"Buddhish: A Guide to the 20 Most Important Buddhist Ideas for the Curious and the Skeptical" offers an engaging, accessible introduction to Buddhism for readers looking to explore a new spiritual tradition or understand the roots of their mindfulness practice.
The Penn State Abington peer counseling program pairs students in distress with other students trained in basic counseling skills who are supervised by licensed mental health professionals from the campus’ Counseling and Psychological Services.
New Penn State Abington baseball head coach David Miller pledges to take the team to the next level while fostering the growth of his student athletes.
Penn State Abington education professor Boni Wozolek's scholarship considers questions of social justice and teaching practices that focus on the examination of race, sexual orientations, and gender identities across schools and communities.
Penn State Abington baseball started a new era last weekend with a former Major League Baseball player at the helm. The team set school marks for hits and runs in a game, and a senior infielder broke three career records.
Josh Ventura, Penn State class of 2021, is using the entrepreneurial mindset he refined at Penn State Abington to invest in his Philadelphia neighborhood and work with at-risk youth who call the area home.
Penn State Abington Chancellor Margo DelliCarpini was interviewed on Executive Leaders Radio, a national program that shares how chief executives developed the skills that enabled them to successfully helm organizations.
"Flat-World Fiction: Digital Humanity in Early Twenty-First-Century America," the latest book by Liliana Naydan, associate professor of English at Penn State Abington, was ranked as the No. 1 new release in 21st century literary criticism on Amazon.com.
"The Gentrification Plot: New York and the Postindustrial Crime Novel" by Thomas Heise, assistant professor of English at Penn State Abington, was published as part of the Columbia University Press Literature Now series, one of the top imprints for the study of contemporary literature.
The WorkRise grant funds the 18-month study "Underemployment in the U.S.: Its Distribution and Effects on Workers," which will be led by Lonnie Golden, professor of economics at Penn State Abington.