Having accessible digital materials, from presentation slides to PDFs, is essential for ensuring all students can fully engage with course content. This workshop equips faculty with practical strategies for designing materials that meet accessibility needs and support diverse learning needs. Participants will learn how to identify and create accessible documents, presentations, and other multimedia content. They will also explore how to use tools like headings, alt text, and captions to enhance accessibility.
Upcoming Events
Employees
Join a 45-minute online training about Pacific’s shared governance system and basic Robert’s Rules parliamentarian procedures. This training is offered to any employee, specifically to members of university standing committees. Select from two training options.
Terran Last Gun, a visual artist and enrolled citizen of the Piikani (Blackfeet) of Montana, creates work that is both ancient and contemporary. He uses color and form as the building blocks of his art, which connects him to his Piikani heritage.
Join staff from the Student Counseling Center and be trained in Question, Persuade, Refer (QPR), a national recognized suicide prevention training. This empirically-validated training will equip you to recognize the warning signs, clues, and suicidal communication of people at risk as well as gain the skills to act and help save a life.
University Council meetings are open to all Pacific community members. The agenda can be viewed one week before the meeting.
Terran Last Gun, a visual artist and enrolled citizen of the Piikani (Blackfeet) of Montana, creates work that is both ancient and contemporary. He uses color and form as the building blocks of his art, which connects him to his Piikani heritage.
Visit the Oregon coast with Outdoor Pursuits
Join the Indigenous Student Alliance for a Fry Bread Social in Boxer Gardens. Meet other students, eat a traditional meal passed on to many people and cultures since the mid 1800s.
Terran Last Gun, a visual artist and enrolled citizen of the Piikani (Blackfeet) of Montana, creates work that is both ancient and contemporary. He uses color and form as the building blocks of his art, which connects him to his Piikani heritage.
Feeling overwhelmed? Emotions feeling intense and taking over? The Crash Out to Coping Workshop is here to help you build emotional resilience and navigate the ups and downs of college life. Presented by Dr. Amanda Guerrero from the Student Counseling Center, this workshop is based on skills from Dialectical Behavioral Therapy (DBT), which helps people create a "life worth living".