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SDSU President Adela de la Torre met with students during her visit to SDSU Georgia. In its 10-plus years, more than 500 Georgian students have completed four-year degrees.

SDSU President Adela de la Torre honored for advancing global education and workforce development

De la Torre receives 2025 Award for Presidential Leadership in Internationalization for her commitment to global engagement, expanding SDSU’s international programs, and preparing students for a global workforce

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    SDSU Research

    MAKE Farm’s CSA program trains participants in agriculture, job skills, and English for career growth.

    SDSU Mission Valley partners with MAKE Projects to launch MAKE Farm, allowing for community supported agriculture

    An urban farm at SDSU Mission Valley, next to the remodeled trolley plaza, cultivates a partnership between SDSU and MAKE Projects, which offers job readiness training for refugee and immigrant women.

    A young person, seen in profile with black hair obscuring most of their face, is working on a laptop keyboard placed on top of a large instrument, about four feet high. Behind them we see an estuary, forking off into two branches, surrounbded by flat wetlands.

    Sensors prove feasibility of real-time water quality reporting

    The instruments were deployed in the Tijuana River Estuary, polluted by raw sewage flows from Mexico.

    Adjunct Faculty Gabriela Fernandez, director of the SDSU Metabolism of Cities Living Lab, supervises big data research that localizes the 17 United Nations Sustainable Development Goals

    SDSU lab dives into big data to localize UN Sustainable Development Goals

    At Metabolism of Cities Living Lab, researchers build awareness of climate change and give a voice to vulnerable populations along the U.S.-Mexico border and globally.

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    Aztec Voices

    Two SDSU researches are inside a lab observing a petri dish.
    This recognition enhances our ability to attract excellent faculty, supercharges our students’ career readiness, and grows the value and prestige of an SDSU degree everywhere, benefiting our 500,000 living Aztec alumni.

    — SDSU President Adela de la Torre, from SDSU earns R1 classification, joins top 5% of research universities in the U.S.