4/22
Penn in the News
A round-up of Penn mentions in local, national, and international media.
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Penn In the News
Pushing on Pell
Penn In the News
Ken Lum on Canada vs. the USA
Ken Lum of the School of Design is featured for his experience living in America, specifically Philadelphia, compared to Canada.
Penn In the News
Has Obama Let Down Historically Black Colleges?
Marybeth Gasman of the Graduate School of Education shares her thoughts on the debate on whether or not President Obama disappointed historically black colleges and universities.
Penn In the News
Insurer Rewards Push Women Towards Mammograms
Harald Schmidt of the Perelman School of Medicine writes about employers and health plans offering incentives to women to get frequent mammograms.
Penn In the News
Science-diversity Efforts Connect Grad Students With Mentors
Most efforts to increase the number of black and other underrepresented minority doctoral recipients in science and engineering have fallen flat. For example, the share of engineering doctorates earned by black students remained unchanged, at 4 percent, from 2004 to 2014, according to the most recent Survey of Earned Doctorates. The problem has many causes — including that most minority-group members enroll in graduate programs at lower rates than white students do — but many observers say a lack of good mentoring is a key factor.
Penn In the News
Poor Kids, Limited Horizons
Darrius Sloan, 17, talks about his dreams — about himself — in the past tense. He hoped to go to the University of Arizona. "I wanted to be a civil engineer," he says. "I really loved math, I really did. I really do, I mean." Raised on Navajo land in Tuba City, Ariz., in a trailer with 13 other family members, Mr. Sloan got good grades and earned a spot in a boardinghouse for Native Americans to attend high school in Flagstaff, about 80 miles from the broken schools of home.
Penn In the News
There May Be a Way to Allow Mass Surveillance and Preserve Our Privacy at the Same Time
Michael Kearns of the School of Engineering and Applied Science is quoted about mass surveillance and citizens’ right to privacy.
Penn In the News
Why I Taught Myself to Procrastinate
Adam Grant of the Wharton School contributes an op-ed about procrastination.
Penn In the News
Higher Status Jobs But Lower Pay for African-Americans Graduating From HBCUs
Marybeth Gasman of the Graduate School of Education says, “Understanding the complex and unique return on investment for MSIs is essential as these institutions serve the new majority in higher education.”
Penn In the News
Audio: Why It’s Hard to Raid a University Endowment
There is a small but growing move afoot to require universities with multi-billion dollar endowments to stop charging tuition. In fact, some proponents of the idea are trying to get a seat on the board that oversees Harvard, and a New York congressman is sponsoring legislation to require rich universities to spend more of their endowments on tuition assistance. Sounds like they're making a simple argument, right? But University endowments aren’t big, liquid pools of money, like what parents with a kid in college wish for.