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  • sustainability, health, and security. Engineers make a real impact, they’re in high demand globally, and they earn great pay. Dual degree engineering students at PLU take three years of math and science courses before transferring to an engineering school where they will finish, after two more years, with two degrees, one from PLU and one in engineering. PLU trains our students in reasoning, writing, global perspectives, and communications, making our students well-rounded and appealing to employers. With

  • —including critical thinking, writing, communication, mathematics, and technology—at more advanced levels of aptitude. Through civic engagement, knowledge and insight no longer exist in the life of the mind; they become coalesced in mindful and caring community involvement. By conjoining the academic knowledge and skills necessary to address community needs, students deepen and extend their learning. Additionally, individuals who are active volunteers have 27 percent higher odds of finding a job than

  • Why Study English?Written works preserve our history, describe our current reality and color our future beyond imagination. Whether you aspire to analyze literature or write it, the study of English offers a versatile and challenging major. Through reading we have the opportunity to live a thousand lives, while writing with care and imagination can reveal new self-truths. A disciplined experience with the written word develops broad vision, fresh insight, and the more sophisticated skills of

  • -Clover Creek Watershed CouncilAl Schmauder, Clover Creek Council Barbara Ann Smolko, Associate Planner, Research/Writer Bob Dieckmann, Environmental Educator Charles Douthwaite, Business Christy Strand and Greg Zentner, City of Tacoma Don Perry, Pierce County Water Resources Dr. Willie Joel Smitherman, Education Erin Hoiland, Puyallup Tribe Gerald M. Hendricks, P.E. Gerald Sorensen, Pierce County Cattlemen’s Association Karen Trueman, GIS Support Ken Canfield, Pierce County Surface Water Management

  • Expression GenEd Element DANC: Dance DATA: Data Science DL: Dean’s List D.N.P.: Doctor of Nursing Practice DTA: Direct Transfer Agreement from Washington Community College ECON: Economics EDUC: Education Ed.D.: Doctor of Education ELMSN: Entry-level M.S.N. Program ENGL: English ENGR: Engineering ENVT: Environmental Studies EOG: Educational Opportunity Grant EPSY: Educational Psychology ES: Examining Self and Society GenEd Element ESCI: Earth Science FAFSA: Free Application for Federal Student Aid FD

  • Rieke Weekie - November 13th - 17thIt’s time for the fifth annual Rieke Weekie! Join us November 13-17th, as the College of Natural Sciences hosts special events in celebration of the disciplines represented in the Rieke Science Center (Biology, Chemistry, Earth Science, Environmental Studies, and Physics).Schedule of Events——————————— Monday, November 13th 10:30-11am, Rieke Lobby Get a sneak peek of the newly remodeled Rieke 103 rooms and play a trivia game about the subject of our spring

  • Public health concerns update Posted by: Student Life / August 23, 2022 August 23, 2022 Dear PLU Community, We are writing today to provide you with a follow up to the communication that you received on July 29, 2022. In that communication, we outlined fall protocols for both COVID-19 and MPX (previously referred to as Monkeypox). Now that more detailed information about risk mitigation for MPX has become available from the CDC, the Washington Department of Health (WADOH), and Tacoma–Pierce

  • Cind M. Treser Memorial Student Scholarship Fund Posted by: nicolacs / February 18, 2022 February 18, 2022 DESCRIPTION The Cind M. Treser Memorial Student Scholarship program (formerly the Ed Pickett Memorial Student Scholarship) gives recognition to outstanding and deserving undergraduate students majoring in Environmental Health (or in an allied discipline) and who intend to take employment in the field of Environmental Health in Washington State upon completion of the baccalaureate degree

  • English Department Learning Outcomes - effective January 2019 Literature Major, Minor, and General Education Coursework Reading. Students will interpret texts with attention to ambiguity, complexity, and aesthetic value. Writing Process. Students will practice a deliberate writing process with emphasis on inquiry, audience, research, and revision. Genre and Rhetorical Situation. Students will evaluate genres of writing and write in appropriate genres and modes for a variety of purposes and

  • The School of Nursing uses the American Psychological Association (APA) Publication Manual, latest edition, for rules of style, citation, and referencing for all formal, scholarly writing. All faculty are expected to be familiar with APA format, and courses are expected to require the use of APA in all formal papers. Faculty at all levels are expected to be able to assist students in improving their writing and mastery of APA guidelines. Students are introduced to the use of APA in the