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EDUC - BA - Educ - Dual Elem Edu and SPED (pdf) view download
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EDUC - BA - Educ - Dual Elem Edu and SPED (pdf) view download
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EDUC - BA - Educ - Dual Elem Edu and SPED (pdf) view download
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Equity vs. Equality Gender and Sexuality Institutional Racism Intersectionality Whiteness and Privilege Interfaith More information about these topics and a sampling of readings for each can be viewed here. Who can participate? Any faculty member may apply to be a part of the Inclusive Pedagogy Seminar. Each seminar cohort can have up to six participants. When are seminars offered? One seminar will be offered each semester, as well as during J-Term and summer. What is the time commitment? The
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Religious Studies from Duke University in 2006. Professor Graber works on religion and violence and inter-religious encounters in American prisons and on the American frontier. Her first book, The Furnace of Affliction: Prisons and Religion in Antebellum America, explores the intersection of church and state during the founding of the nation’s first prisons. Her latest book, The Gods of Indian Country: Religion and the Struggle for the American West, considers religious transformations among Kiowa
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d’Alene, Idaho. It’s a place where the outdoors is the setting for ministry for youth. “When you get [young people] on top of a mountain, they get that awesome outdoor experience,” he said. “All it takes is that one kid who is just awestruck,” Baker, religion and recreation major, said. “It can totally be worth it. It can make something mundane seem totally extraordinary.” What is it about the Pacific Northwest that inspires Daniel Baker to help others to explore the outdoors, what he calls ‘God’s
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American ImaginationMW 1:45-3:30 HGST 200: Introduction to Holocaust and Genocide StudiesTR 9:55-11:40 HIST 289/HGST 287: Africa and the HolocaustTR 11:50-1:35 HIST 360: History of the HolocaustTR 3:40-5:25 HIST 333: Colonization and Genocide in Native North AmericaTR 1:45-3:30 HISP 301: Hispanic Voices for Social Change *Prerequisite: HISP 202TR 11:50-1:35 NAIS 250: Introduction to Native American & Indigenous StudiesMWF 1:45-2:50 RELI 230/HGST 287: Religion and GenocideTR 11:50-1:35 Holocaust
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Advice for first-year students: Create a study space and routine Posted by: vcraker / July 12, 2022 July 12, 2022 Alina Boorse ’25 shares her experience as a first-year student and offers advice to future students. Read Previous Advice for first-year students: Communicate with your professors Read Next PLU places second in National Science Foundation’s COVID-19 Diversity, Equity, & Inclusion Challenge. LATEST POSTS Stuart Gavidia ’24 majored in computer science while interning at Amazon, Cannon
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National Guard member and nursing major prioritizes service to his community Posted by: vcraker / April 7, 2022 Image: Justyn Freeman loads up meals to deliver to local families as part of the Delta Turkey Basket Drive. April 7, 2022 Before attending Pacific Lutheran University, Justyn Freeman ’23 served in the Air Force for six years. Now, he is a senior nursing major and will soon begin his residency at St. Joseph Medical Center in Tacoma. Justyn is a current member of the Washington Air
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PLU alum returns to Namibia to research infections and teach marimba Posted by: vcraker / November 17, 2022 November 17, 2022 Biology major Elizabeth Larios ’21 was awarded a Fullbright scholarship for her work in Namibia. When she was in fourth grade, Larios wanted to be a neurosurgeon. That’s when her class took a field trip to a science museum and Larios saw an exhibit about the human brain. Returning home that day, she told her mom: “I’m going to be a neurosurgeon!” In the following years
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