Faculty Friday: Michelle Stanley
Michelle Stanley recently started her role as Director of the LEAP Institute for the Arts, but arts advocacy and music have always been a passion of hers.
Michelle Stanley recently started her role as Director of the LEAP Institute for the Arts, but arts advocacy and music have always been a passion of hers.
Ryan Scott has been interested in the environment from an early age, and is now an expert in environmental policy in the Department of Political Science.
During the Great Conversations 2018 Season Kickoff, three College of Liberal Arts faculty had a conversation with community members about how rigor and imagination can be used as robust tools for uniting a polarized society and shaping the future of our world.
Frédérique Grim teaches French in the Department of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures because she loves how learning a new language and culture offers students a path to worldly adventures and career opportunities.
Poet Khadijah Queen will give a reading on October 25 at 7:30 p.m. in the Lory Student Center as part of the Department of English’s Creative Writing Reading .
Hongyan Xiang joined the history department in 2014 and teaches courses about Modern China, Japan, and East Asia. Her research studies are currently French Catholic missionaries in modern and early modern China.
Economics students know Professor Nancy Jianakoplos studies household wealth accumulation, gender differences in financial risk taking, and sports economics, but she has a not-so-secret passion for Teletubbies and college football, too.
CSU faculty and alumni won in four of the 14 categories for the 2018 Colorado Book Awards.
Patrick Fahey was inspired by his art teacher in high school to pursue his interests which led him to his role as area coordinator for art education in the Department of Art and Art History.
Art galleries are not usually the place people go to play mini-golf. That is, unless the gallery in question is the Hatton Gallery in the Visual Arts building. The interactive show, called “Mulligan,” was put together by CSU art department students and the experimental design studio Zero-Craft Corp.