New Calculus Center offers study help and camaraderie
For most students, college calculus is no walk in the park. A new center on campus is providing support.
For most students, college calculus is no walk in the park. A new center on campus is providing support.
Professor of Physics Roger Culver has retired after a half-century of astronomy teaching and research at CSU.
CSU computer scientists are creating a standard model for estimating the actual cost of a security breach.
Elizabeth Loftus, of UC Irvine, will be at CSU Sept. 8 to give a public lecture on her research.
This summer break, many College of Natural Sciences students splashed into research and internships across the world.
This summer term, seven eager undergraduate students spent nearly three weeks in the field – and on the water – in the first Field Marine Biology course at CSU’s Todos Santos Center in Baja California Sur, Mexico.
Diana Wall has been named an Honorary Member of the British Ecological Society.
It’s no secret that Calculus I is a major hurdle in the quest for a science degree. But, according to a new paper by CSU researchers, the class is far more likely to discourage women than men from continuing on in their chosen field.
A math camp for 8th- and 9th-graders allows students to explore some big questions that math has to offer – taught by CSU grad students and faculty.
This week, more than a dozen high schoolers from across the country are on campus for the College of Natural Sciences’ SciTrek camp, run by the college’s Education and Outreach Center.