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  • Pacific Lutheran University is committed to providing equal opportunity in education for all students without regard to a person’s race, color, national origin, creed, religion, age, gender, gender identity, sexual orientation, mental or physical disability, or any other status protected by law.  The university community will not tolerate any unlawful discrimination, harassment, or abuse of or toward any member of the university community. The University holds as basic the integrity and well

  • Procedures for Assessing Significant Learning (pdf) view download

  • interested in working. Once accepted, Fellows will work with their mentor to define and develop a research project. Fellows will carry out the work over a 10-week period during the summer and submit two interim reports, a research abstract, and final paper. At the conclusion of the program, students give an oral or poster presentation at one of several Seminar Days, symposia modeled on a professional technical meeting. The 2024 WAVE Fellows award is $7,740 for the ten-week period, plus a $2,300 on-campus

  • PLU Jazz Day in Seattle May 3 Jazz music is a dish best served live and in person. A fusion of African-American, European-American and international musical traditions, jazz is known for its energy, creativity and ingenuity. Its iconic founding fathers and mothers are revered as some of the greatest improvisational artists in… April 27, 2015 MusicTouringUniversity Jazz Ensemble

  • the idea for the book while they were doing research together at the Folger Shakespeare Library a few years ago. “We were doing some research into handwriting and paleography, but we realized that we both had an interest in consciousness and what it meant to be awake and what it meant to be asleep, and the philosophical implications of that, as they manifested in literature.” Professor Nancy Simpson-Younger Forming Sleep: Representing Consciousness in the English Renaissance CoEdited by Nancy

  • surprise, I was missing a lot of what PLU would’ve offered. So much so that I left after that first semester to go back home, this time to community college. I figured if PLU was in Parkland, there was no way it was offering more than what a community college could give me because the area didn’t seem “special” enough to be like a “real” college. In the end, many years later, I ended up right back at PLU for the absolute best 5 years (thank you, PLUS year) of my life where I not only learned about my

  • , think again!  Though anthropology does look at stones and bones, it also examines the politics, medicine, kinship, art, and religion of various peoples and times.  This makes the study of anthropology a complex task, for it requires an understanding of the basics from numerous disciplines such as geology, biology, art, and psychology. The four fields of anthropology are cultural anthropology, how people live in groups today, linguistics, the study of language, biological anthropology, the study of

    Professor Bradford Andrews, Director
    Xavier Hall, Room 142 12180 Park Ave S Tacoma WA 98447
  • acts as a presentational force in the service of standpoint.” It was presented in the Argumentation and Forensics Division. Dr. Amy Young, Associate Professor of Communication, received the award for her paper “Beyond Supreme: Retired Supreme Court Justices as Public Intellectuals”, which deals with the increasingly vocal, political and mediated role we’ve seen Stevens, Souter and O’Connor play since their respective retirements.  It was presented in the Communication & the Law Division. Young’s

  • Carpenter Time: 7 p.m. Date: Wednesday, April 17, 2024 Place: Nordquist Hall, Xavier 201 Free and open to the public ~ For more information or if you have questions concerning this event, contact: Rebekah Mergenthal – mergenrm@plu.edu Dr. Walter C. Schnackenberg graduated from Pacific Lutheran College in 1937. One of his most frequently expressed wishes was that Pacific Lutheran University might establish a lectureship which would bring to the campus distinguished members of the world academic community

  • of a community at PLU that cares about each other and everyone’s ideas.I love IHON so much and am grateful for the relationships I have formed within it.The IHON program to me is what Higher Lutheran Education is and lives out the PLU mission statement. IHON professors were asked “What are your priorities in an IHON class?” Here’s how they answered: Fostering the joy of intellectual community.Stimulating intellectual curiosity and openness.Promoting open-ended ‘inquiry’ — the kind of inquiry