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had felt it many times before and was beginning to trust that it would only open up more opportunities. I was beginning to learn that my largest fears carried my greatest growth.” Wagstaff worked hard and performed well, but she didn’t love the job this time. “I hated the management style,” she said. “It was very churn and burn. Expectations were unrealistic and employees were held to unachievable standards. Adversity ran rampant.” She even found herself encouraging her own people to leave. “Then
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passions, and her community – she looks for connections outside of the obvious. Jenny is a member of the Black and Gold Chapter of Mortar Board – the National Honor Society, is active in service projects, and is the student director of Impact. She is a world traveler, a scholar of the highest rank, multilingual (in Latin!), and is dedicated to a life of inquiry, service, and care. Sarah Martin: BME – K-12 instrumental & Orchestra Sarah is a musician of the highest caliber. As a French Hornist, she
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problems and breaking them down to understand them better and ultimately to help solve them,” he says. Economics Major Presents at National Conference Nellie Moran’s capstone research project examines how political candidates’ expenditures affect the outcome of their campaigns. Learn More “Students who are drawn to Economics ask questions for which the answers aren’t easy—poverty, health care, education, unemployment, development, environmental degradation, international relations—but for which they
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had faced obstacles to participation in sports. “I played softball all through high school and was skilled enough to be able to play in college, but money became the issue. I had to take care of my younger siblings while my parents worked supporting me and my siblings,” read one card, attributed to an 18-year-old U.S. athlete named Stacy. On the cloth walls of the SAAC exhibit were facts displayed as quotes and infographics that pointed out socioeconomic privileges: Head coaches of NCAA Division I
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creating more opportunities for people to walk, bike and take public transit, Austin’s work focuses on policy development, lobbying and statewide coalition building. “Transportation is an issue that a lot of people care about, but it’s not very many people’s number-one issue.” Austin explains. “As transit advocates, our power is based in our relationships with our closest friends. We have to build pro-transit coalitions at the state and local level to have success.” Austin’s professional career in
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cadets. She is a decorated combat veteran of Desert Storm, the conflict in the Balkans and Operation Iraqi Freedom — a seasoned officer who talked with the authority of experience. “What I learned from her about being a leader, taking care of people,” Calata said, “that’s something I’ve always kept.” As he shifted gears from nursing, Calata turned to political science. Through those studies he met Professor Ann Kelleher. She had a reputation as a tough instructor and, like Boice, had real-world
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Art & Design | Academic Programs | PLU 1: Skip to content 2: Skip to navigation Accessibility Tools (CTRL+U) Text-to-Speech Large Cursor Zoom Level (x1) Reset Zoom Disable Animations Reset All Hide the tools After hiding the tool, if you would like to re-enable it, just press CTRL+U to open this window. Or, move your cursor near the tool to display it. Menu Apply Visit Programs PLU News Menu Search Events ePass Apply Visit Programs PLU News Inquiry. Service. Leadership. Care. Menu Search Events
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. Private instruction; special fee in addition to tuition. Students register in MUSI 329A for 1 hour; MUSI 329B for 2 hours; MUSIC 329C for 3 or 4 hours (1 to 4) MUSI 340 : Managing the Classroom and Curriculum Classroom management, classroom technology, and assessment. Unit and lesson planning with introduction to the edTPA. 15 hour practicum required. Prerequisite: MUSI 240. (3) MUSI 341 : Music for Classroom Teachers Methods and procedures in teaching elementary school music as well as infusing the
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background check through Washington State Patrol (for those who have lived in Washington State for the last 5 years). The cost is $12 and there are a couple of forms that need to be completed and submitted. There are alternative routes for those who have lived out of state in the past 5 years. To initiate a background check through PLU, please contact: Susan J. Liden Director, Risk Management and Insurance Pacific Lutheran University lidensj@plu.edu (253) 535-7116 + Incarcerated personsAn incarcerated
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couple of forms that need to be completed and submitted. There are alternative routes for those who have lived out of state in the past 5 years. To initiate a background check through PLU, please contact: Susan J. Liden Director, Risk Management and Insurance Pacific Lutheran University lidensj@plu.edu (253) 535-7116 + Incarcerated personsAn incarcerated person is defined by federal regulations as any individual involuntarily confined or detained in a penal institution. This definition includes
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