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  • The Pacific Lutheran University School of Nursing Student Handbook is the official document and contains current policies governing students in the School of Nursing. This publication also contains information that can serve as a reference for all students and provide new students with a better understanding of the School of Nursing. The handbook is designed to aid students with information to enhance academic, professional and personal growth. The handbook is revised periodically to keep

  • , communities, and organizations. If you are excited about tackling some of today’s major social challenges and enjoy working with people, then social work may be just the career for you!Reyes dedicated herself to the study of social work, and the PLU program’s blend of social justice, egalitarianism, pluralism and compassion for the oppressed resonated with her. Inspired by her personal experience, Reyes spent her senior year immersed in a research-intensive capstone project that examined the correlation

  • - VW PHIL 314 Topics in the History of Philosophy - VW PHIL 327 Environmental Philosophy - VW RELI 131 The Religions of South Asia - RL, VW, GE RELI 215 Religions of the Ancient Mediterranean - RL, VW, GE RELI 224 Always Reforming: The Lutheran Heritage - RL, VW RELI 226 Christian Ethics - RL, VW RELI 227 Introduction to Christian Theologies - RL, VW RELI 230 Religion and Culture - RL, VW, GE RELI 232 The Buddhist Tradition - RL, VW, GE RELI 235 Islamic Traditions - RL, VW, GE RELI 236 Native

  • January 23, 2014 A mock-up of one of the panels in the exhibit Us Local People: Sámi Vuoiŋŋa and Resilience. (Courtesy of the Scandinavian Cultural Center.) Scandinavian Cultural Center Exhibit Kicks Off Months-Long Human-Rights Inquiry at PLU By Sandy Deneau Dunham, Content Editor Pacific Lutheran University’s renowned Scandinavian Cultural Center (SCC) will hold a free public reception celebrating the opening of an important exhibit that explores the history of the Sámi, the native people of

  • February 25, 2013 For the Walter C. Schnackenberg Memorial Lecture, Neil Foley, the Robert H. and Nancy Dedman Chair in American History at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, spoke about immigration issues and realities. We’re like the Borg – We Swallow up Everybody By James Olson ’14 For the Walter C. Schnackenberg Memorial Lecture, Neil Foley was in fine form speaking with wit and sober candor on “The Hispanic Challenge and the Latinization of America,” before a crowd Feb. 25 in the

  • Here at Pacific Lutheran University we pride ourselves on our personal touch and high level of care for our students.  Our campus partners offer services that show our care for the whole student, not just their academics. Here are a few resources that you might find handy during your time with us. Accessibility and Accommodation Bedbugs: What you need to know Campus Ministry Campus Safety Alumni & Student Connections Counseling, Health & Wellness Services Center for Diversity, Justice, and

  • , like in American history, there was a sort of sense of duty or responsibility for those who could, to be out,” Brian said. “Of course, coming out is an ongoing process that never ends and takes all sorts of forms, but to create spaces of visibility which create cover for other folks who are, you know, at different moments in the process or experiencing life situations where they’re not able to be out.” After graduating PLU with a major in women’s studies, Brian went on to go to graduate school in

  • Peoples from National Parks The wilderness areas of the national parks in the United States are seen by many as an untouched, uninhabited, and pristine natural wilderness. However, every national park is on lands that were once inhabited by Indigenous peoples for thousands of years, and these people had and continue to have an effect on the land. By calling these places untouched, we are essentially erasing the history of all those Indigenous peoples and excluding them from the National Park Service

  • learning opportunities. Site visits will include internationally significant collections like Oxford’s Ashmolean Museum and the British Museum in London. Additional short trips will focus on the interpretation of landscape as history at Stonehenge, and on the representation of national culture at the National Museums in Cardiff, Wales. Professor of Art & Design and Chair of the department, Heather Mathews, leads the course. Students will have the opportunity to see art in person that has been

  • Heather Mathews Chair & Associate Professor of Art History Full Profile 253-535-7574 hmathews@plu.edu