4/16
Penn in the News
A round-up of Penn mentions in local, national, and international media.
Filter Stories
Penn In the News
Orderliness in School – What a Concept
Research about school discipline policies conducted by Joan Goodman of the Graduate School of Education is cited.
Penn In the News
Nonprofit Ads Tap ‘Game of Thrones’ to Highlight Real-world Conflict
Katherina Rosqueta of the School of Social Policy & Practice’s Center for High Impact Philanthropy comments on the strategy and impact of using popular fictional stories in nonprofit advertisement.
Penn In the News
Video: Last Week Tonight with John Oliver: Encryption (HBO)
Matt Blaze of the School of Engineering and Applied Science is part of a piece about encryption.
Penn In the News
Center City Chain Has Mastered the Art of the Window Display
Barbara Kahn of the Wharton School comments on how window displays can influence consumers’ purchase process.
Penn In the News
U. of California President Orders Tougher Response to Alleged Sexual Misconduct
Reacting to the latest allegation of sexual harassment by a senior faculty member of a subordinate, the University of California’s president, Janet Napolitano, said in a letter on Friday to all 10 chancellors of the university system that UC must henceforth respond to such cases “firmly, fairly, and expeditiously” and that the university must impose “appropriate sanctions” that “recognize the serious nature of these claims,” reports the Los Angeles Times. Ms.
Penn In the News
The Promise and Peril of Cluster Hiring
Jerry Jacobs of the School of Arts & Sciences is mentioned for his book In Defense of Disciplines.
Penn In the News
Halting Academic Incivility (That’s the Nice Word for It)
A report published last year in the Journal of Applied Psychology confirms what many might say is obvious: "Incivility, … defined as insensitive behavior that displays a lack of regard for others, is rampant and on the rise." This will not be news for academics. Consider the regular calls for an end to faculty incivility — the rudeness, abusive language, bullying, and general meanness that seem to characterize many of our interactions. We aren’t the only profession with jerks, certainly. But the academy does seem to offer a refuge for the obnoxious.
Penn In the News
Should Colleges Provide ‘Safe Spaces’?
The notion of a campus “safe space,” which has seen much ink and ridicule, is nothing new, says Louie Dean Valencia-García. The teaching fellow at Fordham University in New York has studied student protest movements from those in Franco’s fascist Spain to “Occupy Wall Street.” The term “safe spaces” was first used by gay men facing ridicule and violence in the 1960s, as well as by young feminists being derided in classrooms. “It was a response to hate, and trying to find a place that was safer than those they were experiencing on campuses,” Mr. Valencia-García says.
Penn In the News
High ‘Good’ Cholesterol Not Always a Good Sign
Daniel Rader of the Perelman School of Medicine is featured for leading a study about “good” cholesterol levels.
Penn In the News
Fake Tenure?
Rejecting a set of amendments that faculty members argued would have preserved tenure as they know it, the University of Wisconsin System Board of Regents approved Thursday new tenure policies to fill a hole left by recent changes in state law. “I do not believe the academy is precisely like a business,” Regina Millner, board president, said at the meeting. “But we cannot have quality, serve our students, have quality faculty if we do not have a sound financial system. This is a different century, this is a different time ….