Penn State offers a comprehensive selection of engineering degrees online, from bachelor’s to a doctoral program, designed to help working adults gain the skills and knowledge they need to achieve their personal and professional goals.
“Facing Forward: Portraits Looking to Our Future” will open to the public on Monday, April 3, and run until Wednesday, May 31. An opening reception will be held at 6 p.m. on Thursday, April 6.
Penn State Great Valley will host “Women's History Month: In Celebration of Her-Story!”, an alumnae panel discussion and networking event in celebration of Women's History Month on Thursday, March 30.
Fourteen Penn State instructors from eight campuses and three colleges worked with Teaching and Learning with Technology (TLT) over the past summer and fall as part of the 2022-23 TLT Faculty Engagement Awards program. Their goal was to enhance the student engagement experience using Experiential Virtual Spaces.
On March 1, the campus will screen a selection of culturally rich, adventure-packed and incredibly inspiring documentary films curated from the Mountainfilm festival in Telluride, Colorado.
Roger Brindley, vice provost for Penn State Global; Andrea Dowhower interim vice president for Student Affairs; and Renata Engel, vice provost for online education, share resources available for individuals who have been impacted by the earthquake in Syria and Turkey, as well as ways to help with the rescue and recovery.
In a continuation of its longtime partnership with Penn State, Barnes & Noble College, a Barnes & Noble Education company, which operates the Penn State Bookstore, has awarded a 2022-23 round of grants to support a range of programs and initiatives across the University.
The annual golf outing will be on on Tuesday, May 16, at the Applecross Country Club in Downingtown, and will support Penn State Great Valley student scholarships.
“Stories Bones Tell: Philly’s First Baptist Church Burial Ground Project” will explore how speaker Kimberlee Moran, director of forensic science and associate teaching professor at Rutgers University–Camden, and her colleagues at the Arch Street Project are using clues from the past to learn how some of the earliest Philadelphians lived — and died.