Students at Penn State Brandywine started the 2016-17 academic year with three community service projects that fostered positive change in both Delaware and Chester Counties.
Penn State Brandywine officially kicked off the 2016 athletic year last week with all six fall teams in action. Teams combined for five wins and just one loss during the opening week
Penn State Brandywine will host the Pennsylvania Association of College Admissions Counselors' (PACAC) Delaware County Regional College Fair from 6:30 to 8 p.m. Sept. 29 in the Commons/Athletic Center gymnasium. This annual event has become known as the kick off to the college admissions season.
Non-conference play continued for all six of Penn State Brandywine’s fall teams last week as the Lions combined to go 3-3 against NCAA Division III competition, while the cross country squads saw two school records fall at the Cairn Highlander Invitational on Saturday.
When Joshua Phillips was earning his doctorate, he asked one of his advisers to help him choose his dissertation topic. The adviser encouraged Phillips to study an issue that he already cared about deeply: homelessness.
Penn State’s annual celebration of Constitution Day will take place on Friday, Sept. 16 at University Park, with events happening throughout the month of September across Penn State campuses.
Penn State Brandywine’s week in athletics was highlighted by the Lions’ volleyball quad matches on Saturday and Sunday, where the team partnered with the Side-Out Foundation to raise money and awareness for breast cancer research.
Stand for State, a University-wide initiative that launched in January 2016, uses multimedia presentations, workshops and discussion panels to teach students how to combat violent acts such as sexual assault, dating violence and stalking.
Penn State student becomes first female to earn Kalas Award, a college scholarship awarded by the Philadelphia Broadcasters Foundation to aspiring sports broadcasting professionals.