Katrine Melika discusses impacts of Egyptian, Kenyan cultures
One day, 6-year-old Katrine Melika wondered why her classmates couldn’t understand the Arabic word she used.
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One day, 6-year-old Katrine Melika wondered why her classmates couldn’t understand the Arabic word she used.
20 minutes from Taylor, next to a set of railroad tracks in Marion on 406 E 4th St., squats the Train Station Pancake House.
Troy and Liz Shockey embody the word “hospitality.”
On Tuesday, Oct. 18, at 6 p.m., freshman Connor Phillips died in Muncie, Indiana from complications linked to pre-existing health conditions.
It seems like the conversation we should be having right now is about the word “pause.”
We’re all familiar with the idea of learning styles –- some of us are visual learners, while others learn best when reading or writing. It’s a common idea — one review of the literature found over thirty different systems of classifying learners, each with their own lists of categories — and a comforting one. It suggests that when we don’t learn something easily all we have to do is try a different style, and that educators can better serve a wider variety of students by simply changing the format of what they’re teaching.
Vice President for Intercultural Leadership and Church Relations Greg Dyson and Professor of Global Studies Scott Moeschberger are preparing to take students on a four day bus trip through the American South. The trip will pay close attention to the work and life of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., as well as some of the defining moments from the civil rights movement.
The Taylor University Athletic Department released their annual report in accordance with the Equity in Athletics Disclosure Act.
There is an exciting buzz going around Taylor University athletics which involves certain athletes being inducted into the school’s athletic Hall of Fame. The Hall of Fame takes in the sports that Taylor has had, both past and present, there at the school in the athlete’s time.
As human beings, we have been given only five senses: touch, taste, smell, sight and hearing. And while all five are crucial, it’s sight and hearing that help us connect the most with those around us on a day-to-day basis. We see a friendly face at the Hodson Dining Commons or hear a friend’s voice chattering away while waiting for his or her coffee at the Jumping Bean. Even passing by an individual on campus we don’t recognize, a simple “hey” or smile can go a long way in terms of lifting a person’s spirits.
Basketball season is fast approaching here at Taylor University.
One of the more visible projects on campus over the past few weeks has been installing new lighting.
Student government at Taylor University houses two different student groups: Student Senate and the Office of the Student Body President.
President Lindsay has announced the plan to put in place a construction services division.
Taylor University’s 2022 Student Right-To-Know Act Reports were recently posted on the Student Consumer Information website.
Fall is stumbling into winter, and a similar despondency is visible around campus as students mulch over the midterm rut that inevitably pops up every semester. Taylor’s endless barrage of activities steam on, unaffected by the whims and moods of the general public, as it strives to change those “meh’s” into “YEAH!’s.”
From the outside, being in the film department might sound like a lot of fun — and while that might be true, many students outside the major might not realize the time and effort film students put into their projects.
Jacob Harbron | Student Contributor
Taylor University is required to provide equal access to education for students with disabilities through accommodations according to the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990. Disability is a broad term that covers mobile-impairment and neurodevelopmental disorders (such as ADHD and dyslexia), among other things.
Walking on Taylor soil for the first time this year, many students noticed drastic visual and structural changes to the Hodson Dining Commons and Zondervan Library.