Page 57 • (1,691 results in 0.049 seconds)

  • tremendous capacity and has always had an authentically innovative spirit,” she says. Commissioning change: “Establishing a culture of innovation”Cameron Bennett, DMA, is well-known as the Dean of PLU’s School of Arts and Communication, but from 2019-2021 he also had another title — Chief Innovation Officer and chair of the Presidential Commission on Innovation and Change. Established in fall 2019, the commission’s goal was to develop ideas and priorities that position PLU for long-term financial health

  • school leadership roles in districts. The course emphasizes the character, dispositions, and skills, as well as the values and beliefs, which inform effective school and organizational leadership and support the development of a districtwide vision. Additionally, this course will introduce students to the PLU Ed.D. program and build relationships among cohort members and faculty. (3) EDUC 701 : Educational Research I This course provides foundational concepts in educational research including various

  • talk about their own — and not just their own identity, but the world in which they were finding themselves, and also gave them a little glimpse into the kind of activism that students could [use to] figure out mechanisms and models and histories to go about making change beyond a sort of like micro level of a student group,” he said. Brian described his time at PLU as a heyday for novel queer and gay visibility, at least in many respects. He said there were definitely instances of homophobic

  • role. “Masculinity is not natural, it’s performed,” he said. “Look at how it’s changed in the last 30 years. There’s been a radical change of what it means to be a man.” Today, the cultural definition of masculinity is increasingly linked to violence, power and control. This definition of manhood, which he called the “tough guise,” has detrimental effects on both the victims of men’s violence and on the men themselves, he said. Using clips from documentary films produced by his organization, Jhally

  • October 24, 2012 Robert N. Bellah, the Elliott Professor of Sociology Emeritus at the University of California at Berkeley, was the lecturer for the annual David and Marilyn Knutson Lecture, Oct. 24. (Photo by John Struzenberg ’15) Adapting to the advancements of modernity By Katie Scaff ’13 How do we as a species adapt to a rate of change that no biological species before has ever faced? This was the question Robert N. Bellah, one of the foremost sociologists of religion in the world, posed to

  • the structure, but young people bring the hope and the change.” Beiermann found his role as a young person in the election process in March, when he attended the PCD caucus where 30 local election districts caucused together in the same room. He attended as a newcomer, but left an elected delegate for precinct 655, where PLU resides. “It was the first day I had high political efficacy,” he said, “feeling like I could be engaged in politics and have a place.” Soon after, Beiermann started helping

  • available floor space in their room. Pacific Lutheran University has a significant number of loft kits available for check out.  These are accessed on a first come first serve basis. Please see your RA to request a loft kit if you are interested.Types of Beds on CampusPLU has two types of beds, tool free and tooled.  Each bed type has a slight difference in height adjustment options as well as what is required to assemble or change the height of the bed.  Residence hall front desks have a limited supply

  • conditions of award. Process: All investigators, including faculty, staff, and students, who are engaged in the design, conduct, and/or reporting of those funded activities should complete the following three steps: Complete web based training every four years Review PLU’s policy Disclose Significant Financial Interests annually or within 30 days of a change in interests Required Public Disclosures: None to report.

  • Spanish. After PLU I did Peace Corps service in Panama, taught Spanish in Tacoma and then decided it was time for a change. My research here is focused on Colombian immigrants in northern Chile where I just spent December and January doing field work for my thesis.