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  • : Mental Health Assessment & Intervention (4)SOCW 573: Policy Practice & Advocacy in Health Care (4) SOCW 585: Advanced Practicum Experience II (4)SOCW 595: Advance Practicum Experience III (4)SOCW 565: SUD Assessment & Intervention (4) SOCW 500+: Elective (4) Practicum ExperienceThe practicum experience is the signature pedagogy in social work education. At the Master’s level, students are required by CSWE to complete at least 900 hours of practicum work. Students have opportunities to practice their

  • in any 60-minute period and those employees who work in food service and environmental services positions are most affected. 5.2 Policy PLU will protect the health of its employees by recognizing the risks of temperature related injuries and illnesses and controlling those risks through a combination of employee education, administrative, engineering, and protective equipment controls. The use of these controls will vary based on the work environment and needs of the employees. 5.3

  • people about it, they are often surprised. Maybe it isn’t so surprising given what we learned at PLU — the values of a liberal arts education: going to small classes, and knowing our professors. We also learned a lot playing basketball on a team that traveled long hours on buses, playing in a cracker box gym, receiving five dollars for meal money each day, warming up before games to gospel music played on an old pipe organ. These experiences teach you something no class really can: teamwork

  • interest, I am struck by the general lack of concern for animals in universities. It seems to me that nonhuman animals have not fared well in American higher education. Photo taken during a J-term course in Uruguay in 2014 by Mariann Funkhouser (‘16) When I refer to academic animals, I am not referring directly to animal experimentation in universities, though this is a related issue. Rather, I refer to the ways academics are likely to conceptualize nonhuman animals—the animals we construct, the animal

  • individual sponsor — a member of the faculty or administrative staff; a department or program connection — signature of chair required; unit endorsement — signature of dean required. Offers should be coordinated by the Wang Center for Global and Community Engaged Education (where international visiting scholars’ arrangements currently are coordinated). Obligations of the Host: The initiating trio is responsible for hosting the visitor (international visitors in particular may need assistance with housing

  • their highly corrosive properties. These, and other ambitious and large-scale engineering projects, require contributions from multidisciplinary teams to overcome complex technical challenges. Today’s young chemists have the opportunity to provide innovative solutions in fundamental science, optimization, and scale up of next generation alternative energy technologies. I will discuss some recent projects and challenges in alternative energy generation, emphasizing the contribution of chemists and

  • lengths. 3:50 pm - Keynote Speaker (Morken Center for Learning and Technology 103 and Virtually)Call Me, Beep Me: My Transition from Studying Biochemistry to Radiochemistry Tran Hoang (PLU ‘20), Weill Cornell Graduate School of Medical Sciences Before starting her graduate studies at Weill Cornell Pharmacology, Tran found herself sitting in Rieke Science Center, looking at the course requirements for a Chemistry degree during her first year at PLU, overwhelmed and unsure of what this major held for

  • Welcome to the PLU Interactive Equivalency Guide. With this tool you can explore how classes from other colleges and universities transfer to PLU. Whether you’re thinking about applying to PLU or you’re a current student, this guide can help you plan for meeting General Education elements and specific major or minor requirements. We’re frequently adding new schools and classes, so be sure to check back if what you’re looking for is not here. It doesn’t mean a particular class can’t be

  • have before. As for herself, Cory says the trip left her with a sense of gratitude—for water, of course, but also for the education, sense of mission and opportunities she receives at PLU. Just turning on the tap and seeing drinkable water come out is a gift. She also has a renewed determination to make a difference in the world once she graduates. “I will never say I’m a poor college student again,” she laughs. Sure, the water crisis can seem overwhelming, and so can challenging and changing

  • closer look at the contemporary effects of colonialism in Puerto Rico and how the United States has continued to perpetuate those effects, specifically in the areas of language, culture, education, migration, economics, and politics. Through an anthropological, economic, and linguistic lens, it is clear that after a century of U.S. colonial rule Puerto Rico has become a nation that obsesses over monolingualism, rejects the United States and English, has unequal educational opportunities, demonstrates