John Urschel is racking up quite a resume this offseason, from working on his PhD at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to competing for a starting job with the Baltimore Ravens.

On Monday, Urschel announced yet another prestigious opportunity: He will be the commencement speaker for the Penn State college of science. Graduation for the college of science is set for May 7 at the 16,000-seat Bryce Jordan Center.

"Of all the honors I've received, this means the most," Urschel posted on Twitter.

This is quite an accomplishment for anyone who graduated from the university just four years ago, much less a budding NFL player. Urschel is one of the most unique athletes in all of sports, earning Bachelor's and Master's degrees in mathematics -- both with 4.0 grade point averages -- before finishing up his playing eligibility at Penn State.

The winner of the "academic Heisman" coming out of Penn State, Urschel had his research published in peer-reviewed academic journals in his spare time. It was titled "A Cascadic Multigrid Algorithm for Computing the Fiedler Vector of Graph Laplacians."

Last year, Urschel visited the National Security Agency to discuss his passion at "Mathfest." After he suffered a concussion in August, Urschel was working on high-level math problems just to see where he stood. He is working on his his Doctor of Philosophy degree at MIT this offseason.

While many players are focused on their Instagram pages, Urschel spends more time with his research page. The Notices of the American Mathematical Society referred to his research about the connectedness of nodal decompositions of Fiedler vectors as the Urschel-Zikatanov Theorem.

All of his high-level mathematics is happening at a time when Urschel is in position to compete for the starting left guard spot for the Ravens. Baltimore lost Kelechi Osemele in free agency, and Urschel is expected to compete with Ryan Jensen for the job.

So, it probably shouldn't come as a surprise that Penn State selected Urschel not only as a speaker but as a role model.

Urschel posted on Twitter: "I cant wait to come back to the college and university I love. A place that has done so much for me and meant so much to me. I have no words."

Urschel will likely come up with some words by the time he addresses the graduates in three weeks.