Joel Reynolds, NRDC western director and senior attorney, meets with students, joins class discussions and delivers a lecture on climate change.
President Margee M. Ensign, Rose-Walters Prize recipients weigh in on the country's withdrawal from the Paris Agreement on Climate Change.
Dickinson's marketing & communications team is excited to add four international awards to a growing list of professional honors.
The inaugural Faculty Learning Community on Writing, Writing With Numbers, offered professors cross-disciplinary tips on how to best teaching data literacy and was informed by a student point of view.
As a student, he trailblazed as Dickinson's first East Asian studies major. Now, Chuck Silverman '88 is a global financial executive and a new Dickinson trustee.
From Sept. 27 to Oct. 27, there were 527 national and 48 international mentions of Dickinson in the news.
During an internship at Warner Bros., Erik Gomez ’22 provided Spanish translations for the TV show Friends. His ultimate goal: to secure greater Latinx representation in the entertainment industry.
From exploring seagrass beds and mangrove forests in Turks and Caicos to sharing her experiences as a Global Ambassador, Delaney Koch ’20 is making the most of her Dickinson experience.
Dickinson offers Leah Blatt ’22 the rare opportunity to merge professional ballet training and an international business education with the liberal arts.
Olivia Bailey '18 embraces "beautiful and breathtaking" experiences as a Peace Corps volunteer in a Botswana health clinic.
From a cappella to orchestral to jazz, Dickinson musicians are making spirits bright during end-of-year concerts.
Students and faculty reflect on an immersive global, semesterlong course exploring the Rwandan genocide and recovery through on-the-ground original research.
Robots, food justice, modern art, pseudoscience, big data, music, medicine and more. There was a First-Year Seminar for every interest this year.
Actor, theatre professor and former dramatic arts major Ashley Harrison Smith ’92 turned his creativity toward writing, becoming an award-winning author of thrillers.
Using specially trained dogs, former biology and Spanish major Mairi Poisson ’16 works to conserve wildlife for future generations as a field research scientist for Rogue Detection Teams.