General Information
Academic Program
Pacific Lutheran University uses a 4-1-4 calendar which consists of
two 15-week semesters bridged by a four-week January term.
Course credit is computed by hours. The majority of courses are offered for 4 hours. Each undergraduate degree candidate is expected to complete 128 hours with an overall grade point average of 2.00. Departments or schools may set higher grade point requirements.
Degree requirements are specifically stated in this catalog. Each student should become familiar with these requirements and prepare to meet them.
Accreditation
Pacific Lutheran University is fully accredited by the Northwest Association
of Schools and Colleges as a four-year institution of higher education.
In addition the following programs hold specialized accreditations and approvals:
Business - AACSB International - The Association
to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business
Chemistry and Biochemistry - American Chemical Society
Computer Science (BS) - Computing Sciences Accreditation Board,
Inc.
Education - National Council for the Accreditation of Teacher
Education
Marriage and Family Therapy - Commission on Accreditation for
Marriage and Family Therapy Education of the American Association for
Marriage and Family Therapy
Music - National Association of Schools of Music
Nursing - National League for Nursing
Social Work - Council on Social Work Education
Any current or prospective student may, upon request directed to the president's office, review a copy of the documents pertaining to the university's various accreditations and approvals.
Enrollment
3,050 full-time students; 376 part-time students
Environs
Located in suburban Parkland, PLU has a picturesque 126-acre campus.
The university's geographical setting affords students a wide variety
of both recreational and cultural entertainment options. Recreationally,
the grandeur of the Pacific Northwest encourages participation in hiking,
camping, climbing, skiing, boating, and swimming.
The most conspicuous natural monument in the area is Mt. Rainier. In addition to Mt. Rainier, the distinctive realms of the Cascade and Olympic mountain ranges and forests of Douglas Fir complete one of the most naturally tranquil environments in the United States.
Students can also enjoy the aesthetic offerings of nearby Seattle and Tacoma. These city centers host a variety of performing and recording arts and provide dozens of galleries and museums as well as unique shopping and dining experiences.
Faculty
227 full-time faculty*; 101 part-time faculty
*per American Association of University Professors definition.
History
Pacific Lutheran University was founded in 1890 by a group of mostly
Norwegian Lutherans from the Puget Sound area. They were led by the
Reverend Bjug Harstad, who became PLU's first president. In naming the
university, these pioneers recognized the important role that a Lutheran
educational institution on the Western frontier of America could play
in the emerging future of the region. They wanted the institution to
help immigrants adjust to their new land and find jobs, but they also
wanted it to produce graduates who would serve church and community.
Educationand educating for servicewas a venerated part of
the Scandinavian traditions from which these pioneers came.
Although founded as a university, the institution functioned primarily as an academy until 1918, when it closed for two years. It reopened as the two-year Pacific Lutheran College, after merging with Columbia College, previously located in Everett. Further consolidations occurred when Spokane College merged with PLC in 1929. Four-year baccalaureate degrees were first offered in education in 1939 and in the liberal arts in 1942. The institution was reorganized as a university in 1960, reclaiming its original name. It presently includes a College of Arts and Sciences; professional schools of the Arts, Business, Education, Nursing, and Physical Education; and both graduate and continuing education programs.
PLU has been closely and productively affiliated with the Lutheran church throughout its history. It is now a university of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA), owned by the more than six hundred congregations of Region 1 of the ELCA.
Many influences and individuals have combined to shape PLU and its regional, national, and increasingly international reputation for teaching, service, and scholarship. A dedicated faculty has been an extremely important factor. The school has enjoyed a strong musical tradition from the beginning, as well as noteworthy alumni achievements in public school teaching and administration, university teaching and scholarship, the pastoral ministry, the health sciences and healing arts, and business. At PLU the liberal arts and professional education are closely integrated and collaborative in their educational philosophies, activities, and aspirations.
Late-Afternoon, Evening, and Saturday Classes
To provide for the professional growth and cultural enrichment of persons
unable to take a traditional college course schedule, the university
conducts late-afternoon, evening, and Saturday classes. In addition
to a wide variety of offerings in the arts and sciences, there are specialized
and graduate courses for teachers, administrators, and persons in business
and industry.
Retention of First-year Students
The retention of students entering as first-year students has been monitored
since 1972. The data for the past fifteen years is presented in the
following table:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Writing Through the Curriculum
Pacific Lutheran University is a community of scholars, a community
of readers and writers. Reading informs the intellect and liberates
the imagination. Writing pervades our academic lives as teachers and
students, both as a way of communicating what we learn and as a means
of shaping thoughts and ideas.
All faculty members share the responsibility for improving the literacy of their students. Faculty in every department and school make writing an essential part of their courses and show students how to ask questions appropriate to the kinds of reading done in their fields. Students write both formal papers and reports and informal notes and essays in order to master the content and methods of the various disciplines. They are encouraged to prepare important papers in multiple drafts.