In brief, what’s happening at Penn—whether it’s across campus or around the world.
Filter Stories
Displaying 1241 - 1250 of 2501
The facts on the increase in illegal immigration
FactCheck.org looks at the immigration statistics and facts behind the recent increase in illegal immigration at the southern border, and notably an increase in children traveling alone.
Junior Hakiem Ellison receives Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Award
Hakiem Ellison, a political science major minoring in urban education, has received a 2021 Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Community Involvement Recognition Award for his community service in West Philadelphia, where he grew up.
Martha J. Farah recognized by the Society of Experimental Psychologists
The Walter H. Annenberg Professor in the Natural Sciences in the Department of Psychology was awarded the Howard Crosby Warren Medal for her foundational cognitive neuroscientific work on face and object recognition, visual attention, mental imagery, and semantic memory and recent work investigating the influence of early life experience on neurocognitive development.
The Quattrone Center launches website to help prosecutors set up conviction review units
The Quattrone Center for the Fair Administration of Justice has launched a new website, www.convictionreview.net, to help prosecutors in conviction review units, as well as innocence organization lawyers, navigate the issues involved in investigating and resolving wrongful convictions. The site provides materials and templates, a wide variety of information regarding best practices, and guidance for working with victims and surviving victims’ families.
Sharon Y. Irving, associate professor of pediatric nursing and vice-chair of Penn Nursing’s Department of Family and Community Health, has been named a 2021 Fellow of the American Society for Parenteral and Enteral Nutrition (ASPEN). ASPEN Fellows are outstanding leaders in nutrition support, consistently contributing in education, practice, research and service to the field. A Fellow of ASPEN designation is the highest honor available to members.
Allyson Mackey receives NSF Award to study early science learning
The assistant Professor of Psychology, has received a National Science Foundation (NSF) CAREER award for her work combining approaches in neuroscience, psychology, and education to predict and improve science learning in early elementary school students.
Staff dedication is key to patient satisfaction with substance use treatment facilities
Researchers at the Perelman School of Medicine used machine learning-aided analysis to uncover top positive and negative themes in patient Yelp reviews of substance use treatment facilities. The researchers found that professionalism and staff dedication to patients were two of the top qualities that could be attributed to either a negative or positive review of the facility.
In a new study from the School of Nursing’s Center for Health Outcomes and Policy Research, researchers evaluated the association between the nurse work environment and readmission and length of stay for close to 200,000 hospitalized adult ischemic stroke patients in more than 500 hospitals. They found that in hospitals with better nurse work environments, ischemic stroke patients experienced lower odds of 7‐ and 30‐day readmissions and lower lengths of stay.
Diversity in the Stacks: Bollywood and Hindi-language cinema
Penn Libraries’ collections of Hindi films feature a range of popular and historically significant cinema that chronicles the growth of film culture in India, particularly the output of Bombay. It includes physical media, most of which are DVDs, as well as a growing collection of streaming video that includes films assigned in or used in courses at Penn.
The 33rd Annual Sadie T.M. Alexander Commemorative Conference
The Penn chapter of the Black Law Students Association’s annual Sadie T.M. Alexander Commemorative Conference, “Hidden Truths: Addressing a 13th Amendment Ambiguity that Created America’s Carceral State” brought together scholars and leading experts in the fields of law, sociology, and civil rights. Topics included roots of mass incarceration and the prison abolition movement, as well as viable alternatives and legal interventions that can rectify societal harms caused by systemic racism and imprisonment.