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.

Making Changes in Her Home City: Jordan Bellamy ’20 in D.C.

Jordan spent the summer of 2017 as one of the Braden Joplin Memorial Interns working for the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and the Office of Congressional and Intergovernmental Relations (C.I.R.).

Becoming Experts in their Fields: Undergrads Exhibit Research Prowess at Spark 2.0

Funded by the Undergraduate Research Council, Kayla Kroning ’18 brought her chemistry research to center stage at a recent American Chemical Society conference in San Francisco. “The fact that this person has a Ph.D. and has been doing… Read More

Awakening Stories: Wake, Sleeper by Bryan Parys ’04

A teen quietly hoping to miss church and sleep in. A Gordon student wandering in the woods in search of God’s presence. And now, a published author. Bryan Parys ’04’s new spiritual memoir, Wake, Sleeper (Cascade Books, 2015),… Read More

On the Nature of the Atonement

Eleonore Stump, who is the Robert J. Henle Professor of Philosophy at Saint Louis University, will speak at Gordon on Thursday, November 13, at 4 p.m. in the Ken Olsen Science Center (DEC Loggia and Chairman’s Room). The lecture,… Read More