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Courses PSYC 101 : Introduction to Psychology - ES An introduction to the scientific study of behavior and mental processes. Topics include learning, memory, perception, thinking, development, emotion, personality, mental illness, and social behavior. (4) PSYC 242 : Advanced Statistics and Research Design A continuation of Statistics 232 and accompanying lab taught by members of the psychology department. Topics include single- and multi-factor experimental designs and analyses of variance
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Ducusin, Class of 2024, Major: Social Work and double minors in NonProfit Leadership and Art 5:00-7:00pm – Dinner Break 7:00-8:30pm – “Love without Limits: Radical Love in a Time of Polarization,`` Chris Knutzen, AUCThe David and Marilyn Knutson Lecture, Dr. Jacqueline Bussie Reception and Book Signing to Follow
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gowns make their grand entrance as Pharrell Williams’ song “Happy” fills PLU’s Scandinavian Center. “Let’s get that applause going,” says a smiling Jonathan Jackson ’12, as he starts clapping for the Class of 2019 Palmer Scholars. Jackson, a member of the PLU Alumni Board and a current MBA student at PLU, is executive director of Palmer Scholars. The organization was founded in 1983 by Tacoma businessman R. Merle Palmer to help low-income students of color in Pierce County achieve their dreams of a
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Clubs & Honor Societies Meeting Times & Places (Subject to Change): When: Monthly Where: Mary Baker Russell Building Room 334 or 306 (Follow our Instagram for detailed info) Club Email: acda@plu.eduChemistry ClubDescription: PLU Chem Club (ACS Student Affiliate) is a student organization committed to providing fun and informative experiences that highlight the role chemistry plays in our everyday lives. Our club holds events encompassing career planning, volunteering, and social events. All PLU
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Obituaries – Resolute Online: Winter 2018 Search Features Features Welcome Multiculturalism in Norway Greater Tacoma Peace Prize Lutes Broker Peace Våre Røtter: Our Roots The Mooring Mast to The Evening Post Around the World in 17 Years On Campus Discovery Discovery Attaway Lutes Accolades Lute Library Blogs Alumni News Homecoming 2017 Alumni Survey Upcoming Events Regent Spotlight Re•forming Legacy Lutes Alumni Profiles Class Notes Class Notes Obituaries Submit a Class Note Calendar Calendar
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: Personal Inquiry and Global Investigations - H3, GE Students will wrestle with complex contemporary social problems, evaluate multiple responses to those problems, and develop and articulate their own positions and commitments. Class themes vary, but every section includes cross-cultural and interdisciplinary analysis and a final culminating project. May be taken after or with the fourth and final 200-level IHON course. Instructor permission required. (4) IHON 491 : Independent Study To provide
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it’s amazing how Lute love spreads all over! 🙂 Jialing WangHong Kong Business Administration, 2016 I really enjoyed the time when I was studying at PLU. All my professors were knowledgeable, patient, and friendly. They taught me a lot which were very helpful in my future career. I chose PLU because I like the small size of class and admire the high teaching quality. Also, PLU offered me great scholarship which made me [feel] I was valuable in somehow. I was very happy to be one of the members at
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studied abroad in Oxford, England, and Oslo, Norway. We recently met with Paez to learn more about his PLU experience. What drew you to PLU? I attended Keithley Middle School and Washington High School in Parkland, Washington. Many of my school events were hosted at PLU. I wanted the small class sizes and the study-away opportunities. You started at PLU with an interest in pure math. Tell me about your math major. I like that mathematics is about discovery. You have this set of premises, and find out
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stores and spoke to people, but mostly hurried along not knowing what Alger meant. “In class we talked about things sort of theoretically,” said Kathy Keys, ’11, a social work major, from Anchorage, Alaska. “Classroom experiences are important, but I think service components outside of the class are also very important. I think life experience is the greatest way to learn something.” For the Tacoma Community Center, students surveyed the area for services or opportunities that may help the homeless
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wanted to impact people’s lives in a positive way, but I also didn’t want to major in biology or chemistry, so I entered my freshman year as a computer science major,” he says. It was a choice that would radically change his chosen path.In his first computer science class at PLU, Gavidia learned how quickly software can scale and impact people around the world. “Just one person, or a small group of people, can accomplish so much,” Gavidia says. That moment was key for him: he realized he didn’t have
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