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  1. The Pennsylvania Governor's School for the Arts (PGSA) was one of the Pennsylvania Governor's Schools of Excellence, a group of five-week summer academies for gifted high school students in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.

  2. The Governor's School for the Arts is a center for innovation that develops excellence, nurtures creativity, inspires artistic vision and builds communities with a passion for the arts. Photo by John Wadsworth. Art Design by Ava Borte with Visual Arts Neon Class.

  3. Pennsylvania Governor's Schools. The Pennsylvania Gove rnor’s School is a summer program offered at Carnegie Mellon University and provides rising high school seniors with hands-on training and research in the sciences, technology, and engineering.

  4. The Pennsylvania Governor's School for the Arts (PGSA) was a five-week summer academy for gifted high school students in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. The goal of PGSA was to create an environment where gifted students could learn and grow as artists, as people, and as advocates for the arts.

  5. 20 de oct. de 2008 · Pennsylvania Governor's School for the Arts | Facebook. Private group. ·. 859 members. Join group. About this group. PGSA is a five-week summer program for gifted high school students in the state of Pennsylvania. Upon its inception in 1973, PGSA was housed at Bucknell University in Lewisburg.

  6. Students must audition or present a visual arts portfolio for acceptance into The Governor's School for the Arts (GSA). All current 8th - 11th grade students are eligible to apply. We welcome students of all interests, races/ethnicities, gender identities, experience levels, and all socio-economic backgrounds. Watch! Virtual Meet GSA Nights.

  7. The Pennsylvania Governor's School for the Arts (PGSA) was one of the Pennsylvania Governor's Schools of Excellence, a group of five-week summer academies for gifted high school students in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. The school was hosted each summer first by Bucknell University, then by Mercyhurst College.