Chemistry student receives competitive national fellowship
Mariel Price received the Graduate Women in Science Fellowship to aid in research toward transforming plastics using light-driven methods
Mariel Price received the Graduate Women in Science Fellowship to aid in research toward transforming plastics using light-driven methods
CSU's Master of Public Policy & Administration and Master of Sport Management welcomed their first cohorts this fall.
The American Geophysical Union has awarded Atmospheric Science Associate Professor Libby Barnes the Future Horizons in Climate Science: Turco Lectureship. Barnes will present the lecture during the AGU Fall Meeting in December.
Colorado State University atmospheric scientist Emily Fischer has been selected by Science News as one of 10 scientists to watch – a distinction that recognizes early- and mid-career scientists age 40 and under who are significantly contributing to their fields.
New experiments and computational models reveal in single-molecule detail how viruses initiate translation of genetic material into proteins.
Hope Cornelis (M.S. ’17) serves as the program coordinator for the Sexual Assault Resource Team Peers at Poudre School District in Fort Collins. She is originally from Illinois, and came to Colorado State University in 2015 to pursue a master’s degree in the Department of Human Development and Family Studies.
In his new role as associate dean of graduate programs at the College of Business, Travis Maynard is using his knowledge of what it takes to create effective teams to build on the College’s top-ranked graduate programs.
Reagan Miller, a doctoral student in the Colorado State University Department of Human Development and Family Studies, has received the Dean’s Fellowship from CSU’s College of Health and Human Sciences to support her research with teenagers and health.
Aly Cavalier, a doctoral student in the Colorado State University Department of Health and Exercise Science, recently received a major support for her research career in the form of a $20,000 Dean’s Fellowship from the CSU College of Health and Human Sciences.
Researchers at Colorado State University have found that teens who practice mindfulness techniques show fewer signs of stress related to the COVID-19 pandemic than those who do not.