“The Manchu Queue: A Complex Symbol in Chinese Identity,” on April 25, and “Ethnic River: Borderland Ecology and Rice Farming Stories around the Tumen River,” on April 27, are part of CSUSB’s Asian Pacific Islander Desi American Heritage Month celebration.
Brian Levin (criminal justice) comments on the Riverside County sheriff appearing at a campaign rally to be emceed by an extreme right-wing commentator.
The two separate rankings of the online criminal justice BA program and the online criminal justice MA program are the latest recognitions of the School of Criminology and Criminal Justice’s work.
Mildred Dalton Hampton-Henry (education, emeritus) was featured in an article about what makes a good education, and Nancy Acevedo (education) is one of 40 instructors nationwide who will participate in a project to research and test how digital software can help close student equity gaps.
From April 22 to May 15, the theatre department will run a futuristic adaptation of William Shakespeare’s comedy, “The Two Gentlemen of Verona,” alongside the musical comedy “Lucky Stiff.”
Using the Taoist idea of being like water, Russell Jeung, co-founder of Stop AAPI Hate and professor of Asian American studies at San Francisco State, says adopting the properties of the element – clarity, humbleness, persistence and restoration – is the most effective way to fight racism.
New technologies will enhance teaching methods and improve student success thanks to the Vital and Expanded Technologies Initiative grant.
CSUSB kinesiology student Evelyn Atencio and CSUSB psychology alumna Bianca Gonzalez are changing the lives of local youth through the nonprofit Big Brothers Big Sisters, which has led Atencio to win an award.
Mike Stull (entrepreneurship) is CSUSB’s 2021-22 Golden Apple Award recipient, research by Brian Levin (criminal justice) is cited, and Owen J.P. Murphy (computer science emeritus) wrote an opinion piece on the Russia-Ukraine war.
The third annual dessert-themed reception, set for Thursday, April 21, will recognize scholarship recipients and donors who invest in student success.
Cal State San Bernardino is one of 45 colleges and universities in California participating in the program that will provide debt-free pathways to students willing to perform two-years of volunteer service.
Coyote Cares Day, which beings at 7:45 a.m. on Saturday, is a day of volunteer service in local communities that provides CSUSB students with an understanding of the work of nonprofit organizations and engages the students through volunteer service.