Mathematics majors secure jobs at IBM, Capital One and Epic and are accepted to graduate programs at Cornell University and the Mayo Clinic.
From launching charitable startups to ramping up ventilator production, Dickinsonians around the world are responding to the challenges presented by the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.
Environmental science majors secure jobs in forestry, sustainable agriculture and hazardous waste management.
An extensively researched report leads to renaming buildings on campus whose names honor the legacy of supporters of slavery.
Eddy Diamantis ’16, Kai Ward ’19 and Elisa Varlotta ’20 join the 29 Dickinson students, alumni and administrators who have garnered Fulbrights over the past five years.
Lauren Reynolds '08 and Steven Meyers '08 provide personalized video-conference cooking lessons with prominent chefs to raise funds supporting the hard-hit restaurant industry.
Students were all set to present original research on campus. Then COVID-19 happened. Here's how they responded.
International studies majors secure jobs in finance, international service and the U.S. Army.
Guoxuan "Allan" Chi '20 found his academic niche at the intersection of computer science and psychology. Learn more about his lab internship at UC Berkeley, his perfect study-abroad course and more.
International business & management majors secure jobs in finance, teaching, business development and research.
Matthew Kness ’21 serves as a volunteer firefighter in New York during the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.
Dickinson is among more than 315 colleges and universities across the country to issue a collective statement on what admissions deans value in prospective students during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Biochemistry & molecular biology major and former ROTC Cadet Susan Buckenmaier ’16 examines the risk factors of populations and their role in the development of chronic disease.
Meet Lilly Zeitlin ’21, whose interest in studying institutional inequalities led her to conduct original research in India focusing on how urban and industrial development impacts rural communities.
Taytum Robinson-Covert, a 2020 graduate of Carlisle High School, has been selected as the recipient of the Dickinson-Carlisle Scholarship.