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Posts Tagged "research"

Posted on April 5, 2019

Sabbatical Sojourns: Chemistry with Michael Paul

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Posted on April 3, 2019

Sabbatical Sojourns: Theatre Arts with Jeff Miller

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Posted on April 3, 2019

Sabbatical Sojourns: Philosophy with Ian DeWeese-Boyd

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Posted on April 2, 2019

Sabbatical Sojourns: History with David Wick

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Posted on March 8, 2019

Gordon’s Not-so-secret Agent of Shalom

“With the power of communication, you truly can change the world.” The Bell sat down with Communication Arts Department Chair Dr. Christine Gardner to learn what she loves about her field and get to know her better as an influencer at Gordon College.

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Posted on December 12, 2018

From ‘Me’ to ‘We’: Reclaiming a Reciprocal Gospel

In her new book published by InterVarsity Press last month, Dr. Sharon Ketcham addresses the root of why rising generations are leaving the American evangelical Church.

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Posted on December 10, 2018

Melkonian-Hoover Addresses Immigration Conversation Among Evangelicals in New Book

Ruth Melkonian-Hoover (political science) hopes to shed light on immigration reform from a perspective of faith in her new book, 'Evangelicals and Immigration: Fault Lines Among the Faithful.'

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Posted on December 3, 2018

From the World’s Deadliest Earthquake to the World’s Deadliest Cancer

Orlane Destin ’21 says that growing cancer cells for research is like taking care of a baby.

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Posted on October 18, 2018

The Theory of Thriving

Having been awarded a Shared Justice Student-Faculty Research Prize, Paul Brink (political science) and Jordan Bellamy ’20 investigated the effects of the increasing housing prices on the North Shore of Massachusetts, specifically in the city of Lynn.

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Posted on October 9, 2018

An Experiment in Multilayered Mentorship

Dr. Evangeline “Angie” Cornwell (biology), Courtney Olbrich ’18 and Dr. Lisa Spencer ’95 investigate the function of a certain type of white blood cell in the rise of allergies, specifically food allergies.

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Posted on September 30, 2018

Templeton-funded Study Reflects Favorably on Gordon Presidential Fellows

This spring marked the conclusion of a three-year study on the Gordon Presidential Fellows program and its impact on increasing the sense of purpose in college students.

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Posted on September 25, 2018

The Art of Seeing the Subtext

Over the course of three years, Kaye Cook (psychology) and Si-Hua Chang ’16 created ways to code qualitative research on topics ranging from how the Church has changed to whether women should be ordained to national laws that potentially undermine church practice.

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