Graduate students to take part in fitness challenge
This spring, Penn graduate students will get a little help with a popular New Year’s resolution.
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This spring, Penn graduate students will get a little help with a popular New Year’s resolution.
Finding a job in academia is no easy endeavor. But when academics are married to other academics, finding the ideal job becomes significantly more difficult.
Ninety-nine percent of all first-year undergraduate students coming to Penn live on campus, but when it comes to Penn’s graduate population, that figure is less than six percent.
Ninety-nine percent of all first-year undergraduate students coming to Penn live on campus, but when it comes to Penn’s graduate population, that figure is less than six percent.
It’s just before 7 a.m. on a cold sunny morning when I arrive at Penn’s South Bank, where I am greeted by three of the puppies I had met two months ago at the Penn Vet Working Dog Center’s grand opening. Even with a quick glance, one thing is clear — Thunder, PApa Bear and Kaiserin have grown so much.
A new masters program in the Department of Medical Ethics and Health Policy at the Perelman School of Medicine will welcome its first class next fall semester.
After committing to treat her 11-year-old Staffordshire Terrier mix dog Cleopatra for lymphoma in 2009, Michele Pich spent a lot of time in the waiting room at Penn’s Ryan Veterinary Hospital.
When Hurricane Sandy swept across the East Coast last week, thousands of valuable research mice and rats at New York University’s Langone Medical Center perished as the unprecedented storm surge flooded the basement of the school’s Smilow Research Center.
While doctoral students and postdoctoral fellows obtain their advanced scientific training by conducting research, many Ph.D. graduates move on to positions outside of academia — and even outside of research.
Looking at third-year veterinary student Melissa Ogg drink her 16-ounce coffee on the way to Hill Pavilion for her first morning class, it is hard to imagine that she ever donned a business suit instead of the more informal attire she wears on Penn’s campus every day.
Students in the Master of City Planning Program at Penn’s School of Design are helping to transform the face of rail transportation in the entire Northeast Corridor.
Beginning last night with a happy hour event, the Graduate and Professional Student Assembly is encouraging students across all of Penn’s schools to come build their own Penn graduate student experience.
For the past eight years, a Perelman School of Medicine program has brought first-year Medical students outside of the classroom and into the lives of patients.
“Woof!” barked 9/11 K9 hero Kaiser Zintsmaster right as Curtis Institute of Music vocalist Andrew Bogard finished singing the first two lines of “America the Beautiful,” briefly interrupting the solemnity of the moment.
Third-generation iPads are replacing 800 pages per week of written notes per week for medical students.