CSU College of Health and Human Sciences 2023 Alumni Awards
Colorado State University's College of Health and Human Sciences is pleased to honor four 2023 Alumni Award recipients.
Colorado State University's College of Health and Human Sciences is pleased to honor four 2023 Alumni Award recipients.
Fresh beer is the best beer, poured into a frosty glass mug right after production. And, old “skunky” beer is the worst. That is the usual standard.
Extraordinary leaders propel programs to new heights. As dean of the CSU College of Health and Human Sciences from 2011 to 2019, Jeff McCubbin had a lasting impact on the growth of the college. Because of his dedication to excellence and vision to move the College forward, McCubbin is being celebrated as a 2023 Legacies Project honoree.
Updates to Colorado State University’s information technology policy will help remove virtual access barriers for students who use assistive technology – and benefit the entire campus community in the process.
During her 35-year career in CSU's Department of Food Science and Human Nutrition, Mary Harris served as a professor and director of the undergraduate program, a leading researcher, and a friend to many. Now, she is being recognized as a College of Health and Human Sciences Legacies Project honoree for her many outstanding contributions to the success of the college.
The Office of the Provost at Colorado State University, in collaboration with the executive leadership of Semester at Sea, has named the academic deans for the Fall 2023 through Spring 2026 voyages.
Since the annual Celebrate! Colorado State has grown beyond the capacity to acknowledge all award recipients at a single event, the Office of the Provost and Executive Vice President is holding a separate private luncheon this year to recognize its recipients for distinguished teaching and scholarship, faculty excellence, service, advising and leadership-related awards on behalf of the academic enterprise.
Brian Stein (’00) has used his expertise in nutrition, leadership skills, and market wisdom in his career, giving back to his community, and staying connected to his alma mater.
Brett Fling's research at CSU’s Sensorimotor Neuroimaging Laboratory includes having MS patients walk on a split-belt treadmill to get people’s “bad leg” to work harder to catch up to their “good leg.” Fling said preliminary data suggests that imperceptible stimuli via electrodes to the muscle up to the brain and back aids patients in walking beyond the lab.
While a graduate student, Lindsey Weiler helped create the award-winning Campus Connections program. Her mentorship research, mental health advocacy, and leadership are impacting communities, practitioners, and youth facing adversity.