
Second infection in kids doubles long COVID risk

Five insights into the history of government shutdowns

Noah Royal Milad: Purpose and community

Penn receives $5M gift for new theatre

Women’s labor and political agency in Delhi

Two leadership gifts elevate Jewish Studies at Penn Arts & Sciences

Students test one way to combat extreme heat in Philadelphia

Future mRNA vaccines may prevent food and seasonal allergies
Featured Events
2025 New Acquisitions Showcase
This annual Penn Libraries showcase will display new acquisitions from the past year by Kislak Center curators and colleagues. This is a drop-in event; registration is not required. Free and open to the public.

Public Health in Crisis
Peter Marks, former director of the Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research at the FDA, will talk about the crisis in confidence in public health, how this has led to challenges with vaccine acceptance, and what can be done to address the issue. Free and open to the Penn community. Lunch will be served for in-person attendees. Register to attend.


In Principle and Practice
Penn’s strategic framework
Penn’s guiding principles are the University’s enduring values and distinctive strengths: anchored, inventive, interwoven, and engaged. The practices support and strengthen Penn’s core educational mission.
At Penn Today, we focus on some of the ways the University is putting this framework into action. From student, faculty, and staff profiles to research updates and event coverage, Penn Today highlights the latest examples of the University’s principled approach to excellence.

From framework to actions: Provost John L. Jackson Jr. talks Penn Forward

‘A moment when Penn can lead in higher education’: President J. Larry Jameson introduces Penn Forward

Keeping it local: Penn’s partnerships with Philadelphia-based vendors boost local economy, neighborhood impact

Nourish to Flourish
Penn in the News
A doctor shares the No. 1 sign you have hemophilia
Having hemophilia means that you may experience prolonged bleeding after an injury, as your blood may not clot properly, says Allyson Pishko of Penn Medicine.
Good conversations don’t require everybody to agree, neuroscience shows
Emily Falk of the Annenberg School for Communication explains how brain imaging is illuminating the patterns linked to productive, positive dialogue.
NIH to spend $50M on autism cause studies, experts say U.S. should focus on treatments
David Mandell of the Perelman School of Medicine says the best evidence regarding autism treatment is for behavioral interventions, which include encouraging certain behaviors.
This two-step plan can be ‘incredibly helpful’ for your savings, behavioral economist says
Wendy De La Rosa of the Wharton School advises savers to set aside a percentage of their income rather than a small set amount each month.