Natalie Pennington is an assistant professor of communication studies at CSU who studies the dynamics of friendships. Here are some of her key insights for navigating political conversations ahead of the 2024 election and beyond.
Tara Opsal has taken over as chair of the CSU Department of Sociology, becoming the first woman-identified faculty member to hold this position in the department.
Colorado State University’s sponsored project expenditures have set a record once again, growing from $498 million in the 2022-23 fiscal year to $576 million in 2023-24 – marking a 15% increase and surpassing $500 million for the first time in the institution’s history.
Few people expected the campaign to elect the first woman president to spark a referendum on masculinity, but what it means to be a man has become “arguably the most dominant theme of this year’s elections,” according to MSNBC’s Ja’han Jones.
As election season heats up, instructors across campus are invited to attend an event on Thursday, Oct. 10, designed to equip them with tools to navigate polarizing issues in the classroom.
Colorado State University President Amy Parsons had lots of good news to share during her Oct. 2 Fall Address, but what stole the show was her announcement of a $110 million investment in a new engineering/artificial intelligence facility.
Over the summer of 2024, some 250 Russian children traveled to North Korea for a 10-day-long kids camp. Framed as cultural diplomacy, the event was the result of a new youth exchange launched in 2022 that sees Russian youth compete for the free trip abroad. To win a place, children have to write an essay on one of three subjects: the role of Russia in a multipolar world; children’s interest in the culture of North Korea; or the story they would like to tell North Korean children about Russia.
Interdisciplinary study will recruit 100 active wildland firefighters in the Rocky Mountain West and includes communication component for sharing reproductive health information