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| Higher Education Community Service |
| For the fourth straight year, CSU Stanislaus was named to the Presidents Higher Education Community Service Honor Roll in February 2010 by the Corporation for National and Community Service. The University was one of seven CSU campuses named to the national Honor Roll out of a field of more than 500 colleges and universities that submitted applications. |
| CSU Stanislaus Campus Master Plan - Revision 2009 |
CSU Stanislaus Budget Central
Budget Central has been created to provide the latest news about the CSU Stanislaus budget in light of the state’s severe cuts to the California State University system. The University has been required to make $13.5 million in cuts to its 2009-10 budget, including a $2.5 million reduction of part-time faculty and staff, and has reduced full-time equivalent enrolment to 6,800. Click on the link above to learn more
| Criminal Justice student mentors make a big impact on at-risk K-12 Students |
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| Friday, 30 July 2010 21:59 |
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CSU Stanislaus students from two Criminal Justice Service Learning courses mentored at-risk youth at 10 Turlock school campuses during the 2009-10 academic year and helped them improve their opportunities for success in school. Some 75 students in a pair of CSU Stanislaus fall semester classes, Juvenile Justice and Violence Against Children, spent time with students throughout the Turlock Unified School District, encouraging them to focus on applying themselves to their educations. The need is significant as more than 50 percent of TUSD students come from families below the poverty level and 30 percent are classified as English as Second Language learners. The CSU Stanislaus students met with their protégée youngsters each week over a 12-week period during the fall and spring semesters. They provide a valuable service to listen, encourage, and connect with the younger students to help them overcome obstacles that might otherwise lead to dropping out of school. This program is in its fifth year, having developed through the Turlock Against Gangs program in cooperation with the University’s College of Humanities and Social Sciences. School officials acknowledged that the mentor program has made a difference in helping TUSD at-risk students to stay in school and succeed academically. At the end of the semester, the CSU Stanislaus mentors give the Turlock students the opportunity to visit and tour the University campus.
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