- Undergraduate
Bachelor's Degrees
Bachelor of ArtsBachelor of EngineeringDual-Degree ProgramUndergraduate AdmissionsUndergraduate Experience
- Graduate
Graduate Experience
- Research
- Entrepreneurship
- Community
- About
-
Search
News

Feb 21, 2025
Dartmouth Engineering Student Applies Mobile Robotics Toward Healthier, More Sustainable Agriculture
PhD Innovation Fellow Adam Gronewold is applying mobile robotics to the challenge of making agricultural cropping systems more efficient and sustainable.News

Feb 12, 2025
New Mathematical Pricing Model Can Help Public and Private Transportation Systems Work Together So Everyone Wins
In the News
CBS Sunday Morning
America's "Explainer-in-chief"
Senior Lecturer David Macaulay was interviewed while visiting DC's National Building Museum and showed CBS correspondent Martha Teichner how sketching can help you see things like Ledyard Bridge in a new way.
Feb 16, 2025
The Wall Street Journal
Hims Super Bowl Ad Spotlights Weight-Loss Drug Copycats as Clock Ticks on Their Business
Professor Geoffrey Parker is quoted in an article about a telehealth company pushing the boundaries of drug compounding and testing regulators' limits. "Once you have a large customer base, you essentially have a large voter base on your side, and they can demand regulatory change," said Parker.
Feb 10, 2025
The New York Times
In Greenland, the Ice Doesn't Just Flow, It Quivers and Quakes
Professor Hélène Seroussi is quoted in an article about the results of a study into how ice sheets move. Getting enough measurements is a constant challenge for polar scientists, said Seroussi. "That's why we keep finding all these new principles and mechanisms that seem relatively fundamental. Each time you have a new observation, a new ice core, a new way of measuring, you learn something new."
Feb 06, 2025
The Chronicle of Higher Education
Small Ways to Spark Joy in Your Teaching
Professor Eugene Korsunskiy is featured in an article about the false dichotomy that having fun and feeling joy are at odds with doing serious, rigorous work. The article points out that joy actually has cognitive benefits that support creativity, problem-solving, and teamwork. "Joyful learning environments," Korsunskiy said, "help students thrive."
Feb 06, 2025