CQUniNEWS Archives
There are a total of 8978 stories in the archive.
Adult learning peak body visits, calls for 'reassessment'The president of Australia's peak adult learning body, Professor Barry Golding has visited Rockhampton for a forum calling for a reassessment of adult education in Australia. CQUniversity hosted the forum at its Ron Smyth Building in Quay Street. Full Details…2013-07-08 09:52:31.0 |
- Parents welcome at calm home/calm children event
Published on 19 May, 2005
Brisbane-based early childhood specialist Andrea Ashford will present a ‘calm home/calm children’ workshop for parents from 7.30pm on Friday, May 20.
- CQU part of new Eidos education consortium
Published on 18 May, 2005
Central Queensland University has joined Eidos – a new consortium of Queensland universities, government and non-government agencies committed to improving education and social change research, policy and practice.
State Education Minister Anna Bligh launched Eidos in Brisbane this week as part of Queensland’s Education Week.
- Moxham on national health taskforce
Published on 18 May, 2005
CQU Head of Nursing & Health Studies Dr Lorna Moxham is enthusiastic about her new role on the national Mental Health Nurse Education Taskforce.
Dr Moxham joins representatives from James Cook University, University of Wollongong, Victoria University and Murdoch University who will represent the Council of Deans of Nursing and Midwifery on the taskforce.
- Uni-hosted event raises over $180,000 to fight cancer
Published on 18 May, 2005
The Relay for Life event hosted at CQU Rockhampton over the weekend has raised more than $180,000.
Several University-based teams took part, CQU staff members were part of the organising committee and the University was a major sponsor, along with Channel 10, Sea FM and The Morning Bulletin.
- School children confronted by issues about personal safety
Published on 17 May, 2005
School children in Gladstone, Rockhampton and Yeppoon will be confronted by a production of ‘A Property of the Clan’, based on a real-life rape-murder tragedy.
The powerful and sensitive play explores issues relating to personal safety, male attitudes to females and individual responsibility.
- ISRD report sparks water crackdown
Published on 17 May, 2005
A report by CQU's Institute for Sustainable Regional Development has sparked plans for a major crackdown to reduce water pollution.
The Queensland Government is proposing new laws to curb water pollution and avert the loss of thousands of jobs and tens of billions of dollars in tourism, fishing and aquaculture.
- Anglo Coal Australia, CQU and CQIT co-produce a unique mining program
Published on 17 May, 2005
Anglo Coal Australia Pty Ltd, Central Queensland University (CQU) and Central Queensland Institute of TAFE/TAFE Queensland Mining Service (CQIT/TQMS) have united to meet the needs of Australia’s mining community by producing a specialised Mining Associate Program.
The education providers were approached in October last year by Anglo Coal Australia Pty Ltd to help produce a specialised program to address the shortfall in Mining Associates within their organisation.
- Ethanol could fuel regional diversification
Published on 17 May, 2005
There are substantive environmental, economic and social reasons why ethanol should be rigorously evaluated as a credible diversification opportunity for regional Australia.
That is according to Professor Bob Miles, of CQU's Institute for Sustainable Regional Development (ISRD), who presented a paper at the 2005 International Ethanol Conference in Brisbane recently.
- Gladstone campus hosts interactive coal display
Published on 16 May, 2005
Over the past three years, the Gladstone Centre for Clean Coal (GC3) has been working towards its foremost aim of promoting the current and future importance of coal as a sustainable energy source via communication and information dissemination.
The GC3 has been busy keeping up its regularly maintained web presence and publishing newsletters, all designed to promote coal to the broader community as a suitable energy source.
- Renewed push for native plants on campus
Published on 16 May, 2005
Plant Sciences researcher and senior lecturer Dr Nanjappa Ashwath has gained success with his push for native plants to be planted on Rockhampton campus instead of exotic species.
He has worked on the project alongside staff from Facilities Management and Plant Sciences, along with volunteer helpers.