CQUniversity Australia
 

Engaging Indigenous people within Higher Ed

CQUniversity's Office of Indigenous Engagement recently hosted a visit from the Oodgeroo Unit of Queensland University of Technology (QUT), at Rockhampton Campus.

Professor Anita Lee Hong, Director of the Oodgeroo Unit, and Lone Pearce, Project Officer, met with Office of Indigenous Engagement staff to discuss employment issues and best practice models for engaging Indigenous people within the higher education sector, including governance matters.

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Education students to deliver disaster resilience programs 

Gladstone Regional Council has entered into a joint agreement with CQUniversity Australia to deliver a disaster resilience program to school children.

Mayor Gail Sellers said Council was looking forward to working closely with CQUniversity's Bachelor of Learning Management students and staff to raise awareness of the impacts and effects of natural disasters and how to better prepare for them.

PhotoID:10669, Photo: CQUniversity Australia Gladstone lecturer Julianne Impiccini (centre) with Bachelor of Learning Management students (from left) Stephanie Redgen, Amy Durman, Julianne Impiccini, Stacey Caldwell and Kyle Stein at the launch of the joint disaster resilience education project with Gladstone Regional Council.
Photo: CQUniversity Australia Gladstone lecturer Julianne Impiccini (centre) with Bachelor of Learning Management students (from left) Stephanie Redgen, Amy Durman, Julianne Impiccini, Stacey Caldwell and Kyle Stein at the launch of the joint disaster resilience education project with Gladstone Regional Council.

"This program provides benefits for the university students by giving them real life experiences in delivering important programs to school students while helping to make the community more resilient through the education of our young people," Cr Sellers said.

She said the project was timely, given the natural disasters that have confronted communities across the globe since December 2010.

"We've had first-hand experience of mass flooding across much of the state, cyclones, the devastating earthquakes in New Zealand and off Japan and the tsunami that has killed thousands and thousands of people."

Cr Sellers said the funding for this project was part of the community awareness and education initiatives outlined in the $1.66 million Tigalee Creek flood mitigation project, which is being funded equally between the Federal, State and Local Governments.

The Tigalee Project, which involves the construction of a large water detention basin at Kathleen Shanahan Park at the corner of Glenlyon Road and Philip Street in Gladstone to control the flow of water downstream, was halted during the wet season and is scheduled to resume as soon as the water in the area dries.