined to the West. This special report from SOURCE explores the importance of wildland fire research and what the rest of the country needs to know.
The documentary — “CO-Existing with Wildfire” — was produced by Jesse Grace and Steven Weiss, faculty members in CSU’s Department of Journalism and Media Communication. The 30-minute documentary is now available to watch at rmpbs.org.
To share CSU’s wildfire research with the public, the Geospatial Centroid and Radical Open Science Syndicate (ROSS) will host From Burn to Bloom: The Art + Science of Wildfire Recovery on Saturday, Aug. 19, at Odell Brewing Company. Burn to Bloom attendees will have the opportunity to make art while learning about post-fire science.