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Deloitte Challenges Students to Play a Role in Transforming the Future of the Audit and Assurance Profession
Twelve teams of students from around the country participated in the annual National Audit Innovation Campus Challenge
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NEW YORK, April 20, 2021 /PRNewswire/ Deloitte and the Deloitte Foundation hosted the National Audit Innovation Campus Challenge (NAICC) for the sixth year, awarding students of Loyola University Chicago first place for their winning idea.
Hosted by Deloitte s Audit Innovation group and the Deloitte Foundation, the NAICC is a nationwide program, which accelerates innovation in education by helping institutions of higher learning keep pace with the rapidly changing marketplace and evolving technologies impacting the audit and assurance profession. The program engages students and faculty from campuses across the country, providing an educational experience designed to help students develop skills f
Student Government Calls for Switch to In-House Dining
Isabella Grosso | The PhoenixLoyola s student government is advocating for a switch from Aramark, the company that handles food service on Loyola s campuses, to in-house dining.
Published April 14, 2021 7:11 a.m. CT
Aramark Loyola’s food provider and a multi-billion-dollar corporation has had numerous racism allegations, food sanitation issues and questions about their involvement in the prison system through the years. For all these reasons, the Student Government of Loyola Chicago (SGLC) has called on Loyola to pull from this massive corporation and move to a private in-house dining system, according to student government leaders.
Updated 12/13/2020 8:22 AM
A mentorship program initially targeting youth in the Elgin community has shifted its focus toward helping African American boys develop leadership skills.
Brothers Rise Up now provides mentoring and support to 130 Black male students in third through ninth grades across 17 Elgin Area School District U-46 schools. The program focuses on monitoring and improving students academic performance, attendance and behavior and offers a curriculum emphasizing character development, social skills, leadership and career development.
The goal is to help Black male students achieve their goals, improve their future prospects and provide a forum where they can share their struggles, said Jim Cook, a dean s assistant at Kenyon Woods Middle School who founded the program in 2019 as part of the nonprofit Midwest Sports Academy.