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  • Calendar Highlights – ResoLute: Spring 2018 Search Features Features Welcome What it Means to be First Faculty Proudly Wear First-Gen Experience Heritage Speakers Embrace Firsts Together Veteran. First-gen. Trans. Academic. First in the Family Community How First-Gens Thrive Pave the Way On Campus Discovery Discovery Attaway Lutes Accolades Lute Library Blogs Alumni News Alumni News The Prologue The PLU Connection Homecoming 2018 Bjug Day Inside Amazon Alumni Travel Seminar Class Notes Class

  • International Student Health InsurancePacific Lutheran University (PLU) requires all international students to maintain medical insurance that provides coverage in the United States and meets certain minimum benefit requirements.  To ensure this, PLU will automatically enroll all international students registering for classes in PLU’s International Student Accident and Sickness Plan (Student Insurance Plan).  The insurance premium will automatically be added to your university bill at the time

  • Hazard Communication Code (WAC 296-800-170) was developed to make sure employees are informed of chemical hazards in the workplace. PLU has a written hazard communication program. The program requires that material safety data sheets and/or safety data sheets (MSDS/SDS) be on site, that a list of all hazardous products be maintained by the users, that chemical containers are labeled, and that employees receive training for chemical hazards.ContactsEnvironmental Health and Safety safety@plu.eduQuick

  • Being an Active Bystander Active Bystanders are folks who intervene to decrease the chance that a bad situation will happen or get worse. PLU needs all of us to become active bystanders who jump in and uplift the campus’ culture of care, because it’s on Lutes to create communities where people feel safe and respected. If you want to be an active bystander, follow these steps: Identify the Problem: The first step to being an effective active bystander is to understand the situation. Issues of

  • Resources: Wang Center Symposium 2024The Matter of Loneliness: Building Connections for Collective Well-BeingAcademic ResearchIsolation/Loneliness Cacioppo, John T., & Patrick, William. (2008). Loneliness: Human nature and the need for social connection (1st. ed). Norton. (PLU Library link) Hargittai, Eszter. (2022). Connected in isolation: Digital privilege in unsettled times. The MIT Press. (PLU Library link) Seefeldt, Kristin S. (2017). Abandoned families: Social isolation in the twenty

  • wanted to be as transparent as possible about the changes that were made and why we made these changes. Overall, the changes to the site reflect the guiding principles outlined by MarComm, but we also had to consider what aspects and pages of the site are used and viewed the most. All this being said, we also expect that the changes we made will cause some issues whenever some people need to access a certain research resources or a library service. With this in mind, here is a rundown of the biggest

  • diversified cross section of potential return, risk, investment required, and timeline to implementation. While some will require considerable development and investment, and a few include entirely new components, their implementation will produce enhanced long-term net revenue and/or savings based on our existing resources, expertise, and institutional strategic direction. Ad hoc working groups will research and develop actionable plans in the Spring semester for the following alphabetized categories of

  • count the day off from a compressed work week, such as a 4/10 work week. How do I sign up for benefits with the Commute Smart program? Receiving Commute Smart benefits is fast and easy! To participate in campaign drawings and potentially earn LuteBucks, simply track your commute trips on a monthly calendar online at the Pierce Trips website. Please note that these benefits are for faculty and staff only; not students. For detailed information on PLU’s transit benefits, click here. To request

  • : If it’s not necessary, don’t travel with it. If you must take it, consider taking a loaner device that does not have unnecessary data already stored on it. Check and see if your mobile devices such as cell phones will work in the location your will be traveling to. You may need to make prior arrangements with your mobile carrier to maintain service while away. Back up any information on the device and remove and store any information that is not necessary to bring with you. If any sensitive data

  • a student who needed and benefitted from preceptors.  Participate in that tradition and legacy. Contribute to the next nurse practitioners to improve the access to and the quality of health care in our region. Then, through improved access and quality of care, we improve the health of the people in our community. Giving is also a chance to receive; teaching is also an opportunity to learn. Precepting keeps the nurse practitioner inspired, stimulated, rewarded, and invigorated to stay up to date