Hi, thank you for joining us today for our fall webinar series. Were gonna wait a couple minutes for other folks to join and will get started soon.
Great, it looks like a lot of people are logging in. We have people from Colorado, Oklahoma, Maryland, Hawaii, Texas.
OK, we will go ahead and get started an ambassadors when you're not talking. If you wouldn't mind just muting your noise on your video as well, there's a little bit of background noise, but welcome, my name is Meghan Miller and I am an assistant director in the office of admissions. I graduated from CSU in 2016, so I've been graduated for the past four years and CSC really couldn't get rid of me because I just loved it so much, I decided to.
Stay and I'm a part time graduate student. An full time employee at the University and I appreciate you all tuning in for our webinar today. This webinar is called what's there to do at CSU besides studies, so this one is going to be a little bit more focused on some of the outside the classroom. Things that you can get involved in and we are all working on behalf of admissions, so this is really going to be an experience based presentation. Basically I'm going to talk about some of the.
Different things that we have to offer and then we have three ambassadors here today, so Kim Grant an angelic are here joining us and they are also going to be able to share some of their experiences as we go through.
So as I mentioned, my name is Meghan Miller and I work in the office, so I am graduated from CSU and an assistant director in the office. And then I'm going to teach the ambassadors and opportunity to introduce themselves before we jump into the rest of the presentation. So if you could just give a brief introduction and maybe some of the things that you've gotten involved in your urine school annuar major, that would be awesome. So let's start Kim Grant and then Angelica.
Hi everyone, my name is Kim. I used hers pronouns. I'm in my 4th year studying biomedical and mechanical engineering and I'm from Williamsburg, VA and so my involvements include being part of the University Honors Program. I'm a presidential ambassador and I'm also part of Talbot up high, which is an engineering honors fraternity, and I'm a former member of the club climbing team.
Everybody, my name is grant. I'm a fourth year student here as well. I'm ready from Omaha, NE. I'm sitting health next science with a concentration in sports medicine. I'm on a pre Med track so I'm pretty busy with studying and studying for the account right now. So it's kind of all new.
Hey everyone, my name is Angelica. I'm a fourth year student studying human development and family studies with a concentration in leadership going Springer ship and I'm from Denver, Co. I'm also in a multicultural sorority and I'm in a club called Los Compadres and I was also in an real basketball and tennis team.
Awesome, thank you all for introducing yourself, so you'll get to learn more about these ambassadors as we go through the rest of the presentation today. To give you an idea of what to expect, these are the general topics that we're going to be talking about throughout the presentation. So basically I'm going to give a little intro. Some of the things that are offered and then we'll have ambassadors pop in and share their own personal experiences or experiences of their friends that they know of that have done some of these things.
On campus, I do want to encourage you throughout the presentation to please be submitting questions. So on your screen right now at the bottom you can see that there's a little chat question function. You can always be typing those in and we can answer them on the go and then at the end of the presentation will also have some time for General Q&A with these three ambassadors to ask some of your more general questions or things that you think of at the end of the formal presentation with the slides so.
Our whole session today will take probably about 45 minutes depending on how many questions you will ask us, so please submit those that we can really cover information that is relevant and interesting to you. So we'll start with talking about the probably the most common way to get involved. And that's through our student clubs and organizations. So at CSU we have over 500 different student clubs and organizations, and in my personal opinion, that's one of the best things about being a student at.
Maybe a larger University like CSU is that you get that access to so many different things to choose from for when you're deciding what you might want to get involved in. If you can imagine something, we probably have a club for it, and if we don't, it's also really easy to start a club as a student at Csco, so these range everywhere from diversity and international clubs, athletic related clubs, outdoors and hiking and skiing and snowboarding type clubs.
We have faith in spiritual based organizations as well as fraternity and sorority life, so there's just tons of different interest areas that are covered within these student clubs and organizations. All of our registered CSU student clubs are within an umbrella of something called slice, and that's an office at CSU. It stands for student leadership involvement and community engagement. So slice for short and when you're a student, you can go physically to the slice office or set up a virtual appointment with someone.
In the Spice Office to kind of learn more about the different clubs that are offered, they also have an on line system to be able to search the clubs and find different Contacts and then one really cool thing that they have is involvement advising which is pretty unique to CSU where you can actually sit down with basically an advisor counselor in the slice office and talk about your interests and some of the things that you would be wanting to get involved in and then they can help you find something that fits you.
Or that would be of interest to you. So I on this slide I'm going to have grants chime in and grant. If you could talk a little bit about, maybe your advice for finding student clubs and organizations or your personal experience or friends experience with finding ways to get involved on campus.
Yeah, of course. So I first started season undeclared student and I really didn't know what I wanted to do, so I was recommended by somebody to go to slice office and do something called involvement advising. He just really cool process. We actually sit down with like account so they have in the office and they ask me things about like what do you like to do or would you like to study in these certain questions about you and then they take this huge list of like 500 plus clubs and organizations at CSU has and it narrows it down to like 5 or 10. So it's really really cool opportunity. They had something that I really took advantage of as well, so they recommended different things like a pottery club. Although it's not going to health and exercise science.
It's like Wellness club or you actually go around the Fort Collins community and promote like fitness with peoples of different backgrounds. And I thought that was a really cool opportunity so I decided to join that club and as an audit cleared student, it actually ended up leading me down the path of health. Next I science all the way to medical school. So just some really cool involvement. I first started that had a huge impact of what I end up doing here at CSU.
There is there's so many different clubs and organizations. We have here so having some sort of resource. To actually help you narrow those down is incredibly useful in something that you should definitely take advantage of.
Awesome, thank you so much grants then. Next thing that we wanted to share with you all that CSU is a great advocate for is education abroad. So you're interested in studying abroad. This is definitely a good place to be and I think we have an international student joining us on the web and are today too. So if you're going to be sitting in Colorado, it's a good place to be. There's a lot of people from all over the world that study at CSU. And then.
CSU students who also go abroad. So we have some really great relationships with programs and schools across the world. One of the most notable and kind of fun that we like to talk about is semester ascy, so that's what that picture is on semester at sea. It's basically a giant cruise ship that's been repurposed with classroom space so that it goes around the world each semester, and students from all over the country can participate in semester at sea. It's not restricted to just CSU students.
But it is run by CSU, which is pretty cool, so any student at any school. That's taking classes on that ship is taking Colorado State University classes. So we have a really good relationship with other education abroad programs and that one's just a really fun. One also on that side is the Toto Santos enter. This is a CSU campus. That's located in Mexico, where you can get a lot of Spanish immersion courses or cultural courses. There's also a marine biology class that's offered there so.
Just some cool opportunities to find kind of an easy transition with being at a CSU campus in Mexico. And then there's just hundreds of programs across the world that we've sent students on. We have partnership institutions in several countries, and I believe we send students in an average of about 85 countries, so it's really common to go abroad. It's a big thing at CSU, and we absolutely encourage you to take advantage of that while you're a student here.
Um, I'm going to quickly share my experience with it since I did study abroad. I was a student here and then I'll have Angelica jump in a moment. She's planning a study abroad or was planning a studio broad social tell you about that. But I studied abroad so I went to Prague, Czech Republic, which is in Eastern Europe and when I was a student at CSU, I knew I wanted to study abroad, but I didn't know where. I had basically narrowed it down to Europe. I wanted to go to Europe, so I went to our education abroad advisors, which are.
Amazing resources an I told them like my three criteria that I wanted for my study abroad. I said I wanted it to be in Europe. I wanted it to be more of a short term program that wasn't a full semester and then I also wanted it to be like financially make sense so I didn't have very much money to spend on it. And I also wanted it to transfer directly back into my Diggory program so I didn't want to just do it for fun. I wanted it to.
Makes that's within my study at CSU, so they found this program for me. It was six weeks long in Prague, Czech Republic. It's one of our more common programs at CSU because it's they have a University of Economics there that has some really great business classes that transfer over, and it's one of the last expensive program. So some students who are out of state can actually go study at this University of economics for the same or less than they would pay to go to CSU for this semester with scholarships.
Offered through the education abroad office. So there's other programs like that that are exchange programs, but it was the best experience I ever had at CSU. Definitely a really great opportunity and allowed me to get a broad. And then I was able to visit five other countries while I was there as well. So pretty amazing central spot in Eastern Europe to really explore, so I love that. And then Angelica. Did you want to share? I know it's kind of a bummer she was planning on studying abroad. Wasn't able to because of everything that's going on, but do you want to?
Share like how you chose your program or what your plans are moving forward.
Yeah, so I was supposed to do this semester at sea.
Um, so if you have questions about the program.
More than happy to answer those questions. But yeah, basically like making mentioned, I just met with an advisor at education profits for me when initially when I went in there I had no idea of like what program I wanted to do. So they basically just sit down with you. You share places that you have in mind and that's how I found about about this semester at sea program and we also have a really cool opportunity as well through CSU called alternative spring break. It's not necessarily extending abroad for.
Like a month by its on. Going over for two weeks and that was something I was able to do. So that's also really cool opportunity that we have. It's mom offered through this nice nice office so.
What do you do for your alternative spring break? Will you share about it a little bit?
Yeah, of course. So I went through the Catalina Island in California and it was an environmental sustainability. So we basically just cleaned up some hiking trails, did some environmental sustainability things composted. It was a really great opportunity.
Cool, that's awesome. Thanks for sharing.
Alright, the next thing that's really common to get involved in at CSU is undergraduate research, so we are Carnegie Tier 1 research institution, which means that research is a huge part of who we are. It's also one of our four pillars that we were founded on, so hands on learning is really important to CSU. An getting students access to hands-on learning inside and outside of the classroom. As you can see on the slide. Right now we have over 5000 undergraduate researchers on campus right now, so that's actually.
Pretty unique that we really push students to get involved in undergraduate research early, so you don't have to wait until your senior year to do research. You don't have to wait till your graduate student to do research. We would love to have you jump in as soon as you're comfortable and as soon as you want to do it. The other thing that I like to mention with research is that I always easilly picture someone like in a lab coat, working in a lab which is a popular research experience. But there's other types of research at CSU's.
Well, for example, I was a marketing major at CSU and they have a research area that's a lot of marketing research. So focus groups where they put people in a room and interview them on a product or something and get their opinions and then do individual interviews and do surveys and then collect research for companies to determine if their product is landing well with potential customers. So that can be research. There's lots of other examples of research a cross.
The University and a lot of them are very science based in labs as well. So if you're interested in that, that's definitely available. That second bullet point there is, it says search so that stands for celebrating undergraduate research, an creativity. It's a big showcase that happens every year where students are able to showcase their research and get experience with presenting their research so they can do a presentation. And then there's also this giant, basically adult science fair where everyone makes.
Posters many can people walk around and there's judges and you can really learn how to defend your research and also explain something that you've been working on. Maybe for a semester up to full four years on this research project. So that's a great experience, and there's lots of ways to get hands on learning at CS go, so I'm going to turn it over to Kim for a moment and she will talk about some of her hands on learning experiences that she's been able to have within her major.
And then maybe some examples of research that she seen. Some of her friends take on as there at CSU.
Yeah, so we're really passionate about something called experiential learning here, which is just, like Meghan said, it's getting you hands on experiences in the classroom. So kind of each major. It looks a little differently, but for me I've been able to do things like create a robot from like from scratch. I've done projects where I.
Worked with an ultrasound machine. I've done projects where I learn how to machine using really huge machinery like lathes and CNC machines which is really cool as am ex students. But excuse me undergrad research is really easy to get involved with. I have friends who got started as early as their freshman year. My old roommate was doing some work in a lab where they were trying to extend.
The lifetime of an organ outside of the body, so that's really cool. Research is being done here. I actually emailed cold email, don't even know the professor about getting involved in his musculoskeletal bio mechanics research on flooring and how different flooring materials will help minimize injury an optimize athletic performance, but unfortunately due to Kovid, there was some restrictions on adding new people to the lab right now.
But I'm trying to talk to him again in the coming semesters when things settle down a little bit more, but you can call and email any professor on campus if you find something that really interests you. And I really do encourage you to do that if you would like to get involved in undergraduate research.
Cool, thank you Kim. The next thing that we wanted to share with you all is the opportunity to work on campus. So this sounds kind of funny, but honestly one of the best ways to make friends and feel connected at CSU is to get a job on campus. All of these students on the screen right now are paid to do this, so that's pretty cool and there's lots of other really great jobs across campus as well.
And it usually comes with a community of students that are also working on campus. Also taking classes on campus and have lots of fun events and team bonding and ways to just kind of find another community at CS go. It can also be much more convenient to work on campus than off campus and really allow yourself to work around a schedule like between your classes and make it really convenient to help you pay for school as you go through.
We do encourage you to use the Career Center when you're a student here. They helped with students finding jobs on campus off campus, internship San careers after graduation, so that's another great resource that you have at your fingertips to really help you through that transition and make sure that you're taking advantage of everything that CSU has to offer. So I'll give grants opportunity to talk about his job on campus, and maybe share a little bit about what you like about working at CSU.
Of course, so if you didn't notice, I'm in the back row. I thought that was pretty funny. I was not expecting that, so there's a lot of jobs you can have on campus job. I'm currently working right now is an emissions baster. It's a really great position where you get to talk to perspective students like this and you could have all these fun cool connections. But there are so many different job opportunities that we have, so there is actually a student job portal on like Csus Ram Web. It's a really cool resource. Sites you have where you can actually go through and scroll through different jobs that are available on campus. This is actually how I.
Applied for this job right here is that there's is too handshake now, right?
Yeah, so it's not. It's not their handshake, but you're able to research and look at all these different job opportunities that are available on campus. Apply for different ones and working on campus is really a great thing to do while you're a student, it keeps you involved within the CSU community and really, really works well with your student classes. So I have held many different jobs as a student, some on campus, some off campus, and I can tell.
Not working as a student on campus works much better with your schedule. Your employers know your student and they want to see you succeed in your classes as well as in your work so they're really able to work around your schedule and make sure that you're not burning yourself out. But the same time succeeding in the role you're having. So yeah, working on campus is probably if you need to have a job. Working on campus is probably one of the better ways to go about having a job.
A great thing about being at CSU is the surrounding area as well. So we're located in Fort Collins. I know we have a lot of out of state folks joining us today, so just like a little mini geography, basically you, if you know where Denver is, the capital of Colorado were just an hour North of Denver, so we're pretty far North in the state of Colorado. Anwer directly North of Denver, so we're right along the foothills of the mountains, which makes it a really beautiful spot. It's considered a college town.
It's a very like mid sized town, excited to be apart of the CSU community. This is a picture on the side of Old Town square are Old Town area is just about a mile North of campus and kind of stretches close to campus as well. So nice historic downtown area that's very cute and has lots of really great shops. When I say cute I mean that it was literally the inspiration for Main Street, USA and Disney. So it's.
A really cute downtown area with also just a fun environment where you can get a lot of great food. There's a lot of art and cultural events, small scale concert venues as well as outdoor concerts, food trucks just a really fun downtown area that you can easily walk to from the main campus. There's also a tram that runs from main campus to Old Town Square, where you can jump on that tram and use your student ID as a bus.
Has an there's biking trails as well. So it's easy to get too Old Town to enjoy Fort Collins and we have tons of just fun events and concerts and things that happen throughout the year and then outside of the main Old Town downtown area. There's some fun activities in the foothills of the mountains, including drive in movie theater right up against the photos of the mountains. That's definitely a Fort Collins favorite and then just tons of trails and.
Ways to enjoy the rest of Fort Collins as well, which we're going to talk about getting active at CSU. So I'll save some of that for their. But I love Fort Collins. I think it's one of the best things about being apart of CSU Ann. Really, when you're a student, you kind of blend into the community as well. The community loves CSU an Bisa Versa, so you're definitely accepted an become a member of the Fort Collins area and really are have the opportunity to get plugged in and enjoy the downtown area so.
That's a little overview and Angelica. Would you mind sharing? Maybe some of your favorite things to do off campus in the Fort Collins area?
Yeah, of course. I love Old Town I there's a lot of like really cute cafes. I, let's do homework in in Old Town. We also have a reservoir in Fort Collins called Horsetooth and that's a really fun place that like my friends and I go to to have barbecues. And there's a Lake you can go in. So that's like some things I like to do like Megan mentioned with those concerts I attended one last year and it was a really fun like Blues jazz concert. Just getting engaged with the community dancing.
Alright, so you had a perfect lead into the next slide which is highlighting active.
Active activities outdoors activities being active at CSU, so for Collins is a really active community. Like a lot of people do. Love to hike by camp rock, climb all the things if you don't like to do those sort of things you don't have to. There's still plenty of things to do at CSU and in Fort Collins, but if you're interested in learning or if you're already really into outdoorsy activities, this is definitely a good place to be. We have over 315 miles of trails.
So that's running trails, biking trails, walking trails, just really great spaces all over Fort Collins. Some that are flatter around the city and then some that climb up the foothills of the mountains. So definitely some beautiful trails that you can take advantage of an I'm always finding new trails and new things that I can do in the Fort Collins area. The most popular place to go is definitely Horsetooth, which Angelica mentioned and is the picture there. So it's a Six Mile long reservoir. And then.
Horsetooth rock is just above Horsetooth or I guess behind Horsetooth Reservoir and there's a hike that goes up to that. There's also Horsetooth Falls, which is a pretty waterfall and just that whole natural area is a really great place to go. Hiking, camping, picnicking, all of the things and we have stand up paddle boarding, kayaking, a lot of really great space is there, and that's just about five or six miles West of campus, so it's really easy to get there and then Rocky Mountain National Park.
Is an Estes Park. If you've heard of those areas are just about 40 minutes from Csus campus so we have easy access to the best National Park in the country in my opinion. And there's lots of elk and deer and Wildlife and hiking and camping an this amazing to have that right here and then. If you're from the Denver area, one of the things that I like to highlight about CSU that I think is nice and our location is that we are just.
Slightly connected from kind of the main traffic into the mountains and through Denver and you can absolutely get into the mountains from Fort Collins. That's kind of the more popular areas like Breckenridge, Keystone, Copper, Winter Park and we actually have a bus that takes students skiing there. So you like to ski and some of those more popular resorts you can absolutely do that from Fort Collins. One of the things that I personally like is that I can do that, but I also have access to the mountains.
Just West of campus that like doesn't have traffic, so it's a lot easier to just jump up just less of campus and really enjoy, like the Pooter Canyon, which is a River that runs through Fort Collins. And there's lots of great fishing and camping spots. You can also go further and get all the way to Steamboat Springs from Fort Collins just West of us so you don't necessarily have to go down into the most heavily track traffic areas during busy weekends in Colorado. And you can still.
Just pop on over to the mountains and really enjoy some outdoorsy activities, so I definitely think that's a benefit of being up in Fort Collins and really getting to enjoy the outdoors, which is something that I really like to do, so I'll allow Kim to jump in and Kim wait where you on a climbing team is all you said? OK? We talk about that. I know you're not doing it anymore, but then also just other things that you can do outdoors in Fort Collins. What you like about it?
Yeah, absolutely. So my freshman year I knew I wanted to be active. I kind of finished up my high school sports and I was kind of looking for the next thing. And so I went to the Expo where at the rec center where they had all the club 30 plus club sports out with tables an you could go and talk to all of them and I started chatting with the climate team and it's an indoor climbing team and they compete. There were one of the best like club sports at CSU which is really exciting.
And I had never climbed before my life like didn't realize you had to stay on one color. I had never climbed before in my life, but they welcome me with open arms and I made a lot of great friends and a lot of great experiences, learned a lot. And the coolest thing about that is that once you join a club like that, you also get hooked into like a Facebook group or some other type of social Media Group where you can have access to all these other people. Have that similar interest. So almost every weekend.
Someone would post on the Facebook group like, hey, I'm going out to Horsetooth to go bouldering. Does anyone want to come join me? And so if you're interested in things like climbing or backpacking or skiing snowboarding, if you get plugged into things like the climbing team or the outdoor programs or the outdoors club or the snow riders club, that's going to get you access to this Facebook groups where you can find a lot of friends even if you don't have a car to go backpacking with or go skiing snowboarding with.
So highly encourage you to get.
To be a part of those costs that you have more access to, the greater outdoors, especially as a first year. And then I love being active around Fort Collins. I I have a dog now and we go hiking almost every weekend over somewhere will find a random Charlotte Horsetooth and just go for a longer walk. I this past summer I was here all summer being active and outdoors and away from people was really the only option this summer so I tried my hand out mountain biking at Horsetooth we went.
Tubing down the Puter River so there's stuff like a lot of things you can do outdoors, and it's great place to start trying new things as well.
Awesome, thank you for sharing. So that's the end of our slides in our formal presentation. So if you're watching this weapon are I would encourage you to submit some questions while you still have us here. You can ask the students questions about anything that you might want to get involved in, or other questions that you might have about CSU. And while you're thinking if you want to submit any questions, I also just wanted to prompt. We haven't talked about Intermural Sports very much an I think a couple of you mentioned it so.
How many of you have done intermural sports?
Angelica dead, OK, awesome. Would you mind talking about Inter murals and what that is and how you got involved in it?
Yeah, so I had action at with an involvement visor in the slice office and that's how I learned about in real sports. I did in a real basketball as well as tennis. We also offer a lot of other in a male sports though I know that we have like a water polo if I don't know if I'm saying that correctly or water polo on like sports thing that people like to do. And it seems really fun so we have like a lot of really fun ways to get involved in.
We have a lot of animal sports, but like I said I did. The tennis and basketball and it was a really fun way to meet new people. I did Coed so I made a lot of friends through that.
Yeah, it's really funny. I actually did the water polo intermural like every year when I was a student. It's inner tube water polo. So yeah, so you're literally an inner tubes and you're playing water polo like it's really goofy and people could like flip you and stuff. I did it with all women the first season and it was so fun and then we did Coed and guys were literally like flipping are tubes and I like alright. I think I'm going to do all women accounted next.
But it's really fun. That was like a goofy one. And then, yeah, there's just tons of other sports that you can do for intervals for sure, and that's a popular way. I also wanted to mention I don't think you said this. I'm sorry if you did, but it's pretty inexpensive to do Intermural Sports, so it's I think it's $10 a semester. Is that still right? OK, so $10 a semester for unlimited teams, so you just pay $10 and then you can sign up for tournaments and like full seasons. So seasons are usually like 6 to 8 weeks.
So I did soccer. Soccer is more serious about so I enjoy. I joined like more competitive intermural soccer and six to 8 weeks and tournaments and things. But then they have like random days that there's like a corn hole tournament or pumpkin carving tournament or things like that where you still paid your $10.00 so you can join it. And those are really fun as well. OK, we did get a question. Does the outdoor activities, kayaking and things like that cost extra money? So just one of you want to talk about the outdoor programs office.
Kim, will you do you know much about that? You kind of mentioned it.
Yeah, I can chat about it so we do have an outdoor programs desk. What's nice about them is they do offer a gear rental program that's $25 for the semester. Unfortunately they don't have big things, so kayaks, paddle boards, skis, snowboards. They don't offer those but they have things like climbing equipment, backpacking equipment, camping equipment so that can be a more cost effective way to get access to things like backpacking gear. If you're wanting to go on a backpacking trip.
If you are looking to kayak paddle board something like that over at Horsetooth, you do have to pay to rent that equipment out there or again, pro tip, get connected with the outdoor program or the outdoors club or something like that and get connected with people who may have paddle boards. Or it may have those things and are willing to share with friends. So I also want to mention that a lot of the parking lots at Horsetooth.
Are pay to park and it's a $9 fee for a 24 hour period so that is another consideration. But there are some little hidden gems of parking lots around Horsetooth that you don't have to pay so pro tip, find the free parking lots.
Those are Super Helpful Protips.
Alright, I'm gonna give just a second if anyone wants to submit anymore questions.
nice OK. Are there safe places to store personal outdoor equipment like mountain bikes?
Anyone want to talk about that?
I feel like the answer is yes, but I'm going to quickly check to make sure Megan. Do you know?
Yeah, so within maybe you can look up exactly how it works, Kim, but within the residence halls I know there's options for storage and you can basically pay. I think for a storage locker for larger items like skis and that sort of thing, but I'm not sure exactly how that works as far as mountain bikes. For biking, we do have covered and locked bike storage outdoors. If you're OK with that for.
Nicer bike equipment and you can only access the locked area with your student ID, so that's an option too. Otherwise I think there's something through housing in the residence halls that offers larger storage.
We can confirm an put a link in the chat if we find something.
Alright, any other questions?
Kim King
11:36:57 AM
https://housing.colostate.edu/halls/policies/
Kim King
11:37:06 AM
^^Check under storage spaces on this website
Awesome, well thank you all so much for joining our web and are today and thank you so much to the student ambassadors for being here and for sharing your experiences. I really appreciate it. I do want to also thank our participants for being here and taking time out of your day to watch our web and R. Please keep in mind that we're always here for you and that there's lots of other webinars offered throughout the week as well. So if you are interested in signing up for more if you're planning on attending more that full series.
We found on our admissions website you type in fall webinar series. We will be also offering a really cool series next week, that's.
I think it's titled Unique CSU Gems, so it's like really unique things that you can experience in CSU that maybe are like interesting programs or things that other universities won't have. So that's something that you can look into if you're interested in joining us for more webinars. We also offer one on one chats with students, counselors, video phone, just tons of ways to connect with us this fall, so please let us know how we can help you in this virtual space. So thank you.
Kim King
11:37:58 AM
Check here for secure bike storage https://pts.colostate.edu/transportation-options/bicycle-general/bikeshelter/
So much for being here today and thank you for the student ambassadors. Kim thanks, that's awesome. I see that Kim just dropped in the chat secure bike storage, so hopefully that helps with your question and thanks for submitting questions and engaging in our panel. Thank you ambassadors and thank you participants. We will see y'all later go Rams.