Tuesday, October 27, 2015

Free Chipotle offered in Mabee on Mondays

Every Monday at noon in Mabee Library, the Chipotle Ethics workshop provides engaging discussion on ethics, morals and leadership; and free Chipotle. 

The Center for Student Success offers workshops to provide students with the opportunities to learn and improve on skills necessary to succeed. One set of these, started by James Barraclough, director of student success, offers more than tips. 

The Center for Student Success is responsible for Academic Advising, Academic Testing, the First Year Experience, the Tutoring and Writing Center, the “Think 30 to finish in four” campaign, and a variety of success workshops. All are aimed at providing students with tools to make the most of their time at Washburn.  

The workshop, titled “Chipotle Ethics,” is a weekly meeting that entices students with free chipotle. The topics covered in the seminars range from skills to be successful, to ethical and moral dilemmas faced in everyday life. The workshop is led by Dr. David Carter and discusses issues and topics that relate to young leaders at the university level. 

Chipotle Ethics is only open to 20 students per session, so plan accordingly. You can see the complete Center for Student Success schedule here and the Chipotle Ethics sign-up page here.

16 comments:

  1. Great story! The one correction I would make is in your headline. It is more of a title, it needs a verb.

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  2. Maybe for the headline "Chipotle serves free food to WU students" or something. Like Kara pointed out, it needs a verb.

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  3. I wonder if this will continue if Washburn finds out about this since technically Washburn isn't allowed to have other food on campus that's not Chartwells. This is a good story though! I would give credentials to Dr. David Carter and elaborate on who he is.

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    1. That is a really interesting thought, I never thought about that!

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  4. Everyone has said there needs to be an active verb in the headline and I agree with that. If you include something about offering "free food" to college students in your headline then you'll be golden. The article was concise otherwise, good work.

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  5. I agree that you need a different headline, maybe Chipotle is giving free food away at Mabee. Or something like that. Good job though.

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  6. Great job! Other than the change to the headline with adding a verb, there are no other grammatical errors that I found.

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  7. I would change the headline to something like, "Mabee gives away free Chiptole." Overall the article was well-written and reader-friendly! Well done!

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  8. I like your headline, it's easy to catch attention form audiences

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  9. Sounds cool. Might need to check it out.

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  10. I like the change to this headline because it immediately grabs attention and lets the reader know what you're going to be talking about and encourages them to read more.

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  11. Nice story. Really couldn't find too many errors.

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  12. I will hop on the bandwagon and say change headline. Good story over all though.

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  13. The headline is great! Anything that has "free" in it will get reader's attention. Great job editing!

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  14. I really wish I would be able to attend this at least one time, but my schedule doesn't allow it. Good job!

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  15. Great job! This phrase, "and leadership; and free Chipotle.", how about a hyphen instead of a semi-colon?

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