Together, We Persist
In a 2021 monthly series, we share stories that reflect our curiosity, ability to adapt, engagement with the community, and research and creative expertise. This month, we are focusing on our adaptability and determination.
In a 2021 monthly series, we share stories that reflect our curiosity, ability to adapt, engagement with the community, and research and creative expertise. This month, we are focusing on our adaptability and determination.
We are excited to announce that CSU’s 3rd Biennial Brad Sheafor Lecture in Social Work will feature Dr. Michael Yellow Bird, Dean and Professor of the Faculty of Social Work at the University of Manitoba. Dr. Yellow Bird will be presenting the Medicine Wheel is a symbol used to represent wholeness, balance, and the natural […]
A SPOTLIGHT ON THE MENTAL HEALTH STRUGGLES OF STUDENTS OF COLOR AT CSU A Spotlight on the Mental Health Struggles of Students of Color at CSU
When Lindsey Schneider was in fourth grade, she learned from an antiquated history curriculum that the Indians of the American West lived in tipis and didn’t exist anymore.
Colorado State University kicked off a new educational initiative in early October as the words “Black Lives Matter” were painted in yellow on the pavement north of the Visual Arts Building.
My early struggles with reading allowed me to see many of the complex and nuanced issues around class, equity, identity, race, injustice and justice that I teach as a professor today.
The SARS-CoV-2 virus is novel, but pandemic threats to indigenous peoples are anything but new.
Margaret Kovach (Sakewew p’sim iskwew), a professor of education at the University of Saskatchewan, will present “Indigenous Methodologies and Research: Recognizing the Distinctiveness of Indigenous Scholarship within University Zones of Contact.”