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Penn State Harrisburg Faculty Details

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Instructor in Humanities and English Composition
School of Humanities
Education: B.S.; M.A. (Millersville)
Office: W-356 Olmsted Building
Phone: 717-948-6167
E-mail: cbg3@psu.edu

Education

  • MA in English (1996) -- Millersville University
  • BS in ED (1988) -- Millersville University
       Major: English
       Concentration: Linguistics

Experience

Ms. Bixler has taught at Penn State Harrisburg for eight years. She teaches composition courses including Business Writing, Technical Writing, and Writing in the Social Sciences. Ms. Bixler has also taught English and Communication Arts classes at the middle school, high school, and community college level. She has also worked as an actor and director in regional theater.

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College News

‘Lessons learned from launch of blue M&Ms’

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Do you like M&Ms? Ever wonder where the blue M&Ms came from?

A free presentation on “Lessons Learned in Launching the Blue M&M,” featuring Steve Vesce, president and chief executive officer of the Hershey Management Group, LLC, comes to the Special Events Room on campus Wednesday, Dec. 2 at 6:15 p.m.

Sen. Vance to deliver commencement keynote

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State Senator Patricia H. Vance will deliver the keynote address when Penn State Harrisburg confers more than 500 undergraduate and graduate degrees during fall commencement ceremonies Saturday, December 19.

The ceremonies for students who have earned associate, bachelor’s master’s, and doctoral degrees will begin at 9:30 a.m. in the Giant Center, Hershey.

Web site profiles American emigration to Liberia

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Building on years of research and two published books, a Penn State Harrisburg faculty member has created a web site dedicated to profiling the historic African American emigration to Liberia.

Associate Professor of Communications and Humanities C. Patrick Burrowes unveiled his interactive web site entitled “Like a Motherless Child: African American Emigrants to Liberia, 1820-1904” as part of a presentation to faculty, staff, and students recently in the Gallery Lounge. Taken from the title of the well-known spiritual, “Like a motherless child expresses the overriding feeling of dispossession and alienation felt by the emigrants,” Burrowes says. Many of them former slaves, “they had no mother and they had no homeland,” he adds.

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