“Your support allows me to thrive at Dickinson and plan for a meaningful future.”
“I’m proud to be a first-generation college student, raised by a Black single parent, and I’m grateful for my scholarship, acknowledging my hard work and determination to earn a Dickinson education.”
“Without your help, I wouldn’t be able to live my dream of playing the sport I love and looking forward to a bright future.”
“In class, in the lab and through leadership-building activities, I’m already benefitting greatly from my Dickinson experience.”
“Dickinson has been very generous to me, and I am beyond grateful.”
“Through your generosity, I'm earning a world-class education. I've met incredibly knowledgeable professors and gained many important skills.”
“We’re living proof that scholarship support at Dickinson helps serious thinkers with plans to serve their communities to prepare for lives of leadership.”
“I knew I wanted to study in Italy, but I never anticipated how life-changing it would be.”
From Valentine’s Day on, Dining Services is mixing it up, offering special menus to keep Dickinsonians dining in style.
Dickinson changes the name of an important new initiative. Here's why that speaks volumes about the vital work ahead.
Through an on-campus course funded by an alumnus, 20 students earned professional certification that will give them a leg up on their job searches, and may boost their starting salaries.
With $800,000 in funding from the Mellon Foundation, Dickinson will launch a center and academic program in Native American and Indigenous studies.
“It’s so important to put yourself out there and try new things.” Meet Lauren Orefice ’24 (environmental studies), an a cappella singer and study-abroad student who served a writing internship in NYC.
The former economics major dives into data engineering with D.C.-based EAB, a higher-education solutions firm.
Meet Elliot Barr ’23, a club-sports player who served a sports-marketing internship in London and studied abroad in Toulouse.