Page 203 • (2,366 results in 0.106 seconds)

  • – Friday | 8am – 12pm; 1 – 5pm Counselor available Wednesdays, Thursdays, and on call daily. Services only available to students enrolled in a summer course.WebsiteDisability Support ServicesLocation: Lee House Phone: 253-535-6392 Email: dss@plu.edu Summer Hours Monday – Friday | 8am – 12pm; 1 – 5pmWebsiteCenter for Diversity, Justice, and SustainabilityLocation:  Anderson University Center 150 Phone: 253-535-8750 Email: dcenter@plu.edu Summer Hours Monday – Thursday | 8am – 5pm Friday | 8am

  • Humanization is Vocation: Angie Hambrick discusses student well-being, interdependence and retention Angie Hambrick still identifies as a Midwest girl, but after working at PLU for 18 years, she’s also a Lute through and through. As the associate vice president for diversity, justice and sustainability, Hambrick provides strategic vision on matters related to equity and inclusion and… September 10, 2024 ResoLute

  • Questioning Barriers: Angela Pierce-Ngo ’12 understands post-secondary success requires questions While at PLU, Angela Pierce-Ngo ’12 was worried by a troubling pattern. After the first year of college, many peers and friends — especially classmates of color — left school or took an extremely long break. Even as she worked as a diversity advocate and… November 3, 2022 Equity, Faith, JusticeResoLute

  • Humanization is Vocation: Angie Hambrick discusses student well-being, interdependence and retention Angie Hambrick still identifies as a Midwest girl, but after working at PLU for 18 years, she’s also a Lute through and through. As the associate vice president for diversity, justice and sustainability, Hambrick provides strategic vision on matters related to equity and inclusion and… September 10, 2024 ResoLute

  • research.  Bachelors of Arts (BA) students present a capstone paper and seminar about a literature research topic.   Each capstone student arranges for a faculty member to be their mentor. Capstone capstone seminars are presented during afternoons of the Chemistry Capstone Celebration Week in late April or early May each year. The Organic Special Projects Laboratory (CHEM 336)The Organic Special Projects Laboratory (CHEM 336) is a by-application-only alternative to the regular Organic II Laboratory

  • (ESCI 498-499) in their final full year. Prerequisite: at least 8 semester hours of 300-level or above courses in earth science. Pass/Fail. (1) ESCI 499 : Capstone: Senior Seminar - SR Culminating experience applying geological methods and theory through original literature or field or laboratory research under the guidance of a faculty mentor, with written and oral presentation of results. Required of all majors in their senior year. Prerequisite: ESCI 498. (4)

  • full-term courses. Instructors are encouraged to consider obtaining mid-semester feedback. Our colleagues on the Teaching Evaluation Task Force (2013-14) reviewed the literature on best practices for measuring effective teaching, and learned that, “response rates for end of term evaluations increase when a mid-course evaluation is also administered.” Mid-semester feedback is consistent with the Task Force’s recommendation for formative assessment, as it “can foster our professional development as

  • Professor of Philosophy and Literature, Whitman College, Washington Title: “Seeing Things Differently: Community and Theatre in Charlotte Delbo’s ‘Auschwitz and After'” Dee Simon, Baral Family Executive Director, Holocaust Center for Humanity, Seattle, Washington Simon is a second generation survivor. Her mother was interned in Theresienstadt during WWII. 10:30 a.m. – 12:15 p.m. – Reconsidering Anne Frank (Regency Room, AUC) For many people, their first encounter with studying about the Holocaust comes

  • to a field in which the analysis of process and perpetrator often precludes important questions about the victims themselves. About Dr. Patricia Heberer-RiceDr. Heberer Rice is one of the leading scholars on the Nazi Euthanasia murders. She has been based at the Museum’s Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies (former U.S. Holocaust Research Institute) since 1993. Heberer Rice completed her undergraduate degree in Historical Studies and German Language and Literature at Southern Illinois University

  • to a field in which the analysis of process and perpetrator often precludes important questions about the victims themselves. About Dr. Patricia Heberer-RiceDr. Heberer Rice is one of the leading scholars on the Nazi Euthanasia murders. She has been based at the Museum’s Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies (former U.S. Holocaust Research Institute) since 1993. Heberer Rice completed her undergraduate degree in Historical Studies and German Language and Literature at Southern Illinois University