Emerson Brooking | All a-Twitter for the wrong reasons
Social media has its uses, but also its place.
Social media has its uses, but also its place.
If the world made sense, the people responsible for causing a problem would take on the responsibility for fixing it. Unfortunately, we have created a world that is too complex to easily apply the lessons of simple childhood decency.
Stephen Joel Trachtenberg's idea that undergraduate degrees could be completed in three years may save tuition, but it costs students an opportunity to learn.
Even when not the path planned Philadelphia can have a lot to offer a recent college grad.
If the world made sense, the people responsible for causing a problem would take on the responsibility for fixing it. Unfortunately, we have created a world that is too complex to easily apply the lessons of simple childhood decency.
Stephen Joel Trachtenberg's idea that undergraduate degrees could be completed in three years may save tuition, but it costs students an opportunity to learn.
Although the media credits a negative ad with Rep. Joe Sestak's recent victory in the Pennsylvania Democratic primary, this view is too simplistic.
I now present everything that I wish I had known as a freshman.
Somehow, in the most competitive place I’ve ever been, I quit planning and started enjoying myself.
Penn — or more precisely — the people I’ve met at Penn, have played a huge role in that process of discovery.
You don’t have to be a reporter to make the realizations I have during my time at Penn. Pursue your passions, whatever they are.
If there’s any lesson that I could hope to impart, it’s this: Don’t shy away from the things that you love, no matter how difficult or different they seem.
When I applied to Penn, I wrote my retirement speech for my autobiography’s page 217. Today, I rewrote that speech.
I could not have expected that the past four years would unfold as they did. And the narrative of my Penn experience has been full of surprises.
I can confidently say I’m sick of the “then” and the “now” — I’m ready for the “next.”
Penn has made me a suitable candidate to be a physician; the rest of the world has made me a well-rounded human being.
I’m certain that graduation is a time to turn uncertainty into opportunity and experiment as individuals with different paths for our lives.
I’m going to offer a little bit of advice. Take it, leave it, mock it, it doesn’t matter that much to me.
With my days at Penn numbered, I’ve become acutely aware that my time here is more like Chutes and Ladders than I’d like to admit.
From where I’m standing — not a student yet not a graduate — I have a unique view of life before and after graduation.