Colorado State University is among the nation’s top research universities, so it makes sense that students in their earliest years would dive into research and artistry to extend their classroom learning. Thousands of CSU students are doing just that.
First-generation students – the first in their families to earn university degrees – are at the very heart of Colorado State University’s founding land-grant mission: educating the children of working-class families with the aim of boosting the economy and quality of life.
All three Colorado State University campuses saw enrollment increases this year, with notable gains among Colorado residents and students from rural areas.
Warner College of Natural Resources’ second annual “Fat Squirrel Week” celebrated CSU’s chunky squirrels, with a clear winner that stole hearts and acorns alike.
A new poetry anthology exploring the connection between people and the natural world highlights 210 contributors from the arts and ecology, including writers from the departments of English and Fish, Wildlife and Conservation Biology.
The exhibit, which opened Sept. 12, shines a spotlight on the more than 1,000 native bee species that call Colorado home, in many dazzling, quirky and surprising in ways most people have never seen before.
For the first time in 27 years, Colorado State University will host a University-wide Commencement at Canvas Stadium, celebrating almost 5,000 graduating students.