Page 296 • (4,657 results in 0.037 seconds)

  • MediaLabMediaLab is a student-run and semi-autonomous applied skills and research program within the Center for Media Studies. Projects undertaken by MediaLab are exclusively for and with off-campus clients and audiences. For more information about MediaLab, please click here.

  • Review Boards and ApprovalApproval is necessary for research with human subjects or vertebrate animals that is going to be presented publicly, and this needs to happen before data is collected.HPRBHuman Participants Review BoardLearn MoreIACUCInstitutional Animal Care and Use CommitteeLearn MoreReturn to Scholarship Home

  • Ann F. Tolo Administrative Associate; Undergraduate Research Program Coordinator Phone: 253-535-7535 Email: tolo@plu.edu Office Location:Morken Center for Learning & Technology - Room 238 Professional Education B.A., Grand Canyon University, Phoenix, Arizona, 1971 Areas of Emphasis or Expertise Behavioral Sciences Biological Sciences

    Contact Information
    Area of Emphasis/Expertise
  • Encouraging Conservation in Communal Living Environments (pdf) view download This student-driven research investigated the effect of social norms on energy conservation.

  • do about what they’re teaching. They are mentors and fellow learners who encourage you to consider new ways of thinking, to take risks and grow. Experiential Learning Learn inside and outside the classroom. PLU offers close student-faculty research opportunities, along with study away experiences, internships, field studies, lab work, clinical hours, and more. Why the liberal arts & sciences? At the core of a liberal arts and sciences education is flexibility, creativity, critical thinking, and

  • Why Study Anthropology? If you think anthropology is limited to the study of stones and old bones, think again! Quick Facts Archaeological Research Students built upon archaeological research following museum partnership, summer dig in Roche Harbor. Read More Why Study Anthropology? If you think anthropology is limited to the study of stones and old bones, think again! Quick Facts Anthropology: The Study of Humanity If you think that anthropology is limited to the study of stones and old bones

    Professor Bradford Andrews, Director
    Xavier Hall, Room 142 12180 Park Ave S Tacoma WA 98447
  • & Paleoenvironments Selected Publications Research Projects Paleobotany and paleoenvironments on Cenozoic to Quaternary timescales; Disturbance ecology of ancient ecosystems; Vegetation response to ancient climate change. Selected Presentations Zahajská, P., Stamm, F.M., Baldermann, A., Schiller, C.M., and Conley, D., The stubborn silica: Undissolved diatom frustules during sequential leaching: Isotopes in Biogenic Silica, Louvain-La-Neuve, BELGIUM (May 2024) American Geophysical Union (Lowe, A.J., Schmitz, M.D

    Contact Information
    Office Hours
    M & W: 9:10 am - 11:30 am
    Fri: 12:30 pm - 1:30 pm
    Mon - Fri: -
    Area of Emphasis/Expertise
  • in China and East Asia, with a focus on Buddhism. In his research he specializes in the intellectual and institutional history of Chinese Buddhism during the modern period. He has studied Buddhist responses to elements of modernity, such as the discourses surrounding both religion and modern science. His first book,  The Science of Chinese Buddhism: Early Twentieth-Century Engagements, was published in 2015 by Columbia University Press. He has published articles in the Chung-Hwa Buddhist Journal

  • . Analyze diversity within French and Francophone cultures (in Europe, Africa, the Americas, and Asia) and of their products, practices, and perspectives. Develop an original hypothesis to analyze and evaluate texts (broadly understood) grounded in French language study, research, and critical theory. Students completing the French and Francophone Studies minor will be able to: Demonstrate proficiency in French at the Intermediate-Mid proficiency level, as defined by ACTFL Analyze diversity within

  • China and East Asia, with a focus on Buddhism. In his research he specializes in the intellectual and institutional history of Chinese Buddhism during the modern period. He has studied Buddhist responses to elements of modernity, such as the discourses surrounding both religion and modern science. His first book,  The Science of Chinese Buddhism: Early Twentieth-Century Engagements, was published in 2015 by Columbia University Press. He has published articles in the Chung-Hwa Buddhist Journal 中華佛學學報