In 6th grade, Dr. Mel Goldstein visited my class to talk about meteorology and I knew this was exactly what I wanted to do. He said he went to Penn State and from that moment, I only wanted to come to Penn State and study meteorology. Penn State gave me so many wonderful things (education, friends, family, etc) that I can't imagine not coming here.
Study hard, be open to meeting new people and doing new things, and have fun. You're only at Penn State for a limited time, so make the most of it!
Cloud Physics. I love clouds and I am good at physics. It was also the hardest class I took so the challenge made it extra fun.
Meteorology is the perfect major for so many careers - the field must prepare you to take complex concepts and be able to have both deep technical conversations and communicate with many people without science backgrounds. That skill is why so many meteorology graduates from Penn State are successful, no matter what career path you take.
I imagined that I would 1) travel the world, 2) find a career that was a combination of weather and business, and 3) own an entire building in New York City. Numbers 1 and 2 are done, so now I need to work on #3.
The highest quality possible. EMS is like being in a small school but you still have access to everything a large campus has. It's the perfect combination.
I participated in Campus Weather Service for all 4 years and it really helped me with finding my leadership style. I learned that my enthusiasm was infectious, you can never accept subpar work/effort, and you always need to make time for fun. I've used that everywhere in my career.
Other than going to the gym more (don't we all?), probably traveling abroad. I had to travel a lot internationally in my first job out of college and I feel like a study abroad program would have helped me.
1) You can always do more networking and 2) get involved in Penn State alumni groups (local alumni chapters, special interest groups, etc)