Arianna Huhn (anthropology) was interviewed for Brianna Reeves’s column on the writer’s Afrolatine heritage, Brian Levin (criminal justice) discussed the impact Congress’s Jan. 6 committee may have on extremist groups, and Guillermo Escalante (kinesiology) was a speaker at the recent Optima Conference.
Guillermo Escalante (kinesiology) was interviewed for an article about the difference between adduction and abduction, and why that’s important, and Brian Levin (criminal justice) discussed an aspect of the federal trial of the leader of the extremist group, the Oath Keepers.
CSUSB’s The College Tour episode provides prospective students with the opportunity to learn from 10 current students through their individual perspectives. The program is coming to Amazon Prime in November; however, you can watch the full episode now on CSUSB’s The College Tour website.
Brian Levin (criminal justice) was appointed to California’s Commission on the State of Hate, Guillermo Escalante (kinesiology), was named to fellowship in the HACU Leadership Academy, and Michael Stull (entrepreneurship) discussed the Inland Empire Center for Entrepreneurship’s 2022 State of Entrepreneurship Minority Report.
Annika Anderson (sociology), was interviewed about formerly incarcerated individuals reentering society, Brittany Bloodhart (psychology) commented on a Title IX case at Cal Poly Humboldt, and Bryan Haddock (kinesiology) has been appointed CSUSB President Tomás D. Morales’ chief of staff.
Escalante is the first CSUSB faculty member named a HACU Leadership Academy Fellow. The cohort will hold its first in-person meeting at the HACU annual conference in October.
Bryan Haddock said his role as chief of staff “is to make sure the president has all the information necessary to make timely and wise decisions to help students, faculty and staff.”
The presentation showed how CSUSB’s xREAL Lab uses embodied conversational agents in virtual reality to simulate realistic conversations for increasing students’ empathy and engagement.
Codi Lazar (geological science), Riguad Joseph (social work), Brian Levin (criminal justice), David Yaghoubian (history), Stuart Sumida (biology), Fadi Muheidat (computer sciences), Kristi Papailler (theatre arts) and Wagner Prado (kinesiology) were mentioned in recent news coverage.