PSU announced holidays for students from March 28 to April 5 due COVID-19 pandemic

29.03.2020 20:26

On Thursday, March 26 A.D. Guliakov, Rector of Penza State University, signed an order on measures to implement the Decree of the President of the Russian Federation “On declaring non-work days in the Russian Federation”, an order of the Russian Ministry of Education and Science and to ensure sanitary and epidemiological welfare of the population.

University employees are provided with non-work days (days off) with pay from March 30 to April 3. Workers with a 6-day working week work on March 28 and April 4 in accordance with measures to prevent the spread of the coronavirus infection. Workers with shift-based working hours are guided by the shift schedule.

Students are given holidays from March 28 to April 5. The educational process will be adjusted taking holidays into account.

» Последние новости:
03.07.2025 13:16 PSU student Samira Ponomareva is a participant of the 10th International Youth Forum "Eurasia Global"
27.06.2025 08:56 PSU participated in the International Conference on Constitutional Values
17.06.2025 12:55 PSU lecturers delivered reports at the XIII International Symposium ‘Russian Language and Russian Literature in a Multilingual World’ in Bulgaria
17.06.2025 10:25 PSU students are winners of the VI International Olympiad in Russian as a Foreign Language in Croatia
16.06.2025 15:44 PSU Indian students' cricket team won silver in the N.P. Ogaryov MSU Rector's Open Cup
16.06.2025 09:31 The Admission Commission of PSU held a seminar with school principals from the Republic of Kyrgyzstan
16.06.2025 09:24 PSU scientists are participants of the International Scientific Conference on Biomedical Engineering, Radioelectronics and Information Technologies
16.06.2025 09:19 International Alumni Association Established at PSU
11.06.2025 11:16 Iranian school graduates are interested in studying at Penza State University
10.06.2025 11:15 PSU graduate appointed Chairman of Iraq's Federal Council for Civil Service