Category: "Student Voices"
More from this site
Students in the Archives: Aubree Vecellio (Video)
Aubree Vecellio (B.A. '25) talks about her hands-on work with getting historical CSU yearbooks online and why it matters.
Students in the Archives: Cameron Kacsh (Video)
Cameron Kacsh (B.A. '24) talks about what he's learning as a student worker in the Archives and how his work helps researchers.
When the internet was new: From student worker to tech innovator
Student worker-turned-innovator Alex Welch (B.A. '99) talks about how working at Morgan Library and his business classes were the secrets to his success.
Students Mentor Students with Peer Research Program
The CSU Libraries launched a Peer Research Mentors program to help students discover the breadth of sources available to them.
Student Employee Spotlight: Eliana Meyer
Eliana Meyer (M.F.A. ‘23) discovered a new passion for community programming as the Libraries’ 2021-2022 inaugural writer-in-residence.
Student Employee Spotlight: Terrie Farley
History major Terrie Farley jumped at the chance to work as the undergraduate archival intern this semester at the CSU Libraries.
Students predict the future of CSU
What will Colorado’s future look like? With the Libraries’ leaders and employees engaging in future-forward research and planning, we asked CSU students how they envision the future and library staff how they’re making those visions reality.
Student Employee Spotlight: William Fabrocini
An aspiring geophysicist, intern and geoscience major William Fabrocini (B.A. ‘22) was first in line when the opportunity came to work with a geosciences professor through the Geospatial Centroid at the CSU Libraries.
Student Employee Spotlight: Mary Williams
The Geospatial Centroid at the CSU Libraries serves as a resource for the growing field of geospatial data and mapping. It’s also a second home on campus for student employees, like Mary Williams (B.A. ‘22).
Employees show off the items you might not know are free at Morgan Library
Pretty much every library has books. So does the Morgan Library, but it also has a 3D object scanner, a meditation room, state and county parks passes, more chargers than anyone would ever need and an extensive collection of cat-centric yearbooks.