Page 347 • (4,558 results in 0.051 seconds)

  • Passion for solving unanswered questions drives PLU alum’s research career TACOMA, WASH. (Dec. 24, 2019) — Research has become Pacific Lutheran University grad SarahAnn McFadden’s life. This year, McFadden ‘11 landed a position as a postdoctoral associate at the Yale Institute of Global Health in New Haven, Connecticut, where she spends her time analyzing factors… January 7, 2020

  • me view biology through an equity lens as well. [video: Fade to black]   [video: Emma and Hayden’s voices over a montage of students in the lab, then outside in nature investigating samples they collected. Then, another clip of Dr. Behrens, this time in a forest by a waterway, talking to a student. After that, a slow pan of building with the words Pacific Lutheran University on the front.] Emma: I have always wanted to be a teacher. I didn’t necessarily like science growing up, but I was like

  • Team combined [video: Prof. Yakelis stands in a lab.] Prof. Yakelis: have decades of experience helping students navigate both their time at PLU as well as after graduation into their careers in the health sciences. [video: Prof. Auman’s voice comes in over clips. A student in a lab coat flips through a notebook filled with notes on graph paper. A professor speaks to nursing students in scrubs in front of a wall of medical supplies. Students in goggles and lab coats observe an experiment. A student

  • of your contribution. If you receive a benefit later from your gift, you will be informed of its fair market value at that time. What is PLU’s tax identification number?The PLU Tax Identification Number is 91-0565571. Pacific Lutheran University is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt organization dedicated to securing and stewarding private gifts and grants that benefit the University. Your gift is very much appreciated and may be tax deductible pursuant to IRC §170(c). Each year, thousands of generous donors

  • all templates can be found here.Do I need to complete human subjects training?Before submitting an HPRB application, all researchers (and key personnel, as well as faculty supervisors) must successfully complete the Collaborative Institutional Training Initiative (CITI) online training course. Important information about registering for CITI training for the first time can be found here. Still have questions? Please email hprb@plu.edu. Training is valid for four years. Our online proposal

  • associated with social media Steps that social media platforms are taking to help their users Choosing the 'right' research questionWhen choosing a research question to write about, it’s always useful to pick something that interests you or that you are curious about. That being said, it is also essential that your research question aligns with the parameters of your assignment, can be researched within a reasonable time frame, and takes into account the research resources available to you. When you take

  • yourself and ask what classes you should take and what time the orientation is for your graduate program. 5. Plan to attend the New International Student Orientation. Review the New Student Orientation Schedule for International Students for details. 6.  Get the required TWO MMR vaccinations (or proof you have already received them), and TB test and have your health care provider sign form below. These should be sent before you arrive. We can accept scanned documents. Download the Medical History

  • received rave reviews and requests for repeated presentations. As a church musician, she has been a long-time voice in the Evangelical Lutheran Church of America. She has been contributing editor for both the keyboard and choral divisions of the Sundays and Seasons resource published by Augsburg Fortress (now 1517 Media); served on the Board of Directors of Lutheran Summer Music, the nation’s premier faith-based music academy for high school students; and now acts as an ambassador for the program. Amy

  • 2015-16 Spotlight Series: ‘Roots of Resilience’ Posted by: Zach Powers / October 15, 2015 Image: (Photo by John Froschauer/PLU) October 15, 2015 By Zach Powers '10PLU Marketing & CommunicationsTACOMA, Wash. (Oct. 15, 2015)—Resilience is characterized by the “power or ability to return to original form” after being “bent, compressed or stretched.”You see examples of resilience in the news all the time—in the exhausted yet determined faces of Syrian refugees, in the grace of forgiveness following

  • inherit a team of community-orientated librarians that reflected the communities they served.“It was the first time I’d really been in a management job where my team really was of, and knew, the communities that we were a part of,” he remembers. “There were countless examples during that period of time where I had people who had a different lived experience and therefore a unique perspective, and they could help navigate the culture and the politics in a much more nuanced and impactful way than I