Julie Taylor, associate professor of communication and media, was honored with the 2023-24 Outstanding Faculty Advisor Award for her dedication to CSUSB students and effective advising qualities and practices.
Several faculty members and a graduate student from the College of Arts and Letters and the College of Natural Sciences are among the initial awardees of funding from CSUSB’s new Catalytic Investment on Research and Innovation Seed (CiRIS) program. Their research has the potential to profoundly impact both the scientific community and the Inland Empire region.
The university will host a faculty panel on the use of artificial intelligence apps such as ChatGPT in academia, Sharon Velarde Pierce (public administration) is CSUSB’s 2022-23 Outstanding Faculty Advisor, and Brian Levin (criminal justice) was cited in an article on a new book about Chinese laborers brought to the U.S. in the late 1800s.
A panel of CSUSB faculty members from a cross section of academic disciplines will share their insights and perspectives on ChatGPT and its implications for instruction, research and writing.
The Oct. 28 event will include presentations and a roundtable discussion that focuses on what fascism is, how it works and what the ramifications of it are as a political system and ideology.
As a distinguished glass artist, CSUSB art professor Katherine Gray continues to be recognized for her talent and will be honored as a Fellow of the American Craft Council in October.
Attendees will learn about career pathways into the comics industry, creative process discussions and writing advice -- and meet with professionals -- at the Comic Book Expo and Career Workshop on Thursday, Feb. 20.
Juan Delgado (English), Liliana Gallegos (communication studies), Matthew Poole (art) and Brian Levin (criminal justice) are mentioned in various news articles.