Student Archive
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Laura Whelan, C’20, is examining how organ transplant recipients are prioritized.
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An afternoon of TED Talk-style presentations by Penn Arts and Sciences graduate students.
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Ivy Tse, C ’19, uses video games to explore social interactions.
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Undergraduate Yujiao (Cecily) Chen, C’20, learns how to step back and observe through research mentoring program.
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Elizabeth Lazarus, C’20, conducts research on how drug users express feelings related to their usage on Twitter.
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Ana Alonso, C’18, develops card games to transmit Traditional Ecological Knowledge in Flathead Nation.
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Savannah Lambert, C’18, is researching why men have won the majority of recent national book awards.
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We ask Arts and Sciences students and staff about their hopes for the new year.
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Ph.D. candidate Phoebe Ho and Hua-Yu Sebastian Cherng, GR’14, examine whether social class affects immigrants’ involvement in their children’s education.
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Zachary Sheldon, C’19, designed an experiment to study sensory feedback mechanisms in zebra finches.
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We look back on our favorite arts and sciences stories of 2017.
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Penn students share their plans and wishes for winter break.
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Ph.D. candidate Hajer Al-Faham explores Islamophobia’s effects on Muslim American politics.
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The College Cognoscenti give prospective students and parents the inside story on what it’s like to be a student here.
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Professor Charles Bernstein and Ph.D. student Chris Mustazza from the Department of English discuss PennSound—the world's largest online poetry archive, founded in 2003.
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Leslie Jones, GR’18, on the intersection of Black feminism and social media.
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Penn hosts the inaugural Ivy League Undergraduate Research Symposium.
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Laurie Allen, Director for Digital Scholarship at Penn Libraries, and Penn's Price Lab for Digital Humanities are helping to immortalize the public art and history project.
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Through an Arts and Sciences grant, undergrads produced documentary and virtual-reality films with residents of the Kakuma Refugee Camp.
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Hannah Fagin, C’17, won the History Department’s Thomas C. Cochran Prize for the best Honors thesis in American history for “A Long, Hot Summer: The 1964 Columbia Avenue Race Riot and the Jewish Community Relations Council of Greater Philadelphia.”