Details, Explanation and Meaning About Pennsylvania State University

Pennsylvania State University Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description

Penn State University


Established 1855
School type Public, Land grant
President Graham Spanier
Location University Park, PA Satellite campuses in Abington, PA; Altoona, PA; Berks, PA; Beaver, PA; Delaware County, PA; DuBois, PA; Erie, PA; Fayette, PA; Harrisburg, PA; Hazleton, PA; Lehigh Valley, PA; McKeesport, PA; Mount Alo, PA; New Kensington, PA; Schuylkill, PA; Shenago, PA; Wilkes-Barre, PA; Worthington Scranton, PA; and York, PA.
Enrollment 41,795 Main Campus
33,743 Satellite Campuses
6,255 PA College of Tech
646 Dickinson School of Law
83,177 Total Enrollment
Faculty 20,817
Operating Budget US $2,560,309,000
Campuses 18,370 acres (74 km²)
Website www.psu.edu

A university in Pennsylvania, The Pennsylvania State University (commonly referred to as Penn State) was founded in 1855 by order of the Commonwealth government as Agricultural College of Pennsylvania. The campus was designated a land grant college. The main campus, University Park, is found in State College, just east of the geographic center of the state. It is among the top research universities in the country, known for its breadth of strong programs in engineering, business and the sciences. Only the most-qualified students gain admission to the University Park campus for freshman year. More than 60% of first-year students begin at one of the other 19 campus locations. Additionally, PSU comprises several "special-mission" campuses. Penn State offers more than 160 majors. More than 80,000 students attend the university with over half in University Park.

Penn State was the first college in the United States to award baccalaureate and graduate degrees in agriculture, the first to operate a nuclear reactor capable of reaching criticality and the first to found a graduate program for Native Americans.

Pennsylvania State University should not be confused with the University of Pennsylvania (commonly referred to as "Penn"), the Ivy League university located in Philadelphia. Penn State is a public school, while Penn is private, although Penn State actually gets a very small percentage of its budget from public funds compared to most public universities.

Penn State has a large football following and attracts tens of thousands of visitors to its campus, the area around which is also known as "Happy Valley," for tailgating and games on Saturdays in Autumn.

Penn State's mascot is the Nittany Lion. They participate in the NCAA Division I-A and in the Big Ten Conference.

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