Page 67 • (3,807 results in 0.025 seconds)

  • Ash Bechtel ’24 combines science and social work for holistic view of patient care; aims to serve Hispanic community Ash Bechtel has always wanted to be in healthcare, but she wasn’t sure which direction to take — nursing or medical school. So, Ash counseled with family and academic advisors before deciding to pursue a biology major that would lead her to becoming a doctor.… June 13, 2024 AcademicsBiologyGender Sexuality and Race StudiesGlobal EducationPre-HealthSciencesStudent LifeStudy Away

  • Business BRITTANY RUSSELL (2015) Senior Content Marketing Manager, Amazon.com Major: English, Literature Concentration Minor: Communication How did your English major establish a foundation for your career path? My career path has spanned public relations, book publicity, and now content marketing. Writing, storytelling, and critical thinking are skills that I learned through my English major, and they’ve been essential in every stage of my career. What do you love about your job? My work as a

  • Education Our on-campus courses and programs, from general education to majors and minors, support all students in navigating global society. Chinese & Chinese StudiesView WebsiteEnvironmental StudiesView WebsiteFrench & Francophone StudiesView WebsiteGen Ed CurriculumView WebsiteGender, Sexuality & Race StudiesView WebsiteGlobal & Cultural StudiesView WebsiteGlobal StudiesView WebsiteHispanic & Latino StudiesView WebsiteHolocaust & Genocide StudiesView WebsiteInterdisciplinary ProgramsView

  • : Graduate Financial Aid: Graduate Satisfactory Progress Financial Aid: Loans Financial Aid: Satisfactory Academic Progress Financial Aid: Scholarships and Grants Financial Aid: Student Employment Financial Aid: Undergraduate Financial Aid: Verification of FAFSA Financial Aid: Veterans Affairs and Vocational Rehabilitation Financial Privacy Policy First Academic Dismissal First Year Experience Program Fitness & Wellness Fitness & Wellness Courses: 8-Hour Rule French Gender, Sexuality, and Race Studies

  • reflect the diversity of ethnicity, race, class, and sexual orientation in the culture being taught.  In the classroom, we can use our current materials as examples to teach our students about sexism. This will encourage students to maintain a critical perspective on classroom materials in other classes as well. We can devise interim strategies until more permanent solutions are found. When non-sexist materials are unavailable, we must adopt existing materials by using critical supplements, role

  • obscured nation-building agendas, and why opposition to asylum seekers from Central America today may not be so anomalous to our immigration history.Dr. Mae NgaiSpeaker: Mae Ngai is Lung Family Professor of Asian American Studies and Professor of History at Columbia University, whose research and teaching focuses on the histories of migration, citizenship, race and ethnicity. She is author of the award-winning Impossible Subjects: Illegal Aliens and the Making of Modern America (2004), and The Lucky

  • present through word and image: What’s significant about Butler’s decision to recreate the history of slavery as a loop? How does translating that text-based story into the comics form work to explore that looping history of violence in our current place in time? That is, why comics, why now? How might this version of this narrative open conversations about how inequities (race, class, gender, sexuality et al) are constructed and maintained today – and how these might be dismantled and more equitable

  • New Delete Philosophy Academic Programs all programs program website Philosophy Undergraduate Major & Minor College of Liberal Studies Bachelor of Arts Video Transcription Philosophy Major Minute Transcription [video: Prof. Sergia Hay sits in her office, posters on the wall behind her and shelves of books next to her.] Prof. Sergia Hay, Associate Professor of Philosophy: Hi, I’m Sergia Hay, Associate Professor of Philosophy. This is my Major Minute. [video: Over the video of Prof. Hay, the header

  • Meet Dr. Marnie Ritchie, Assistant Professor of Communication! Posted by: Todd / January 10, 2020 January 10, 2020 Meet the Communications department’s most recent faculty member, Dr. Marnie Ritchie. Dr. Ritchie joined PLU in 2018 and has taught a variety of communications classes since then, from introductory communications to courses covering complex topics like gender and ethics. Dr. Ritchie’s other interests for her own research and writing include rhetorical studies, war, and surveillance

  • -first century. Russell Sage Foundation. (PLU Library link) Stauffer, Jill. (2015). Ethical loneliness: The injustice of not being heard. Columbia University Press. (PLU Library link) Political/partisan divide Abramowitz, Alan. (2018). The great alignment: Race, party transformation, and the rise of Donald Trump. Yale University Press. (PLU Library link) Whippman, Ruth. (2016). America the anxious: How our pursuit of happiness is creating a nation of nervous wrecks (First U.S. edition). St. Martin’s