“The Paper Bag Princess and Other Stories” by Robert Munsch, a traveling collection of family-friendly, imaginative stories, will be presented Saturday, Dec. 1, in the Ronald E. Barnes Theatre.
CSUSB is one of nine schools chosen for the All of Us Research Program funding. The program seeks to build a national research cohort of 1 million or more participants reflecting the diversity of the United States.
Arianna Huhn (anthropology and director of the museum), Annika Anderson (sociology), Brian Levin (criminal justice) and Michael Stull (entrepreneurship) are included in news coverage of various topics.
Mike Stull, a professor at CSUSB and director of the Inland Empire Center for Entrepreneurship, gave the keynote address when the Inland News Group recently celebrated the recipients of its fifth annual Top Workplaces awards luncheon.
A CSUSB faculty member, student and alumnus were featured in a PBS NewsHour segment on America’s automated economy and the role education plays adapting to the changes it brings and training its workforce.
The alumni, Charles Brown and Wil Greer, who is also an assistant professor of educational leadership at his alma mater, will be recognized at the event on Saturday, Dec. 8, at the National Orange Show in San Bernardino.
Charles Brown and Wil Greer, who is also a CSUSB assistant professor of education leadership and technology, were honored at the 8th annual Educators’ Prayer Breakfast hosted by the National Sorority of Phi Delta Kappa, Delta Rho Chapter on Dec. 8.
The end of the CSUSB Anthropology Museum exhibit In|Dignity was officially marked with an original production based on those who contributed stories to it.
The university is one of 16 recipients will receive a portion of a $6 million grant from Kaiser Permanente Southern California.