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tool can also be used to collect higher stakes assignments such as a research paper, presentation (slides or video), or group project. Links to assignments can be posted to an online lesson page. When the instructor grades the assignment, grades and feedback can be automatically populated in the Sakai Gradebook. Tests & Quizzes Instructors may wish to utilize the Tests & Quizzes tool to collect assessments comprised of multiple choice, matching, true/false, fill-in-the-blank, short answer, or essay
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semester, Impact boards will fill up quickly and will most likely be continuously full for the first month or so. Thus, we recommend that you either guarantee your space on our boards by submitting a Quick Copy Request. ADVERTISING POLICIESAll Advertising Must Include: Event name, time/date, location, PLU department/club/organization, and contact information should be clearly stated on event advertisements or should be providing information/awareness from a PLU group who is bringing important
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loved playing the Suzuki songs, but I also loved to sing and sang in a group like the Tacoma Youth Chorus (the Northwest Boychoir) as well. I also took piano lessons from my mother, and later from a local high school student named Rick Steves (yes, he grew up to be THE Rick Steves!). I loved all of these things (and continue to), but by the time I was finishing grade school I knew I had to make a choice. I gave violin my all, but learned a bit of guitar, and occasionally sang in choirs. When I was
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class that really changed the way I look at the world, and even myself.” PLU’s GSRS program presented Ash an opportunity to study abroad in Tobago for a month, allowing her to gain hands-on social work experience. Ash partnered with a program for adolescent mothers that combined daycare and school and taught classes like first aid, reproductive health and basic science lessons. Recalling when the group made baking soda and vinegar volcanoes, Ash says, “Just seeing the joy on their faces as they saw
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with a simulator, and now we get to use the real hardware and work in-person. This project is actually a continuation of a project by a previous capstone group. They finished most of the hardware for the car which has been really helpful to us. Hopefully, after we finish our capstone work, other groups will come and work on it in the future as well. What are some of your goals for the future? I plan on graduating this spring. I am not sure where I would like to work yet, but I do know I want to
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capstone is focused on four different works of art that depict Christ as queer, dissecting the messages that these works have for LGBTQ+ Christians and for the Christian church as an institution. I’m finding that the works model a way for LGBTQ+ people to identify with Christ, even in the face of rejection by the church. What advice would you give to other Lutes on their educational journeys? Find your community — it can be in sports, in clubs, educational programs, anywhere, but having a group of
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Concordia rounded out the group. During her stay in Tanzania, Webb said two of the most difficult aspects have been seeing “crushing poverty” every day and adjusting to the slower pace of life. “I’m kind of ashamed, because of the different natures of the problems, to say that they have been equally so,” she said. Webb’s had to face the inequities that exist between herself and most Tanzanians. While she attends an expensive private university and spends thousands of dollars to travel and create life
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Barbara Aston. She identified several new types of pottery, and the discovery will aid future Egyptologists in dating similar objects, Ryan explained. Just as things were winding down, the team found human remains in KV 27’s final chamber. Also, while reexamining artifacts found during previous field seasons, they uncovered new revelations. These discoveries will send the group back to the valley at least once more. “People, I think, are intrinsically interested in the past,” Ryan said. “I think in
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-walled laboratory at the Rieke Science Center on lower campus. Rebuilding the north side of Rieke to support the unique device – including Professor Dean Waldow’s “science on display” glass enclosure – brought the NMR cost to more than $1 million, all of which was paid for by sources outside the university. Eventually, the group sees not only students using the machine for student-faculty research, but local community and four-year colleges bringing samples over as well. The chemistry faculty members
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the Can the Can program in 2006, and the university has a 71 percent diversion rate of waste. Student Involvement A: PLU has a zero-waste picnic during new student orientation. The university provides a full-time sustainability internship. A student group (GREAN) has also sold more than 1,000 reusable bottles. Transportation A: One quarter of the university fleet is made up of alternative fuel vehicles, and the university subsidizes mass transportation. A bike co-op started in 2008. In the areas
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