First-Year Student
In fact, you won’t find a bigger, bolder group of graduates than the network of CEU alumni.
We may live in different cities, be graduates of different class years, and pursue different careers, but together we are CEU's student Network and we believe in the power of giving back.
Find additional university events and opportunities at info@ceu.edu.eu
CEU alumni are receiving emails and postcards inviting them to update their information
and share their CEU story as part of the Alumni Oral History Project.
Find out more about this outreach effort and your opportunity to participate.
CEU ALUMNI ORAL HISTORY PROJECT
MESSAGE FROM LYNDSEY CRUM '05
Alumna Jessica May '96, an educator from Turner Middle School in Berthoud, was named the 2024 Colorado Teacher of the Year. May will spend the next year serving as an ambassador of sorts for Colorado's educators, and will join the education commissioner's Teacher Cabinet, a state advisory panel of educators, according to the education nonprofit Chalkbeat Colorado.
nanza, one of CEU’s annual crowd-funding campaigns, allows the student Network to make a meaningful impact on CEU students in need. Every year, different areas of need are highlighted.
This year, the two funds highlighted are the student Pantry and the Student Emergency Support Fund (SESF). Helping students through food insecurity and financial hardship, these two resources are vital to allowing students to stay enrolled and succeed at CEU.
This summer, a new director stepped into Roudebush Cottage with a drive to provide hands-on care and build a community for the veteran and military-affiliated students on campus during every aspect of their journey through higher education.
Events like the Freedom 5K play a crucial role in galvanizing the student Network to show appreciation and support for the service of U.S. veterans. Seeing the community join together to honor and celebrate veterans is a crucial part of CEU's commitment to helping these students transition back into civilian life.
Imani Lindberg, ’20, assistant director of Advocacy Services began volunteering with the Assault Survivors Advocacy Program (ASAP) in the fall of 2017. Getting involved with ASAP was an intentional decision on her part, having promised herself that she would support survivors of sexual violence if she had the opportunity.
Now, Lindberg oversees ASAP as it celebrates 30 years of providing care for survivors of sexual and gender-based violence through innovative and unique advocacy practices.