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Benefits of Holistic Healthcare Practices in Scope of Depression14. PSYC 499 - Tiarra LewisThe Effect of Weight Sensations and Gender on Attitudes Toward Advertising15. PSYC 499 - Bertha MuñozAffection and Friendship Functions of Current and Former FriendshipsAffection and Friendship Functions of Current and Former Friendships16. PSYC 499 - Poerava MeinhardtComparing Media Portrayals of Stockholm Syndrome to the Peer-Reviewed LiteratureThursday, December 6 / 5 - 6 p.m. / CK Hall, AUCClick on student
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As set forth in this policy, PLU prohibits discrimination on the basis of sex in its programs and activities. As defined by Title IX, discrimination on the basis of sex includes discrimination on the basis of sex stereotypes, sex characteristics, pregnancy or related conditions, sexual orientation, and gender identity. Consistent with other provisions of PLU’s Student Code of Conduct, this policy and procedures herein apply to all students enrolled in courses at Pacific Lutheran University
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ENVT 350 Environmental Methods of Investigation is a watershed-based course that examines the health of PLU’s watershed – the Chambers-Clover Creek Watershed. The class has been the centerpiece of our interdisciplinary Environmental Studies program since the minor was first offered in 1992. Later the program offered its first major in 1998. In the class, students study the health of our watershed using multiple disciplines – this semester, including Biology, Chemistry, Geosciences, History, and
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Revised English Learning Outcomes (5/2/24)1. Reading. Students will interpret texts with attention to the complexities of content, form, and aesthetic value. 2. Writing Process. Students will practice a deliberate process of writing as revision, with emphasis on inquiry, argument, and craft. 3. Genre, Media, and Rhetorical Situation. Students will study diverse genres, media, and modes of communication and write for a variety of purposes and audiences. 4. Culture, History, and Power. Students
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Resources TitleAuthorPublisher Holocaust Mothers and Daughters: Family, History, and Trauma F. K. Clementi Brandeis UP, 2013 We Only Know Men: The Rescue of Jews in France during the Holocaust Patrick Henry Washington, DC: The Catholic University of America Press, 2007 Jewish Resistance Against the Nazis Patrick Henry (Editor) Washington, DC: The Catholic University of America Press, 2014 The Beautiful Beast: The Life & Crimes of SS-Aufseherin Irma Grese – 2nd ed Daniel Brown Golden West, 2004
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Publishing & Printing Arts (PPA) Program (Interdisciplinary Minor)Learning Outcomes Through studying the history of print culture, students will review the variety of modes of human expression from antiquity to the present day and analyze the interrelationships between particular cultures and their modes of recording, disseminating, and interpreting information. Through studio press work, students will practice the traditional arts and crafts of the book, its design, and its production and
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decline your financial aid award offer. Messages pertaining to your aid offer or revisions to that award are also posted, as well as outstanding requirements necessary to continue the processing of your aid offer. Your status in meeting the Financial Aid Satisfactory Academic Progress Policy will also be posted at the end of each academic year. Your student loan borrowing history at PLU, including an estimate of your monthly loan payment amount and your estimated total loan payoff is available
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. Beginning in our intermediate-level German courses and continuing through our upper-division literature seminars and our cultural history sequence, the German program at PLU incorporates the study of many texts, artworks, treatises, and other cultural products from several humanities fields, enabling students to approach the study of the German-speaking countries from an interdisciplinary perspective. This academic year, students in two upper-division German courses have had particularly focused
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10th Anniversary CelebrationKeynote SpeakerDr. Jeffrey RiedingerDr. Riedinger has leadership and administrative responsibility for the University’s diverse global programming including support for international research, study abroad, student and faculty exchanges, and overseas centers. He also serves on the faculty of the University of Washington School of Law and the Sustainable Development LL.M. program. He is a member of the Board of Directors and Vice President for Scholarship and
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receives requests to make public statements on various topics, from local to global issues; from spiritual matters to political unrest and natural disasters. While there may be rare or exceptional circumstances in which the university will share a statement on an issue, event, or policy, we prioritize actions in providing mental health support services and educational programming to better aid our community.
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