ABINGTON, Pa. — Penn State Abington honored its student leaders for their accomplishments at the annual Awards and Leadership reception and ceremony. Led by Chancellor Margo DelliCarpini, the campus community recognized the students’ high standards and dedication.
“Generally, people who do great work ... understand their roles and responsibilities in making a difference and their potential to change lives. They often seek out communities of similar people, and they create communities of excellence, as you are doing at Penn State Abington and in your own communities,” she said.
Gina Kaufman, the director of Student Affairs, announced senior Patrice Manasse as the winner of the most prestigious award of the evening, the Eric A. and Josephine S. Walker Award. It recognizes a student whose outstanding character, scholarship, leadership and citizenship have been directed into activities that have positively influenced other students and have contributed to the prestige and well-being of their campus and the reputation of the University as a whole.
Manasse, a first-generation college student, has served as a peer counselor in the campus Counseling and Psychological Services office, where she also assisted with advertising, recruiting and program development. She is a member of the Afro-Caribbean organization on campus, the National Society of Leadership and Success, and the Abington Christian Fellowship, and she worked as a Lion Guide mentoring first-year students and as a resident assistant at the Lions Gate student apartment community.
A nominator described Manasse as “a proactive and conscientious student who has been able to utilize and implement the counseling skills learned throughout her education at Penn State Abington in order to help others and connect to students of differing races, backgrounds and genders.”
Off campus, she has volunteered with a homeless ministry and the Make-a-Wish Foundation.