Inside Penn

In brief, what’s happening at Penn—whether it’s across campus or around the world.

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  • Announcing the 2023 Lauder Fellows

    Penn’s School of Nursing has named its second cohort of Fellows for the Leonard A. Lauder Community Care Nurse Practitioner Program, and the group is comprised of nursing professionals from across the country who will begin full-time studies towards becoming a primary care nurse practitioner this fall.

    FULL STORY AT Penn Nursing News

  • Roos honored by American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology

    David S. Roos, Penn’s E. Otis Kendall Professor of Biology, will receive the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 2024 Alice and C. C. Wang Award in Molecular Parasitology, in recognition of his work making seminal contributions to the field of molecular parasitology.

    FULL STORY AT Penn Arts & Sciences

  • Grid reliability in the decarbonization era

    Responding to the challenge of climate change in the United States demands new approaches to grid reliability, argue Kleinman Center and Carey Law professor Shelley Welton and her coauthors.

    FULL STORY AT Kleinman Center

  • New grant from Panda Express establishes postdoctoral fellowship in Asian American studies

    Penn’s The School of Arts & Sciences has received a grant from the Panda CommUnity Fund to support the creation of the Panda Express Postdoctoral Fellowship in Asian American Studies (ASAM) for recent Ph.D.s to pursue their own scholarship, offer new courses, support undergraduate and graduate research, collaborate with faculty, and help organize programming.

    FULL STORY AT Penn Arts & Sciences

  • What happens to a business when the founder leaves?

    Startup founders are often fired by investors who want the company to steer into a new direction, yet new research from Wharton’s Danny Kim shows that these entrepreneurs have what it takes to effect change.

    FULL STORY AT Knowledge at Wharton

  • What the COVID experience teaches about designing a new stimulus package

    Fiscal and monetary policy moves need to be coordinated for maximum impact, a new Wharton paper finds.

    FULL STORY AT Knowledge at Wharton

  • Energy justice professor Sanya Carley earns EPA funding

    The Kleinman Center’s co-faculty Director Sanya Carly and her team were awarded an EPA grant to evaluate the effects of weatherization and electrification on household energy consumption and behavior, energy poverty, and indoor air quality for urban Cincinnati.

    FULL STORY AT Kleinman Center

  • Featured Books and DVDs: Philadelphia

    A curated selection of Philadelphia-centric books and DVDs are on display on the first floor of the Van Pelt-Dietrich Library Center.

    FULL STORY AT Penn Libraries

  • How to destigmatize repulsive products

    Wharton’s Samir Nurmohamed explains “dirty creativity,” a phrase he and his co-author coined to describe how entrepreneurs pitch unusual products that consumers may find objectionable.

    FULL STORY AT Knowledge at Wharton

  • Scaling up atomic innovation at the NSF’s Center for the Mechanical Control of Chemistry

    Demystifying mechanochemistry, the crushing of chemicals to produce reactions and substances, is the central goal of the National Science Foundation’s (NSF) Center for the Mechanical Control of Chemistry, an interdisciplinary and multi-institutional collaboration.

    FULL STORY AT Penn Engineering Today