Thursday, January 22, 2015

What’s a Nittany Lion? I traveled to Penn State to find out!

Last week, I had the opportunity to visit Pennsylvania State University to learn exactly what a Nittany Lion is and to check out their awesome campus located in State College. Penn State has 24 different campuses in cities across Pennsylvania and their largest campus is called University Park, which is located in the city of State College. University Park is home to 46,000 undergraduate students, including 11 current Visitation alumnae! The campus is an easy 3.5 hour drive from the DC area and there is so much to see…..

My first stop was to take a selfie with at the Nittany Lion Shrine. 


It is a tradition for students to pose with the Nittany Lion on graduation day. The word “Nittany” comes from the Algonquin word Nit-A-Nee meaning “single mountain.” The original inhabitants of the area used the word to describe one of the mountains near the campus, which was at one time populated with mountain lions (not anymore!) After checking out the shrine, I drove to see Beaver Stadium, which is the second largest college football stadium in the country and seats 107,000 people. I can’t even imagine how exciting it would be to see a football game there- the stadium is massive and fills to the brim on game days.

Walking around downtown State College, I was amazed to see so many shops and restaurants. The downtown area is directly across from campus so it was filled with students at lunch time. There are plenty of places to pick up your requisite Penn State gear!

Approximately 13,700 students live on campus and all first year students are required to live on campus and are guaranteed housing. The campus is easily walkable but I passed lots of buses, which would be great on particularly cold days. Even though there are a lot of buildings and dorms, it is not that hard to walk from one end of campus to another.

Penn State offers more than 160 different majors, which are housed in the different academic colleges. One of the most well-known academic colleges is the Smeal College of Business. The business school building has state of the art classrooms and a trading room, which allows students to experience hands-on, real-time analysis of financial markets and manage an actual investment portfolio through the Nittany Lion Fund. 
Inside the Smeal College of Business


While Penn State does offer some large classes, 85 percent of first-year classes at University Park have 50 or fewer students. As students being to take courses in their specific major, classes get even smaller.

No visit to Penn State is complete with a trip to the Berkey Creamery. In 1892, Penn State began offering America’s first collegiate instruction in ice cream manufacturing. The Creamery sells over 2.5 million ice cream cones each year and it features a wide array of unique flavors.
YUM


 I tried the Berkey Brickle, which is vanilla ice cream with a caramel swirl and pieces of peanut brickle- it was delicious! Thankfully, I was told in advance that you are only allowed to order one flavor of ice cream- you cannot mix and match. The only person that was allowed to order more than one flavor at a time was President Clinton during a visit to campus in 1996!

University Park has so many resources available to undergraduate students.  
Student Union. And Actual Students.
Home to one of the biggest research libraries in the country, as well as the Pasquerilla Spiritual Center, which is the largest multi-faith centers in the country, and the student union building that has offices for the more than 900 various student organizations, it is clear that everything is done on a bigger scale at Penn State! After my visit, I can definitely understand why our students love the university.


 Published by: LP

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