UConn Students Selected for Millennium Fellowship Program uconn.edu - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from uconn.edu Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The Penn State Millennium Scholars Program, a program within the College of Agricultural Sciences to support students researching in STEM fields, received donor support from two Penn State alumni.
The program received an estimated $1 million, according to a press release, from Paul Heffner as an estate gift that will benefit the Paul Heffner Scholarship in the College of Agricultural Sciences. The first preference for this scholarship is for students in the Millennium Scholars Program.
The other donation came from Duane Norman and his wife, Roslyn W. Norman, who endowed a $100,000 gift to H. Duane and Roslyn W. Norman Millennium Scholars Scholarship through the Educational Equity Matching Program, securing a one to one match through the program.
Ag Sciences receives donor support for Millennium Scholars Program
Susan Bedsworth
May 06, 2021
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. The Penn State Millennium Scholars Program in the College of Agricultural Sciences has received a generous increase in support thanks to philanthropic gifts from two of the college’s alumni.
Paul Heffner pledged an estimated $1 million estate gift to benefit the Paul Heffner Scholarship in the College of Agricultural Sciences, which he created in 2010. First preference for the scholarship has been denoted for Millennium Scholars students. Duane Norman and his wife, Roslyn W. Norman, endowed the H. Duane and Roslyn W. Norman Millennium Scholars Scholarship through a $100,000 gift through the University’s now concluded Educational Equity Matching Program, securing a 1:1 match through the program.
College of Health and Human Development to join Millennium Scholars Program psu.edu - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from psu.edu Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Though Black faculty members have been part of the Penn State community for over 60 years, âthe challenges facing Black faculty are no less formidableâ in 2021, according to the second âMore Rivers To Crossâ report.
As a follow-up to the first report published in January 2020, biobehavioral health professor Gary King and an independent group of Black faculty members published part two of âMore Rivers To Crossâ on March 25.
The 2020 report, which was 93 pages long, examined issues of representation at Penn State and the âracially biasedâ responses from students on Student Rating of Teacher Effectiveness surveys.
Part two of âMore Rivers To Crossâ is a 108-page report that outlines survey results of Black faculty membersâ experiences with racism from students, administrators and colleagues at University Park and commonwealth campuses.