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  • education helps us understand the tradition that guides the heart of the institution. It’s about service, not individual gain. It’s about how to serve at home, in the broader community and in the world. How do you live side-by-side with others of varying perspectives and beliefs, and learn and serve together? It’s complex, it’s messy and it’s the essence of our PLU learning community. This is a deeper look at how Lutheran higher education fuels critical questioning and learning in community, the

  • Psychology Exercise & Sport Psychology Program Website minor Undergraduate College of Health Professions Early Christian Studies Early Christian Studies Program Website minor Undergraduate College of Liberal Studies Data Science Data Science Program Details major & minor Undergraduate College of Natural Sciences Critical Race Studies Critical Race Studies Program Website minor Undergraduate College of Liberal Studies Gender & Sexuality Studies Gender & Sexuality Studies Program Website minor

  • sympathetic understanding of different communities of music listeners. Using Wilson’s example as a springboard, my own work explores what it means to pursue this kind of project well—something that calls for striking a delicate balance between receptivity and critical-mindedness. Celine Dion in Concert: photo from Wikipedia Wilson’s book served as the central text in my Writing 101 class, and our end-of-semester writing project invited students to engage in their own Wilson-esque taste experiment. Each

  • repercussions, and the more time invested, the greater the reward. Setting type and printing is a lot like making lefse, the soft Norwegian flatbread familiar to many Lutes. Both acts require critical Ps: patience, perseverance and potatoes. The first two are significant to the success of makers. As for potatoes? Printers need to eat to stay alert when running a press. The donation of the Thorniley Collection is a watershed moment that expands the depth of our type, press and equipment collections, as well

  • the most important during her time at PLU. “A big selling point for my business is the fact that I am a traditional artist, I have a lot of experience developing my eye for composition and color theory,” Reed said. While at PLU, Reed took nearly all her classes in Ingram, but she says her most useful class was her figure drawing class. “Understanding anatomy and the way the human body looks in a certain light, that has helped me beyond any other class,” Reed said. “I never thought my drawing class

  • critical thinking. I’m happy that PLU is a campus that encourages this kind of community. Dan Nguyen2015I chose PLU because I wanted to find a college where none of my Danish friends would go to, through the organization EDU-Danmark. PLU sounded like a good place to choose because of the small and friendly community they have offered here. One of the things that also made me choose this University was that I could live on campus, and experience the American college life. My main goal for the study

  • , provide access and opportunity, and sustain the University’s mission. It’s a meaningful giving option for those interested in having an ongoing, long-term impact that will extend far into the University’s future. How are endowment funds invested?The PLU endowment is invested in highly diversified asset classes, providing principal stability. Spending from the endowment is a critical source of PLU’s annual revenue, creating an objective for stability and intergenerational equity. The investment

  • Notes Class Notes Obituaries Submit a Class Note Calendar What Lutheran Higher Education looks like in 2019 Bring Your Whole Self The values of Lutheran higher education — critical questioning, free expression, service in the world and more — inform how learning takes place at PLU, both inside and outside the classroom. Cover story LUTHERAN HIGHER EDUCATION Inquiry. Service. Leadership. Care. Lutheran higher education A visual portrait of how we live our values at Pacific Lutheran University. Power

  • What Lutheran Higher Education looks like in 2019 Bring Your Whole Self The values of Lutheran higher education — critical questioning, free expression, service in the world and more — inform how learning takes place at PLU, both inside and outside the classroom. Cover story LUTHERAN HIGHER EDUCATION Inquiry. Service. Leadership. Care. Lutheran higher education A visual portrait of how we live our values at Pacific Lutheran University. Power Paddle Lute joins her Samish Tribe in canoe journey that

  • The Wang Center for Global and Community Engaged Education continually strives to do better and be better for students.  Through continual pursuit of new opportunities, the Wang Center is able to complete critical self-reflection to encourage growth for stronger programs tomorrow.  PLU has been recognized for its efforts to expand global education on and off campus, as well as improve programs, and care for the environment. 2019     2019     2014     2012-2013     2009   2009     January 2006