5/18
Penn in the News
A round-up of Penn mentions in local, national, and international media.
Filter Stories
Penn In the News
Your Tweets Can Reveal How Much Money You Earn
Daniel Preotiuc-Pietro of the School of Arts & Sciences is cited for leading a study that revealed how Twitter behavior can predict users’ income level.
Penn In the News
Boss Make Your Blood Boil? Here Are Six Ways to Prevent Anger From Ruining Your Career
Sigal Barsade of the Wharton School suggests that “anger is not all bad.”
Penn In the News
Simple – But Not Easy – Steps to Prevent Cancer
Susan Domchek of the Perelman School of Medicine comments on lifestyle factors that can help prevent cancer.
Penn In the News
Coalition’s Plans for New Application Platform Stir Debate
They came to listen, to question, and to vent. Most of all, they came early to get a good seat: Nobody wanted to miss the hottest discussion in town. At the National Association for College Admission Counseling’s annual conference here on Saturday, a spirited crowd gathered to hear more about why 83 public and private colleges plan to build a shared college-application system, meant to “recast” the admissions process.
Penn In the News
New Swarthmore President Has a Plan: Listen, Think, Communicate
Swarthmore College's new president has a plan for dealing with a student body known for its vocal activism: Listen carefully to the students. Craft a careful, well-researched response. Communicate with them. "It's critically important to maintain open dialogue with students," said Valerie Smith, 59, who on Saturday was inaugurated as the first African American president of Swarthmore, one of the most prestigious and selective colleges in the country.
Penn In the News
Swarthmore Student Dies in Fall
A Swarthmore College student died Saturday afternoon after accidentally falling several dozen feet off a cliff, police said. The school identified him as Anthony Chiarenza, a sophomore from Bayside, N.Y. He fell about 40 or 50 feet in Crum Woods, part of a wooded, rocky section at the back of the school's main campus, said Sgt. Raymond Stufflet of the borough's police department. Stufflet said the fall, which appeared to be accidental, occurred around 2:45 p.m.
Penn In the News
New College-application Site Aims to Capture Traits of Success – Like Grit and Engagement
Does the world need a new way to apply to college? The question echoed throughout the convention center on Thursday here at the National Association for College Admission Counseling’s annual conference. Three days after a group of more than 80 selective colleges announced plans to build a shared application platform that would "streamline the experience of planning for and applying to college," some admissions officials described the idea as a bold, welcome innovation.
Penn In the News
The Power of Precise Predictions
Philip Tetlock of the Wharton School and the School of Arts & Sciences co-writes an article about using forecasting tournaments to depolarize political debate.
Penn In the News
The Panthers’ Revolutionary Feminism
Salamishah Tillet of the School of Arts & Sciences pens an op-ed concentrated on the Black Panther Party and feminism.
Penn In the News
College Admissions Isn’t Fair… Whatever That Means
Let’s talk about fairness, the word no one can quite pin down. It echoes in high-school hallways and campus quads, in editorial pages and judicial opinions — wherever people have something to say about college admissions. But what is fairness, really? Ask the applicant, for whom an admissions decision from a selective college arrives like the last judgment. An acceptance rewards years of studying deep into the night, excelling in extracurriculars, and shelling out for those SAT-prep courses. And rejection is condemnation.