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  • Northwest Center for Occupational Health and Safety Webinar Posted by: nicolacs / August 6, 2021 August 6, 2021 The Northwest Center for Occupational Health and Safety (NWCOHS) at the University of Washington prepares graduate students for careers in worker health and safety through training programs, significant financial support and community-engaged research opportunities. The NWCOHS offers funded graduate training for MS and PhD degrees. The NWCOHS is offering a free webinar on careers in

  • Sean Whalen Research Associate Full Profile 253-535-7047 sean.whalen@plu.edu

  • Guidelines for Purchasing and Reimbursement of Expenses section below. Stipends for student research assistants may be included. Arrangements for payment are to be made through the Office of the Provost. Please note that only individuals who are students at PLU may be paid as research assistants. Travel related to research or professional development, including conference travel. See Guidelines for Purchasing and Reimbursement of Expenses section below for travel expense guidelines. Professional

  • March 12, 2012 ‘My journey into compassion fatigue’ Editor’s note: In this story, Katie Scaff ’13 writes about her experiences creating the documentary Overexposed – an examination of compassion fatigue, with two other students and her communications professor. The faculty-student research project exposes students to the realities of world issues and makes them masterful storytellers. By Katie Scaff ’13 A detour to Joplin We stepped out of the car and were immediately hit with a hazy fog. We

  • -care, specialty-care, and urgent-care clinics in Pierce, King, Kitsap, Thurston, Snohomish, Spokane, and Yakima Counties. Operates five neighborhood emergency departments, including emergency services in Parkland-Spanaway. Conducting ground- breaking health care research right here in the South Sound. Is Pierce County’s largest private employer. “ MultiCare is committed to ensuring the communities we serve have access to a wide range of health care options, now and for the years to come. We’re

  • deepest gratitude to my advisors; Professor Michael Zbaraschuk, Professor Jordan Levy, and Professor Peter Grosvenor. I also want to say thank you to all of the staff and faculty working in the Global Studies Department at PLU for fostering my love for a globally informed education.Critiquing Neoliberalism: Placing NAFTA and Its Attempt to Reform Under a MicroscopeUsing radical international relations theory, this capstone research project looks at neoliberalism and its hegemonic implementation

  • research in Ecuador and spent his final semester studying away in Oaxaca, Mexico, where he discovered his knack for conducting research in Spanish-speaking countries. Taylor-Mosquera earned degrees in Spanish and global studies, building lasting friendships with PLU faculty members along the way. They represented what he aspired to become, he says. “There were a handful of professors — Carmiña, Michael Zbaraschuk, Tamara Williams, Teresa Ciabattari, Jim Predmore and a few others — who I looked to as

  • that sets the standards related to that discipline. May include accreditation standards and requirements. Evaluative materials must have been created specifically for accreditation. Official Copy: President’s Office Retention: 6 years after accreditation received. Transfer to Archives Other Copies: Retention: Administrative Records for Grants/Contracts (Vital Record) Official Copy: Business Office Retention: Permanent. Other Copies: Retention: Application for Research Support Funds – Awarded (Vital

  • Getting to Know the Alumni – Chris Robson Posted by: wagnerjc / September 27, 2017 September 27, 2017 Chris Robson, class of 2016 MSMR Graduate, discusses his experiences with the program and how it got him to where he is today.Why PLU’s MSMR Program? The PLU MSMR program far exceeded my expectations and gave me the skills I needed to grow both personally and professionally. In my professional life, the program gave me much more than the knowledge of market research and the tools used in the

  • feet above is call type 3, a crossbill which feeds on Western Hemlock cones. The next step in Smith’s research requires bringing female crossbills into captivity to see how they respond to songs of different call types. “I like giving students an opportunity to have an experience they may not have in a lab,” Smith said, as she and Grossberg picked their way down the muddy trail to the beach. Once the songs are collected, Smith and her students,Grossberg and Kirsten Paasche ’13, will take the sounds