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InternshipsStudents participating in internships will have two supervisors–one at work, one at the
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global courses and projects, and in 2013 created an innovative new course in the PLU School of Business that allows students to earn internship credit and participate in a unique, global project. In this course, students experience and grow in the areas of community building and engagement, outreach and education (locally and globally), fundraising, crowdfunding, and international nonprofit projects. The course utilizes an interdisciplinary approach blending business, philosophy, Hispanic studies
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educational philosophy, having students really get their hands on real-world problems and actually doing work.” For some, summer is a time for play. For others, it’s a time for work. But for many at Pacific Lutheran University, it’s a time for a little bit of both — through science.The Division of Natural Sciences at PLU offers rigorous opportunities for inquiry and discovery each summer through the Summer Undergraduate Research Program, in which students take their curiosities outside the classroom and
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Anthropology Alumni Award Endowment Mary Jane Aram Endowed Scholarship Donna Arbaugh Scholarship in Environmental Studies George and Donna Arbaugh Family Endowment for Philosophy George Arbaugh Philosophy Scholarship Clifford & Lydia Arntson Endowed Scholarship Hedvig Arthur Memorial Endowed Scholarship AURA / Thrivent Financial for Lutherans Endowed Scholarship Esther Westby Aus Education Scholarship Fund Back to the top B Marguerite and Wilmer Baer Endowed Scholarship Elbert H. Baker II and Janice M
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(from two different departments) from the following: ENGL 234: Environmental Literature (4) ENGL 394: Studies in Literature and the Environment (4) PHIL 226: Environmental Ethics (4) PHIL 327: Environmental Philosophy (4) RELI 236: Native American Religious Traditions (4) RELI 257: Christian Theology (4) (when topic is “Green Theology” only) Environmental Justice 4 semester hours These courses examine intersections between environmental degradation and structural discrimination and how Indigenous
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positions, including work in multi-modal argumentation and how our senses influence our reasoning. Recently, he has studied sound as it relates to argumentation, how it can make us feel, how it works in advertisements and how it impacts the way we reason. “As a discipline, argument tends to approach the ways people resolve disagreement as visual,” Eckstein said. “For instance, work on political advertisements might focus on the visuals or the text of the words uttered. But this sort of analysis misses
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university, and that’s been really valuable.” Clark’s taken English and political science classes, and those have given her new perspectives. “The GSRS major really gets you in everywhere and gets you to do everything.” Clark is also Robert Noyce Teacher Scholarship recipient. Known as the Culturally Sustaining STEM (CS-STEM) Teaching Program at PLU, the scholarship is awarded to students of different backgrounds in their senior and graduate years who want to teach STEM subjects. “There are six of us
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of your generosity! My experience so far at PLU has been wonderful and life-changing. I feel so thankful that I have the opportunities that PLU allows me to have, and they would not be possible without your support! 🙂Caeden '22, Political ScienceThese last few months at PLU have been undeniably some of the best of my life. Without donors like you, the financial aid necessary for me to attend this prestigious university wouldn’t have been possible and I simply wouldn’t be here.Lindsey '22, Music
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’18 and Matthew Salzano ’18 at the Yes on I-591 rally on Election Night 2014. (Photo: Carolyn Adolph/KUOW) I signed up with my best friend, Michael Diambri, a fellow journalism major (and my employee at PLU’s college newspaper, The Mooring Mast). We showed up at the TNT dressed in our best, excited to be first-years at an award-winning paper on election night, ready to report the news. The political editor, Kim Bradford, briefed us in a conference room about the hashtag we would be using (#waelex
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variety of industry experts,” Wiersma said, “to try and get a sense of just the scope or perceptions regarding ‘what does it mean to work in a masculine industry?’ or, ‘what does it mean to work in a feminine industry?’” “Just like we did through the process of making the series, we hope everyone will gain a better understanding of the meaning of diversity and the varying ways in which it is valued and discussed.”- Rachel Lovrovich ’18 Given the current political climate and various events in the U.S
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