Heading off campus later in the evening?
A four-year starter on the Concordia women’s hockey team and a member of the Cobber track team, Chelsey Petrich '17, Elk River, Minn., lives a life busier than most college students. The pre-med biology major has found time to focus on her studies while also being involved in many on-campus and off-campus activities.
Steve Rohr ’92 didn’t expect to be a red carpet regular, but the Oscars publicist says his training in forensics and student leadership positions helped him get there.
Jenna Collins ’16 applied both of her majors, heritage and museum studies and history, toward an internship at the Smithsonian in Washington, D.C.
The annual Careers Connecting Cobbers event encourages participants to share their experiences, build personal connections, hear about career options and cultivate their professional networks.
Becoming responsibly engaged in the world (BREW) is a value that Concordia students learn to apply in various ways during their time at college.
While we can’t fully illustrate every reason why being a Cobber is so special, these are a few of the college’s time-honored traditions that stand out as hallmarks of the Concordia experience.
As a transfer student, Quinn Anderson ’16 was only on campus for two years. But Anderson made the most of his abbreviated time at Concordia by singing in the choir, competing as a student-athlete, and working as a student ambassador.
From a very early age we are told to avoid at least two topics during any dinner table conversation: politics and religion.
From the beginning, Concordia has been a place for immigrants, refugees and people from all walks of life to come together in common cause for the pursuit of knowledge and the betterment of self and community.