Pathways to Your Future: Exploring STEAM Careers celebrates its 25th anniversary at Penn State York. The free program aimed at seventh grade girls, but open to all seventh graders, is a career awareness program highlighting opportunities in sciences, technology, engineering, art, and technology. Students from 13 schools in the York area will attend on Friday, May 13 from 8 a.m.-2 p.m. The logo was designed by eighth grade students at the Edgar Fahs Smith STEAM Academy and past Pathways participants, Mya Bruno and Paige Conway.
Pathways to Your Future: Exploring STEAM Careers celebrates its 25th anniversary on Friday, May 13, at Penn State York. This career awareness program encourages participants to pursue careers in science, technology, engineering, art and mathematics.
Ashton Ball, of Spring Grove, Pennsylvania, shared a few words during the open microphone opportunity provided to students at the commencement ceremony on Friday, May 6, at Penn State York in the Pullo Family Performing Arts Center on campus. She graduated with a bachelor of science degree in human development and family studies.
Penn State York celebrated spring commencement on Friday, May 6, with students receiving associate and baccalaureate degrees. The class of 2022 consisted of 54 students.
Nicholas (Nick) Nase gets ready to measure lizards in the lab and take blood samples for parasite analysis as part of a research project. He was able to travel to California and do field research with Anne Vardo-Zalik, associate professor of biology at Penn State York, as part of his degree program in biology.
For Nicholas Nase, lizards made earning a biology degree a lot more interesting and fun at Penn Sate York. Nase will cross the stage of the Pullo Family Performing Arts Center to graduate at 6 p.m. Friday, May 6, as part of the campus' spring 2022 commencement.
Summer sessions offer students an opportunity to get ahead for fall, catch-up on classes, or just get started. Some students prefer to focus on a single course.
Penn State Schuylkill nursing students collected soil samples from various campus locations, later testing them for antibiotic discovery in an increasinglyantibiotic-resistant world.