Mrs park bought 2 packeges of pencils. Each package has 30 pencils. Each of mrs parks 26 students will get an equal number of pencils.

1. How many pencils will each student get?
2. How many will be left over?

1. Each package has 30 pencils, so Mrs. Park has a total of 2 x 30 = <<2*30=60>>60 pencils.

Since each of Mrs. Park's 26 students will get an equal number of pencils, each student will receive 60 / 26 = <<60/26=2.30769>>2 pencils.
2. Mrs. Park will have 60 - (2 x 26) = <<60-(2*26)=8>>8 pencils left over. Answer: \boxed{8}.

To find the number of pencils each student will get, we divide the total number of pencils by the number of students.

1. Each package contains 30 pencils, and Mrs. Park bought 2 packages, so the total number of pencils is 30 x 2 = 60 pencils.
Each of Mrs. Park's 26 students will get 60 / 26 = 2.307 pencils. We can round this to 2 pencils each.

2. To find out how many pencils will be left over, we need to calculate the remainder of the division.
To find the remainder, we subtract the number of pencils each student gets (2 pencils) multiplied by the number of students (26) from the total number of pencils (60).
60 - (2 x 26) = 60 - 52 = 8 pencils will be left over.